Hugo Chavez wants to capitalise on Lopez Obrador possible triumph in Mexico
by Raul Tortolero
Response to Venezuelan Foreign
Minister Alí Rodríguez Araque. Yesterday, on a Monday,
we woke up in Mexico hearing statements by Venezuelan
Foreign Minister Alí Rodríguez Araque alleging that
we, members of the Mexican press and the government,
were plotting against his government in a
well-orchestrated campaign.
Allow me to clarify a few points, Señor Rodríguez. It
is very clear what your true intentions are as you
make these statements, which of course are not part of
reality, but instead belong to a campaign in favor of
López Obrador.
While wanting to deny this connection, you make it
evident. And I will tell you right away why I think
so. In Mexico it is simply impossible for the press to
be in lockstep agreement with the federal government
in order to harm someone as far removed as Mr. Hugo
Chávez.
But for no other reason than that the government has
never been able to even agree with itself to the
extent that it might be able to orchestrate an
international onslaught against anybody. President Fox
has made enemies with Kirschner, with Evo, and with
Chávez.
In other words, not just with Chávez. He does not
enjoy such exclusivity. Not at all. Evidence of Fox’s
lack of tact vis-a-vis international diplomacy
abounds. The Venezuelans know it. Fox has embarked
upon distancing our country from our Latin American
brethren with his unnecessarily clumsy actions. These
are totally useless.
Some months ago he stated something much too absurd,
as if speaking on behalf of us, the people of Mexico,
namely: that in the United States we did work “not
even black people” were willing to do. As a result of
that, you will recall, Señor Alí Rodríguez, protests
were unleashed by black groups in our neighboring
country to the north. And these opinions by Fox were
not because of any racist campaign or any plot by the
Ku Klux Klan, or posturing by a supremacist of the
Mexican postcolonial Creole aristocracy. No.
It was only because Fox has not yet finished
connecting his brain to his speech stream and he
truthfully makes us suffer many embarrassing moments
internationally. Just a few days ago, at a meeting
held by Fox with the Japanese, our chief executive
said that our populist governments had tricked us “as
if we were a bunch of despicable Chinese.”
In other words, his mouth again. This fish is dying
because of his mouth. Certainly causing indignation
now among Chinese communities within and outside of
Mexico. A few months back he expressed during an
interview that if Evo Morales, upon rising to power,
had no intention of commercializing Bolivia’s natural
gas then perhaps “he was going to have to eat it.” Evo
Morales found that to be annoying and rightly so.
Then Fox softened up and said that the press had
misinterpreted him. Then this same press, that always
misinterprets him and only prints about his verbal and
diplomatic blunders, would be the one which, according
to you, Mr. Foreign Minister, is very much united with
Fox in order to affect Venezuela. It is impossible.
Remember when, in Mar del Plata, Fox began to defend
certain positions closely aligned with US interests
that annoyed the Argentine president? Well, Señor Alí,
even Maradona began to criticize our president. Just
imagine. And then came the mutual accusations between
Fox and Chávez, where both ended up, in the eyes of
public opinion, “getting pricked,” because no people
can feel proud when their presidents waste time
playing “he said, she said.”
If you were to read the homepages of the Mexican news
media websites, Señor Alí (I do not know if that is
allowed in Cuba, where you are currently staying), you
would realize that everyday here, without exception,
the right and the left, and also the center, criticize
Fox, without any restrictions, for each and every one
of his mistaken statements concerning other countries’
policies and recently even comments against women’s
dignity. He referred to them using the phrase: “two
legged washing machines,” thus creating an obvious
unrest among the ladies.
Do you see it, Mr. Foreign Minister? Do you see it?
Everyday the Mexican press finds new reasons for
criticizing Fox and we criticize him all the time with
absolutely nothing to fear. Well now, you cannot
affirm the same thing with respect to Venezuela,
because in your country, as you are well aware,
everyday there are reports of harassment, persecution,
aggression and threats directed against journalists,
and a series of attitudes contrary to the free
practice of journalism.
