CARACAS, Thursday December 04, 2008 | Update
Country
The National Journalist Association (CNP) denounced again
in a written statement that "the government is waging
a political offensive through the coercive bodies of the state
to frighten both the opposition and people who are not aligned
with its interests and goals."
The CNP claims that such strategy, which features all the
elements of "low-intensity state terrorism," has unfolded
in a number of examples, including legal attacks against private
TV news network Globovisión; criminalization of political
association as evidenced by the legal process that could be
initiated against opposition group 2D Movement; accusations
against opposition leader Manuel Rosales; capricious and violent
attacks against opposition activists and supporters of some
candidates who won governor's offices and mayoralties in recent
elections; and the offensive and rude words voiced by the
Venezuelan president against his opponents.
The Venezuelan Journalist Association highlighted "the unspeakable
attack the ineffable (pro-government) group known as
La Piedrita conducted against journalist and university professor
Marta Colomina. Such assault was followed by grotesque
permissiveness and impunity. Rather than enforcing the
law and punishing aggressors, the Minister of Interior and
Justice only released a general statement rejecting the incident,
as if the country was ruled by other people."
The CNP urged the Venezuelan government to act properly
and stop hostilities and insults that jeopardize the
coexistence of all Venezuelans.
Translated by Gerardo
Cárdenas
05:09 PM. Economy. If any country has cashed in on the Bolivarian revolution, that is Brazil, particularly the private companies of the southern neighbor. Over the past five years, it has been awarded contracts for works to be carried out in Venezuela for over USD 14 billion. This puts it as the first recipient of government-to-government contracts, that is, without bidding, since Hugo Chávez took office.