PANDEMONIUM
Coup D'Petrol
WATCH
No. 446
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Coup D'Petrol in Venezuela
By Gregory Wilpert
Caracas. Exactly one year after the opposition's first "general strike,"
on December 10, 2001, which launched the campaign to oust the democratically
elected president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, the opposition is engaged
in its fourth "general strike" and has come very close to finally achieving
its goal. The fourth employer-sponsored general strike, which began on
December 2, seemed to have a strong start, as traffic resembled a Sunday
and many stores and practically all private schools throughout the country
were closed that day. However, by the second day it was clear that the
strike would not last. Still, the opposition continued to extend the strike
for an additional day every day, each time finding new reasons to continue
the strike, even though it was clear that the strike had very little ongoing
support beyond a few large businesses, such as McDonald's and other fast
food chains, the supermarkets, and the private schools. The opposition,
which consists of the main Chamber of Commerce Fedecameras, the union
federation CTV, the coalition of opposition parties and organizations
gathered under the "Coordinadora Democratica," and the private mass media
kept claiming that the strike was a resounding success nonetheless.
The opposition's fortunes turned, however, when it pulled its trump card
on the fourth day of the strike: the managers and administrative workers
of Venezuela's oil company, PDVSA. Following a suspicious break-in at
a manager's home and the government's raid of a tanker captain's home,
managers and other white-collar workers of PDVSA staged a protest in front
of the oil company's headquarters. The National Guard immediately broke-up
this strike with tear gas and plastic bullets because the headquarters
had several months earlier been declared a "security zone" and off limits
to demonstrations, since it is of vital economic interest to the country.
Despite PDVSA's president's continuous efforts to negotiate with dissident
managers, these decided that it was time for them to join the strike,
given the recent events. The management and white-collar worker strike,
however, did not gain much momentum until tanker captains and dock workers
joined it.
The opposition received an additional and tremendous boost when the opposition's
leaders and the media took advantage of a terrible tragedy, in which a
gunman opened fire on a peaceful opposition rally and killed three and
wounded about 30 others. Opposition leaders immediately argued that the
government was responsible for this atrocity. For the next two days the
media continuously repeated the images of the chaos and confusion and
of the dead and wounded that were recorded immediately after the shooting.
The gunman was apprehended at the scene of the crime and within two hours
of the shooting, amateur video footage surfaced that supposedly showed
the gunman in the presence of pro-Chavez mayor Freddy Bernal a day earlier.
Investigators of the crime, however, have said that there is proof that
the gunman, Joao de Goveia, a Portuguese national, entered Venezuela from
Portugal the day before the shooting, but well after the footage of the
amateur video was taped. In other words, either the video image is not
of de Gouveia or the video might have been faked, which would not have
been too difficult, since the image is very grainy and dark because it was
filmed in the middle of the night. Apparently, de Goveia was living and
working in Venezuela, but had been abroad for a while, just before the
shooting.
As is usual in such high profile cases, the truth will probably never
be known beyond a reasonable doubt, since there are too many interests
at stake and too many people willing and in the position to forge evidence
or testimony. Still, there can be little doubt that this attack was of
absolutely no benefit to the government, since it rekindled a strike that
was faltering. As a result, it provided a big boost to the opposition's
campaign to oust President Chavez.
Opposition leaders' taking advantage of the attack and the relentless
media campaign of the five private television stations and eight or so
major newspapers, which consistently present only one perspective for
interpreting all events that take place in Venezuela, upset many pro-Chavez
Venezuelans even more with the media than they had already been. On the
eighth day of the strike, "Chavistas" surrounded the headquarters of all
of the major television stations in the capital and of several in the
rest of the country, staging loud pot-banging "cacerolazos." (The opposition
had already pioneered such protests on a regular basis at the building
of the state-run television channel, ever since the two-day coup in April,
but this never received any media attention, not even from the affected
station.) After a couple hours of pot-banging, the demonstrators withdrew,
at the behest of pro-Chavez legislators and OAS general secretary Cesar
Gaviria. To the media, these protests were additional proof that Venezuela
is a totalitarian country, of which Chavez is the dictator. Journalists
argued that their lives were threatened, even though it was quite clear
that these were peaceful protests. Still, the director of one TV channel
even went so far as to argue that the protests constituted "genocide."
