The Devil's Excrement





  The Devil's Excrement
Observations focused on the problems of an underdeveloped country, Venezuela, with some serendipity about the world (orchids, techs, science, investments, politics) at large. A famous Venezuelan, Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo, referred to oil as the devil's excrement. For countries, easy wealth appears indeed to be the sure path to failure. Venezuela might be a clear example of that.
Last updated:
4/2/2007; 9:46:20 PM

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Tuesday, May 30, 2006



One must recognize that the Chavez administration has a remarkable ability to turn issues into a fuzzy area where unless you know the details, everything looks fine from afar, but in reality it isn't.


This week we have seen this twice, both in the case of the riots at the Universidad de Los Andes and the case of the audit of the electoral registry that the muniversities have proposed:

--The audit of the electoral registry: Some of the best technical universities in the country proposed onths ago that they could do a better audit of the electoral registry than any international institution. Moreover, they argued, if the gave the green light to the registry, people would have confidence in it. Two of the three universities involved (UCV and USB) generate 90% of the university research in Venezuela, as measured by their yearly publications.

Problem is that there are many more universities, some of which began (in jealousy!) complaining that they were not involved in the process. Well, in the spirit of collaboration and cooperation, seven other universities were included in the project. Problem was, in the spirit of democracy, each university also has a vote in the process, and therein lays the problem and likely that was precisely the trap.

You see the seven universities have been acting much like the old Chavez-dominated National Assembly in that everything they propose is voted on dand there is little discussion and at the end the vote is mostly seven to three according to the President of Simon Bolivar University Benjamin Sharifker, himself a distinguished scientist of international renown.

While these three universities (UCV, ULA and UCAB) object to the procedure, their main concern at this time is the fact that the CNE refuses to allow an audit that involves looking outside the CNE register, like using public death or borth registers, geographical demographics and the like. Last night these three universities were ready to pull out of the project and today they will make a final decision on the matter.


Clearly, the audit has to look beyond what the Electoral registry contains. By looking at birth records and ID records at the national scale, one can tell whether the registry is consistent or not, whether it has been inflated with ghost voters or not and whether people vote more than once.

If the CNE wins the battle, the three universities will withdraw from the process, but the Chavez Government will proceed to tell the world how the registry is squeaky clean and was audited by seven of the "best" universities in the country. And the world will believe it and nod in agreement that Chavez is truly the most democratically elected President of the Western world since Alvaro Uribe.

--The riots at the Universidad de Los Andes: The origin of the riots is the ruling by the Venezuelan Supreme Court that the University may not have the autonomy to hold its own elections for student union. The decision was made at the request of an injunction by a pro-Chavez student group that lost the last election and appeared to be going to lose this one by an even wider margin. Thus, the Court admitted the case and stopped the election from taking place.

The issue arises because the new Constitution says (Art. 293) that the CNE will organize and supervise all elections for unions, professional associations and political organizations". However the same Constitution (Art. 109) recognizes that Universities are autonomous in their organization. This principle has been in Venezuelan law for quite a while and is common in most of Latin America. It also has been at the crux of most student/Government conflicts in Venezuela's history. The question is whether these organizations are covered or not by autonomy.

It has been understood since 2000 when the new Constitution was approved that universities have autonomy and indeed they have organized all elections, except in one University where the Government has not carried out any elections as established by law. (Interestingly, the "democratic" union created by Chavez UNT, has yet to hold elections which is stopping all other individual union elections from taking place for more than 250 trade unions. Incredibly, UNT is apparently thinking of postponing any elections once again until next year, so they can devote all their time and energy to getting Chavez reelected! Screw the rank and files and their problems!)

Well, last week when the students learned of the intervention of their election by the Supreme Court, they started protesting. This led to the National Guard raiding the University with tanks, which in turn led to more violent riots. Yes, students were armed and people were hurt on both sides, but it was the concatenation of the two events, the Court's decision and the violation of the autonomy, which was to blame for the events of the last few days. And they are likely to continue unless elections are held soon.

But the Government's version is that this is nothing but a destabilization plan by the opposition and the presence of Teodoro Petkoff at that university last Friday, led Minister Chacon to involve Petkoff in this plan, to which Petkoff responded today, calling it a "dirty war" against his candidacy. As usual the People's Ombudsman acts like the Government's Ombudsman, calling the riots shameful, rather than defending the rights of everyone involved, guardsmen and students alike.

For once, something positive is done by this Government, in that the National Assembly proposed a dialogue to solve the problem, something that we have not seen in the last seven years where everything has been ordered from the top, the way the autocrat wants it. Unfortunately, every time I praise something the Government does, they later come out and screw it up. That is how democracy works, you talk, you have a dialogu, not the way Chavez wants or likes it. Let’s see if it lasts.

As far as I remember, nobody had ever asked for a university election to be organized by the CNE before, the students are asking that the university not organize it, teher seems to be no other option but the CNE, since these are clearly political organizations and Art. 293 would apply.

It has been tacitly understood that autonomy gave the rights of self determination and organization to the Universities themselves. Unions on the other hand have largely refused to let the CNE organized their electoral processes, saying this violates international labor agreements signed by the Venezuelan Government. The Court admitted the case and will rule in the future.

But it is now wonder the Government wants to supervise all this. According to Elides Rojas, the Chief of the press room at El Universal, there have been 112 electoral processes at unions and universities not supervised by the CNE in the last two years. Curiously, in a country where Chavismo never seems to lose an election, 109 of them have been won by the opposition. This is precisely what the Government wants to stop. (For the PSF's reading this, most of these elections have been decided by fairly wide margins and the pro-Chavez forces have seldom claimed there was fraud.)


Thus, the Supreme Court's decision had a very clear political objective. Once again, from afar, those reading about the riots will believe these students are simply trying to use this as an excuse to protest and the more naive may even think Petkoff and the opposition have something to do with the riots. That is exactly how the Government wants to spin it and it will likely be successful once again. Just twisting the facts to fit its story.

9:40:53 PM    comment []



I guess this country has been screwed up for quite a while when the Student Union leaders at Central University (UCV) and Universidad de Los Andes (ULA) are named Stalin Gonzalez and Nixon Moreno respectively..

What were they parents thinking of? Funny thing is, they both ended up on the same side. I bet their parents never thought that possible.

(I just checked, there are over 1600 people with Nixon as first, second or last name registered to vote, very few as last name. Remarkably, there are only 1400-plus Stalin's, but over 4500 Lenin's)

7:37:29 PM    comment []



Former Yaracuy Governor Eduardo Lapi was detained this morning as his home was raided by the intelligence police. Reportedly he will be charged with misuse of funds. Thus, as the robolution robs, steals and charges commisions, opposition figures are detained for subtle charges of misuse of funds. If the same criterai were applied to the Government, they would all be in jail, beginning with William Lara who one no longer knows if he is speaking as Minister or as spokesman for Chavez' political party MVR. Or how about former CNE President Jorge Rodriguez who still has ten bodyguards and three official vehicles for his use.

8:37:34 AM    comment []



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