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View Full Version : Venezuelans protests as pro-Chavez channel replaces private TV station



jetdawgg
06-02-07, 01:37 PM
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - Venezuela's oldest private television station was pushed off the air as President Hugo Chavez's government replaced the popular opposition-aligned network on Monday with a new state-funded channel.

Radio Caracas Television shut down just before midnight Sunday as its broadcast license expired and soldiers took control of the station's transmitters. Chavez refused
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</td> </tr> </tbody></table> to renew its license, accusing the channel of «subversive» activities.

The new channel, TVES, launched its transmissions with artists singing pro-Chavez music, then carried an exercise program and a talk show, interspersed with government ads proclaiming, «Now Venezuela belongs to everyone.»

Thousands of government supporters reveled in the streets as they watched the changeover on large TV screens, seeing RCTV's signal go black and then be replaced by a TVES logo featuring Venezuela's national colors.

Others launched fireworks and danced to the classic salsa tune «Todo tiene su final» _ «Everything Has Its End.»

In the countdown to the midnight deadline, thousands of RCTV backers banged pots in protest and played recordings of sirens. Some fired gunshots into the air.

Earlier Sunday, police broke up an opposition protest using a water cannon and tear gas and later clashed with protesters who set afire trash heaps in affluent eastern Caracas. Police said some protesters fired shots, and others threw rocks and bottles. Police said 11 officers were injured.

Inside the studios of RCTV _ the sole opposition-aligned TV station with nationwide reach _ disheartened actors and comedians wept and embraced in the final minutes on the air.

They bowed their heads in prayer, and presenter Nelson Bustamante declared: «Long live Venezuela! We will return soon.»

Chavez says he is democratizing the airwaves by turning the network's signal over to public use. His opponents condemned the move as an assault on free speech.

Germany, which holds the European Union presidency, expressed concern that Venezuela let RCTV's license expire «without holding an open competition for the successor license.» It said the EU expects that Venezuela will uphold freedom of speech and «support pluralism.»

Founded in 1953, RCTV had broadcast talk shows, sports, soap operas and a popular comedy program that poked fun at presidents _ including Chavez _ for decades. It had some 3,000 employees, including 200 journalists.

RCTV was regularly the top channel in viewer ratings, but Chavez accused the network of «poisoning» Venezuelans with programming that promotes capitalism, violating broadcast laws and other infractions.

The government promises TVES will be more diverse, buying 70 percent of its content from independent Venezuelan producers. It will carry sports, news and an educational program for children emphasizing socialist values, as well as foreign-made programs such as National Geographic documentaries.

«We've come here to start a new television with the true face of the people, the face that was hidden, the face that they didn't allow us to show,» said Roman Chalbaud, a pro-Chavez filmmaker appointed by the government to TVES' board of directors.

Chavez, who says he is steering Venezuela toward socialism, accuses RCTV of supporting a short-lived 2002 coup. RCTV's journalists argue violent demonstrations staged by Chavez's supporters outside the station's studios prevented them from covering the news at the time.

RCTV's shutdown leaves 24-hour Globovision news channel as the only other major opposition-sided station, and it is not seen in all parts of the country. Other channels once critical of Chavez have toned down their coverage.

Chavez's decision «marks a turn toward totalitarianism,» said RCTV's top executive, Marcel Granier, while hundreds of protesters chanted «No to the shutdown!» outside the station. «He's losing international recognition and he's losing the respect of his people.»

http://www.pr-inside.com/venezuelans-protests-as-pro-chavez-channel-r136771.htm

Sgt Leprechaun
06-03-07, 11:24 AM
What a big surprise.

OLE SARG
06-03-07, 12:48 PM
Quite a DICKtator!!!!! Or just a dick!!!!

SEMPER FI,

Zulu 36
06-03-07, 12:50 PM
Emulating Hugo is just the sort of thing Hillary and her friends would like to do if they get the chance. Of course, they'll do it better - just ask them.

10thzodiac
06-04-07, 08:36 AM
http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2007/03/post_21.html

SuckerPunch (http://www.usatoday.com/community/profile.htm?UID=8bfee725416ae023) wrote: 87d ago
Chavez is not liked in Latin America? Pull your head out of the sand. In his own country he had been reelected ten times, count ‘em. He is pulling better ratings in Venezuela than Bush is in Texas. Three of four Latin American countries have democratically elected socialist leaders precisely because of decades of American politics and economic rip-off scams perpetrated by American banks with the help of your spy agencies. The reason none of the other Latin American leaders will openly ally themselves with Chavez is because they don’t want to become targets for assassination or economic sanctions by your American government. The tide has not turned in Latin America just since Bush stole the elections, it has always been socialistic. But Americans don’t know that their government has assassinated those democratically elected leftist leaders like Allende and installed puppet dictators like Pinochet because this rag and other American newspapers are part of the mis-information mill pumping out NSA- CIA horse pucky for consumption in America. If hypocrite Bush can afford to send doctors to Venezuela or anywhere in Latin America, why can’t this government provide medical care to the thousands of Americans who are going without? I think that the reason Chavez is openly challenging Bush is because, like Castro in Cuba, a timid approach would only get him killed. He has to make fireworks to stay alive. Bush would not dare send in the CIA operatives to assassinate a man who is so much in the headlines.

Sgt Leprechaun
06-06-07, 06:46 AM
Nice quote from a typical left wing site. Note the fact that is glossed over.....it's easy for dicators to win elections when they control the country.

And, no, I'm not talking about Bush.

The writer has obviously been sucking the kool aid thru a straw.