One unoccupied station outside of Caracas did get looted, for which Chavistas
blamed radical elements of the opposition, since witnesses say that there
were no protests at that station that night.
Once again, these protests provided the ammunition the opposition needed
to justify he continuation of the strike. While the strike has been relatively
ineffective in the general population and especially among the poor, it
has had its most devastating effect in the state-owned oil company, PDVSA.
With the complete shut-down of Venezuela's main oil refinery, which is
also one of the largest in the world, the walk-out of key dock workers,
and the anchoring of tankers off of Venezuela's main ports, the supply
of oil has been halved, from 3 million barrels per day (bpd) to 1.5 million
bpd. Meanwhile, PDVSA's president, Ali Rodriguez, announced that a continued
stoppage of oil production and shipments would seriously harm the Venezuelan
economy, which is losing around $50 million per day as a result of the
strike. Also, nearly all of Venezuela's economic activity depends in one
way or another on the steady supply of oil from its own refineries, such
as gasoline for the transportation food to cities or of supplies to factories,
for the filling of airplanes that land in Venezuela with jet fuel, or
for the generation of electricity. Rodriguez also warned that Venezuela
would lose international oil customers and could default on debt payments,
if oil production was not restarted soon. So far the restriction of oil
supplies has had most of its impact on the lack of gasoline at many gas
stations, especially in the country's interior, leading to long lines
at gas stations throughout the country, due to consumer fears that their
local gas station would soon run out of gasoline.
As of this writing (Dec. 16), the government claims that it has by and
large managed to regain control over the oil production and shipping process,
with the help of the military, so that oil supply should be back to normal
within a few days. The opposition, however, denies this and warns that
serious industrial accidents could result because unqualified personnel
are taking control of the installations.
Both the opposition and the government are keeping up their efforts to
mobilize their supporters through large mobilizations. On December 7 the
government organized a large demonstration at the presidential palace,
which attracted several hundred thousand supporters, at which Chavez promised
that just as he had defeated the opposition in the seven elections of
1998 to 2001, he would defeat them again in the current confrontation. The
opposition, for its part, organized a massive demonstration of its own,
also attracting hundreds of thousands of its supporters, on December 14th.
These demonstrations proved, once again, that both the government and
the opposition enjoy widespread popular support. Of course, the private
media in Venezuela does not reflect this and covers only opposition demonstrations,
leaving the impression to non-participating observers that only the opposition
has popular support.
It would seem that where the opposition's efforts to oust Chavez via a
non-stop media campaign, large demonstrations, a coup, and four "general"
strikes have largely failed, the management take-over, or coup, of the
oil company might succeed. The scenarios for doing so are still murky,
though. Many among the more radical elements of the opposition, to which
the main actors behind the "general strike" belong, such as Fedecameras
President Carlos Fernandez, CTV President Carlos Ortega, and Caracas Mayor
Alfredo Peña, seem to be hoping for another military coup attempt.
These three continuously issue calls to the military to "abide by their
mission," to "defend the constitution," and to avert Venezuela's "castro-communist
dictatorship." The more moderate elements of the opposition, such as CTV
general secretary Manuel Cova and NGO-leader Elias Santana of "Queremos
Elegir," seem to placing their bets on a negotiated settlement for early
elections. However, the OAS-mediated negotiations have so far stalled
and it is far from certain that they will reach any kind of agreement
before Christmas. What is for sure, however, is that the opposition and
a significant number of Venezuela's businesses prefer to commit economic
suicide, in its efforts to oust Chavez, and to drag the country down with
it.
Gregory Wilpert is a sociologist and freelance journalist living in Venezuela.
He is currently working on a book on the Chavez presidency, which will
be published by Zed Books in 2003.
COPYRIGHT, Gregory Wilpert.
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