Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Latest Breaking News
In reply to the discussion: Venezuela's poor join protests as turmoil grips Chávez's revolution [View all]Turborama
(22,109 posts)1. "Venezuela Erupts"
Hugo Chavez may have spewed hate, but he always kept a lid on repression. That may be over now.
By William J. Dobson
The tremors have been building for years, but on Wednesday night Venezuela was convulsed in a wave of violence as the government of President Nicolas Maduro appeared to enforce a brutal crackdown on nationwide protests. Streets were filled with tear gas and the crackle of gunfire, as National Guard units and National Police came out in force. Bands of regime supportersparamilitary gangs known as colectivosswarmed neighborhoods and public squares on their motorcycles, firing live ammunition at anyone who remained in the open. Some stormed into apartment buildings in search of protesters. The crackdown extended from Caracas to Maracaibo, Maracay, Valencia, and nearly every major city across the South American country. Venezuelas cities have become notoriously dangerous in recent years, as the countrys crime and murder rate soared. But on Wednesday, Venezuelan cities werent simply dangerous; they were a war zone.
As startling as the violence itself was the fact that the government gave no warning or explanation in advance. In a rambling national address earlier that day, President Maduro spoke of the need for peacethen praised the work of paramilitary thugs and promised to target members of Popular Will, a leading opposition party. Its leader, Leopoldo Lopez, was spending his second night in a military prison, after surrendering himself to authorities on Tuesday to face trumped-up charges implicating him for the death of three Venezuelans at protests. Even if Lopez, one of the oppositions best-known leaders, is imprisoned, Maduro isnt acting like the man with the upper hand. In his remarks Wednesday, he seemed erratic and unsure of himself, which only fuels rumors that he may have diminishing control over the state and its security forces.
The most focused target of the regimes repression has been the Popular Will party. Lopez is being held in the Ramo Verde military prison, a small facility that sits on a mountainside about an hour outside of Caracas. The remote prison has held other high-value political prisoners during Chavezs years in power. On Tuesday, security personnel raided the Popular Will partys headquarters in search of their second in command, Carlos Vecchio. Vecchio, a lawyer and activist, has been forced to go into hiding, and on Wednesday President Maduro confirmed that a warrant had been issued for his arrest. There were also unconfirmed reports that a warrant would soon be released for David Smolansky, the next highest party leader. A senior member of the party confirmed Thursday morning that most of the partys top leadership has either been detained or gone underground.
That may be the key difference between Venezuela today and before: For all of the combative rhetoric and venom spewed by Hugo Chavez, the Comandante always kept a lid on widespread repression. The late strongman was expert at verbally provoking and demonizing his opponents, but the threshold for a large-scale crackdown was never crossed. Chavez would unsettle his enemies, entertain half measures, or defuse a situation by simply directing his abuse at a wholly new target. But Maduro has never possessed his predecessors confidence, communication, or political canny, and he inherited a government rife with factions. Since his narrow election last April, the fear has been that Chavismos odd blend of bravado and insecurity would swing wildly in his hands, especially as the country dire economic conditions worsened. Early Thursday morning, a senior adviser to a Popular Will party leader described the situation as extremely fluid, before expressing surprise at Maduros decision to ramp up the confrontation. The government keeps upping the ante, he said.
Continues: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2014/02/nicolas_maduro_s_venezuela_erupts_in_violence_the_venezuelan_president_appears.html
By William J. Dobson
The tremors have been building for years, but on Wednesday night Venezuela was convulsed in a wave of violence as the government of President Nicolas Maduro appeared to enforce a brutal crackdown on nationwide protests. Streets were filled with tear gas and the crackle of gunfire, as National Guard units and National Police came out in force. Bands of regime supportersparamilitary gangs known as colectivosswarmed neighborhoods and public squares on their motorcycles, firing live ammunition at anyone who remained in the open. Some stormed into apartment buildings in search of protesters. The crackdown extended from Caracas to Maracaibo, Maracay, Valencia, and nearly every major city across the South American country. Venezuelas cities have become notoriously dangerous in recent years, as the countrys crime and murder rate soared. But on Wednesday, Venezuelan cities werent simply dangerous; they were a war zone.
As startling as the violence itself was the fact that the government gave no warning or explanation in advance. In a rambling national address earlier that day, President Maduro spoke of the need for peacethen praised the work of paramilitary thugs and promised to target members of Popular Will, a leading opposition party. Its leader, Leopoldo Lopez, was spending his second night in a military prison, after surrendering himself to authorities on Tuesday to face trumped-up charges implicating him for the death of three Venezuelans at protests. Even if Lopez, one of the oppositions best-known leaders, is imprisoned, Maduro isnt acting like the man with the upper hand. In his remarks Wednesday, he seemed erratic and unsure of himself, which only fuels rumors that he may have diminishing control over the state and its security forces.