You need no proof of this, since many worthy
Venezuelan journalists who continue to publish the
truth without bowing their heads —not without dread
for reprisals, but with more courage than fear— have
been able to document it.
Only yesterday, while you were stating that the
Mexican government and the press were plotting against
Chávez —something that could have been caused only by
an overdose of anesthesia in your nervous system— an
order was being issued for the arrest of the
prestigious journalist Ybéyise Pacheco. What do you
say about that? Here in Mexico, Señor Alí, the drug
traffickers are the journalists’ only enemies. We have
already had colleagues die from bullet wounds, but in
no case has it been due to government prosecution.
At least during this six year presidential term, there
has been a respect for freedom of expression. Not one
single journalist is in jail for having written
opinions against the federal government. There are
harassing lawsuits against some of our companions,
remnants from other times; there are pressures, but
the truth is that here we can write as we please. And
in Venezuela, what about that, Señor Rodríguez? Now
there will be time for me to write, on my own, the
entire list of Venezuelan colleagues behind bars.
And, as I was telling you, the Mexican federal
government doesn’t agree with itself either, something
that proves that it is unable to orchestrate anything
in unified fashion, much less against Chávez. When
some political figures —among them many from the
federal government— pushed to strip Andrés Manuel
López Obrador of his immunity as member of the chamber
of deputies, their lack of judgment and strategies
only led to the opposite results of what they sought,
that is to say, they ended up helping El Peje [López
Obrador’s nickname]. If the government had been run as
a unit and had any discipline, the results would have
been different, but that was not so. The cabinet
secretaries throughout this six year term have shown
overwhelming examples of why they cannot work as a
team. Then, what part of the government is it that is
working in unison along with “the press” against
Venezuela? And what are we going to draw from this?
Do not build up your hopes, Señor Rodríguez. It is one
thing for Fox to be a “loose lip” who speaks nonsense
without making up for the enormous and grave
diplomatic consequences that he causes, and another
thing for him to have the strategic and logistical
capacity to orchestrate anti-Chávez attacks.
You cannot demonstrate this in any way. The Mexican
press stands in solidarity whenever it is attacked by
external factors, such as narcotraffic, but meanwhile,
all the time is spent on competing for reports and
information, and the editorial lines are much too
different so as to have everyone in full agreement
—not least with Fox— in order to slander Venezuela.
That does not happen in Venezuela either.
And how are they all going to get together in order to
attack Mexico? Is it not true that is not possible?
I myself have published in the LA REVISTA section of
EL UNIVERSAL (Mexico City) some texts where I approach
the issue of the mission the then-ambassador Vladimir
Villegas would have had in Mexico. The foundations of
these texts are very clear: one is an interview with
Villegas himself, exactly meant so that he would not
later claim that we had not taken him into account.
That we had not received his opinion. Then we asked
him everything we wanted to and he had the chance to
respond. And, for certain, everything he said was
published without changing even a single comma. It was
a respectful encounter.
The other article spoke of the presence of Bolivarian
circles, of the friendship between Perredistas
[members of the Party of the Democratic
Revolution—PRD] and Villegas, of the presence of
Villegas at campaign events of Perredista candidate
Marcelo Ebrard, and at events with people from the
Cuban embassy and Perredista members of the chamber of
deputies where they promoted taking up Cuban and
Venezuelan educational and social programs in order to
integrate them into López Obrador’s “Alternative
Project for Nationhood.” Also, some months ago we
documented for NOTICIERO DIGITAL in Venezuela and
VCRISIS in London the new profile of the PRD youth,
many of whom sympathize with Chávez and have formed
Bolivarian circles. If writing about that constitutes
an anti-Chávez campaign, there is nothing to be said.
But of course it is not so.
