The United States Senate is getting ready to endorse a resolution
in favor of freedom of expression and private TV channel Radio
Caracas Televisión (RCTV), on the initiative of Senator
Richard Lugar, a Republican for Indiana, and Democrat pre-candidate
Christopher Dodd. The proposal is to be submitted next Thursday
to the Committee on Foreign Relations, and the Senate is expected
to approve it "unanimously." Additional co-sponsors are expected
to join the initiative. This resolution is similar to an instrument
backed by the Chilean Senate about one month ago.
The draft resolution 211 follows:
110th Congress
1ST SESSION
RESOLUTION
Expressing the profound concern of the Senate regarding the
transgression against freedom of thought and expression that
is being carried out in Venezuela, and for other purposes.
Whereas, for several months, the President of Venezuela,
Hugo Chávez, has been announcing over various media that
he will not renew the current concession of the television
station ''Radio Caracas Television'', also known as RCTV,
which is set to expire on May 27, 2007, because of its adherence
to an editorial stance different from his way of thinking;
Whereas President Chavez justifies this measure based on
the alleged role RCTV played in the unsuccessful unconstitutional
attempts in April 2002 to unseat President Chavez, under circumstances
where there exists no filed complaint or judicial sentence
that would sustain such a charge, nor any legal sanction against
RCTV that would prevent the renewal of its concession, as
provided for under Venezuelan law;
Whereas the refusal to renew the concession of any television
or radio broadcasting station that complies with legal regulations
in the matter of telecommunications constitutes a transgression
against the freedom of thought and expression, which is prohibited
by Article 13 of the American Convention on Human Rights,
signed at San Jose, Costa Rica, July 18, 1978, which has been
signed by the United States;
Whereas that convention establishes that ''the right of expression
may not be restricted by indirect methods or means, such as
the abuse of government or private controls over newsprint,
radio broadcasting frequencies, or equipment used in the dissemination
of information, or by any other means tending to impede the
communication and circulation of ideas and opinions'';
Whereas the Inter-American Declaration of Principles on Freedom
of Expression, approved by the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights, states in Principle 13, "The exercise of power
and the use of public funds by the state, the granting of
customs duty privileges, the arbitrary and discriminatory
placement of official advertising and government loans; the
concession of radio and television broadcast frequencies,
among others, with the intent to put pressure on and punish
or reward and provide privileges to social communicators and
communications media because of the opinions they express
threaten freedom of expression, and must be explicitly prohibited
by law. The means of communication have the right to carry
out their role in an independent manner. Direct or indirect
pressures exerted upon journalists or other social communicators
to stifle the dissemination of information are incompatible
with freedom of expression.'';
Whereas, according to the principles of the American Convention
on Human Rights and the Inter-American Declaration of Principles
on Freedom of Expression, to both of which Venezuela is a
party, the decision not to renew the concession of the television
station RCTV is an assault against freedom of thought and
expression and cannot be accepted by democratic countries,
especially by those in North America who are signatories to
the American Convention on Human Rights;
Whereas the most paradoxical aspect of the decision by President
Chavez is that it trongly conflicts with two principles from
the Liberator Simon Bolívar's thinking, principles President
Chavez says inspire him, which state that ''[p]ublic opinion
is the most sacred of objects, it needs the protection of
an enlightened government which knows that opinion is the
fountain of the most important of events,'' and that ''[t]he
right to express one's houghts and opinions, by word, by writing
or by any other means, is the first and most worthy asset
mankind has in society. The law itself will never be able
to prohibit it.''; and
Whereas the United States should raise its concerns about
these and other serious restrictions on freedoms of thought
and expression being imposed by the Government of Venezuela
before the Organization of American States:
Now, therefore, be it
1 Resolved, That the Senate
(1) expresses its profound concern about the transgression
against freedom of thought and ex pression that is being
attempted and committed in Venezuela by the refusal of
the President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, to renew the concession
of the television station ''Radio Caracas Televisión'' (RCTV)
merely because of its adherence to an editorial and informational
stance distinct from the thinking of the Government of
Venezuela; and
(2) strongly encourages the Organization of American
States to respond appropriately, with full consideration
of the necessary institutional instruments, to such transgression.
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