The most focused target of the regimes repression has been the Popular Will party. Lopez is being held in the Ramo Verde military prison, a small facility that sits on a mountainside about an hour outside of Caracas. The remote prison has held other high-value political prisoners during Chavezs years in power. On Tuesday, security personnel raided the Popular Will partys headquarters in search of their second in command, Carlos Vecchio. Vecchio, a lawyer and activist, has been forced to go into hiding, and on Wednesday President Maduro confirmed that a warrant had been issued for his arrest. There were also unconfirmed reports that a warrant would soon be released for David Smolansky, the next highest party leader. A senior member of the party confirmed Thursday morning that most of the partys top leadership has either been detained or gone underground.
That may be the key difference between Venezuela today and before: For all of the combative rhetoric and venom spewed by Hugo Chavez, the Comandante always kept a lid on widespread repression. The late strongman was expert at verbally provoking and demonizing his opponents, but the threshold for a large-scale crackdown was never crossed. Chavez would unsettle his enemies, entertain half measures, or defuse a situation by simply directing his abuse at a wholly new target. But Maduro has never possessed his predecessors confidence, communication, or political canny, and he inherited a government rife with factions. Since his narrow election last April, the fear has been that Chavismos odd blend of bravado and insecurity would swing wildly in his hands, especially as the country dire economic conditions worsened. Early Thursday morning, a senior adviser to a Popular Will party leader described the situation as extremely fluid, before expressing surprise at Maduros decision to ramp up the confrontation. The government keeps upping the ante, he said.
Continues: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2014/02/nicolas_maduro_s_venezuela_erupts_in_violence_the_venezuelan_president_appears.html
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
190 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
Venezuela's poor join protests as turmoil grips Chávez's revolution [View all]
Turborama
Feb 2014
OP
"A foreign govt. spends millions to create shortages and make life intolerable under a Socialists.."
EX500rider
Feb 2014
#47
Go right ahead, and point out any LIES and distortions democrats here have posted
Judi Lynn
Feb 2014
#160
"Here at D.U. "we" like to refer to us as "members of the Democratic party..."
Judi Lynn
Feb 2014
#168
"You can't show they are dishonest because they don't think, act, or live like right-wingers...
EX500rider
Feb 2014
#185
Otherwise, why would people want to put into power a Harvard educated pampered...etc"
EX500rider
Feb 2014
#49
Democracy Now! is a progressive left, pro-democracy site, and therefore has no credibility here at
Zorra
Feb 2014
#17
I'd go with the assessment of the Venezuelan guy in the barrio in the OP over the US professor
Bacchus4.0
Feb 2014
#19
Everyone who says Lopez is behind the protests is enabling Lopez and the opposition.
joshcryer
Feb 2014
#21
"Your anti-Venezuela, anti-socialist and anti-democracy views have been noted"
EX500rider
Feb 2014
#190
Yeah because Yale and Harvard graduates have been doing a bangup job.
Fantastic Anarchist
Feb 2014
#183
Gotcha! Now spill the beans on the Bohemian Grove! I dare you to tell TheTruth©!
freshwest
Feb 2014
#107
Dirty my left foot--how desperate of you. You have NO problem "name calling" people you find
MADem
Feb 2014
#38
Well, it's quite clear that you are indulging in blatantly false character assassination.
MADem
Feb 2014
#44
Two people murdered an hour per day. The situation that underlies that. Cenk was fair, too.
freshwest
Feb 2014
#111
That should satisfy everyone, particularly if he's a honest man. I edited and asked questions, but
freshwest
Feb 2014
#113
Perhaps peace is at hand. Despite the dissing, I'll blame Obama for that! n/t
freshwest
Feb 2014
#115
The link says successive electoral victories. And 1% is still a win. The thing that struck me, IIRC,
freshwest
Feb 2014
#25
That is weird. But certainly explains the anomaly. Looks like civil war in Caracas, maybe all over?
freshwest
Feb 2014
#27
Is that the aftermath of the demonstrations we've seen? Looks very depressing. Anyway, good luck, VN
freshwest
Feb 2014
#31
"u spend a minimum of two weeks gaining somewhat of an idea of the history and politics of Latin Am"
EX500rider
Feb 2014
#162
War for oil and a class war -- the elite turn discontent to their favor just as they've done in U.S.
Lodestar
Feb 2014
#87
"The current problems have more to do with the successes rather than the failures of Chavismo."
EX500rider
Feb 2014
#97
Bring your proof, there's your credibility. Only the opposition has anything to gain
Judi Lynn
Feb 2014
#169