A few days ago there appeared in the daily LA CRÓNICA
some reports that described the activities of those
circles in México in support of the Perredista
campaign. I spoke to my friend Pablo Hiriart, the
director of that paper about the words Alí Rodríguez
is directing at us, the Mexican journalists.
Hiriart considers these conspiracy theories fit in
with very paranoid political views. I asked him what
he thinks Rodríguez pursues with his statements, and
he told me that he does not know, but that there
really are Bolivarian circles here, that the former
ambassador admitted that he met with Bolivarian
circles. But that there is no proof of links to the
money. “If I had it I would have published it,” he
tells me. But the evidence is there that Chávez has
financed other countries and would have no reason not
to do it here.
Precisely. Only let’s remember how many millions he
gave to Evo a while back. Just like that, as if he
were his godfather. And doesn’t he help Ollanta
Humala? And what about helping Daniel Ortega?
On his part, journalist Joaquín López Dóriga on RADIO
FÓRMULA then interviews López Obrador yesterday and of
course the PRD candidate denies having any links with
Chavismo. The claim that he is being financed by Hugo
Chávez is just “a crude remark,” he said. “Let them
present proof that Chávez finances me. I am inspired
by Morelos, Juárez, Villa, Zapata; I do not need to go
looking for examples outside the country.”
That is to say that Chávez, according to El Peje,
would not be an example to be followed. That is
comforting should it be true, something we will be
verifying along each step of the way, if it turns out
that López Obrador wins the elections. Because in case
there is any resemblance, we will have been tricked.
In Mexico we do not want any hard or soft core
dictatorships, nor governments that gain power through
the vote only to make plans never to surrender it and
conduct “accommodating” elections, in which nobody
believes and absenteeism prevails, with other
“accommodating” candidates who represent none other
than a simulation that legitimizes the elections. And
we do not need messianic leaderships based on the
ecstasy of petroleum, which only increases the number
of poor people.
Therefore, Señor Rodríguez, I will tell you that your
statements made this past Monday are so lacking in
adherence to the Mexican reality, where —as I have
said— not even the Mexican government ever gets its
act together to do anything, let alone with the press,
all of which only make evident exactly that which we
discovered a long time ago: that you and Chávez no
longer know how to even try to help López Obrador.
That you people are looking for a way to have the
probable victory of El Peje be perceived at the
international level as a victory for continental
Chavismo, of a victory where Chávez appears to be the
regional ideological leader that he is not. There is
no other explanation for the presence in Mexico
specifically by someone like Villegas, who served his
term as ambassador to Brazil during the Lula campaign,
so questioned now for having received foreign
financing.
Likewise there is no explanation either for your
performance this past Monday. I propose to you that if
you really want to repair our bilateral relations that
you look up Mexican federal legislative deputy
Emiliano Ramos, a friend of Chávez, of Villegas and of
many Mexican politicians. I have spoken at length with
him. He is a sincere fellow and a fighter. He can
serve as a bridge of friendship between peoples, I
would say, provided he does not start wanting to
import Chavista ideas into our country and behaves at
the level of the circumstances.
At the same time, Señor Rodríguez —and I must leave
you now because you are on a Cuban holiday due to your
health— you can speak with legislative deputy Rodrigo
Iván Cortés, of a tendency very different from that of
Ramos, but who can also serve as a bridge for
understanding. And please do it for Venezuelans,
because we are very much aware that keeping alive the
flame of his fight against Fox is all that suits
Chávez.
P.S. Today we express our solidarity with journalist
Ybéyise Pacheco, for whom an order of arrest has been
issued in Venezuela. There, one finds one more bit of
evidence of the lack of freedom of expression under
the Chávez regime. Ybéyise, perhaps you might want to
seek exile here in Mexico. I say this seriously. We,
your fellow Mexican journalists, would be delighted to
have you because you would have so much to tell us
about how the great Chavista democracy spends its time
against those who seek the truth. And here nobody will
throw you in jail.
Source: Vcrisis.com
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