Media mayhem: violence in Venezuela sparked by press.
Hellinger, Daniel
Venezuela's traditional ruling class, in opposition to the
elected, populist president, Hugo Chavez Frias, has relied extensively
on the country's private media not only to tell its story but to
orchestrate its efforts to overthrow Chavez. The president has responded
with threats to enforce media laws requiring social responsibility. His
supporters, often egged on by the president's harsh rhetoric, have
staged noisy, sometimes threatening, rallies outside privately owned
newspapers and television stations. Occasionally these protests have
escalated into the sacking of stations and threats against the physical
safety of reporters.
On the other side, journalists face threats of firing by owners who
insist on unremittingly negative coverage of the government. Also,
reporters who are sympathetic to Chavez, especially those working for
the government owned Venezolana de Television, have been attacked by
middle class demonstrators.
Business organizations, which include a sector of labor led by
leaders associated with the discredited parties of the pre-Chavez era,
most of the nation's major newspapers, and all five of the private
national television networks launched the general strike on Dec. 2,
having failed on April 11 to force Chavez out via a military coup.
The Venezuelan crisis might attract little attention in the United
States were it not for the role of the country's oil in the North
American market. With a new Gulf War apparently inevitable, a general
strike threatened to remove the one element of Chavez's rule
designed to appease the Bush administration: keeping the flow of oil
steady. Almost the entire professional and managerial staff of the state
oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela, and enough of the workforce, walked
off the job, strangling exports during December and January.
Why is the Venezuelan media so hostile to Chavez? Opposition
journalists and media owners blame the president for their decision to
join the Coordinadora and abandon objectivity. They say he has abused
his right under Venezuela law to commandeer national broadcast time. By
labeling all critics, including the media, as the "squalid
ones," the president has distracted the population from his own
failings and incited anger against the media.
Government censorship was minimal in Venezuela before Chavez, but a
symbiotic relationship existed between the government and the media.
Political parties, directly subsidized by the state, spent massively on
advertising. The political sections of daily newspapers were packed with
ads announcing party forums, neighborhood celebrations, congratulatory
messages, ads for radio and television programs hosted by prominent
personalities.
The chavista agenda of change inevitably places him in conflict
with the highly globalized media. Chavez has proclaimed himself an
opponent of economic globalization and the uncontested hegemony of the
United States. Venezuela's media barons preside over enterprises
linked in many ways to national and global economic forces and
communications. So, the media responds in kind, almost welcoming
indiscreet condemnations as evidence that they are merely defending
democracy.
During the confusing period of April 10-14, 2002, Venezuela's
private media acted in a way strongly suggesting complicity in the plot
to overthrow Chavez. First, major news outlets brazenly invoked
opponents into the streets for a demonstration in front of oil company
headquarters; then they carried calls by organizers to march on the
presidential palace and demand the military remove Chavez. Thousands of
Chavez supporters had mobilized and military units were deployed to head
off any such action. Not surprisingly, when the two sides met near the
presidential palace, violence erupted. News teams edited film reports to
depict the resulting incident as an unprovoked act of repression by the
government. In fact, a majority of deaths were among Chavez
counter-demonstrators.
Community broadcasters
Using low power transmitters, camcorders and Internet technologies,
grassroots broadcasters had sprung up as an alternative to the mass
commercial media. Some were organized by "Bolivarian Circles"
linked closely to Chavez, but others are associated with social
movements that keep an arm's length from the president and his
movement. Alienated by the opening antagonistic role of the national
media, and angry about stereotyping of Venezuela's poor majority,
these groups have multiplied in the months since the April events and
played an important role in providing alternative, independent
reporting.
Community media groups have documented lethal aggression of Caracas
police against pro-Chavez groups. The state-run media have taken these
reports and others and re-broadcast them. All over the country and on
the internet, videotape interviews presenting pro-government narratives
have become available. In addition, these groups have created an
alternative cultural space for popular music, sporting events, etc.
Proposed legislation to legalize what the private media groups call
"pirate broadcasters" provided an additional motive for
commercial broadcasters to support the strike, which sought to oust the
president immediately, even though the Constitution allows for a
referendum on Chavez as early as August 2002.
Taking sides
or defending journalism?
Only the most sycophantic admirers of Chavez believe that his words
are not offensive. In a February 2001 broadcast, for example, the
president excoriated "a tiny group of four or five persons that for
years have accumulated money and media power" and accused them of
fomenting a conspiracy against him. "Down with these reporters and
capitalism," he concluded. Was the president prescient in
identifying how complicit the media were in plotting his overthrow, or
was he engaged in a self-fulfilling prophecy?
Media attacks on the president are just as virulent, but less
visible in international reporting. For example, the headline of El
Nacional on March 21, 2002, said, "Hugo Chavez admits to being the
head of a criminal network." Comparisons to Fidel Castro are among
the kinder references. More often columnists and talk show hosts compare
Chavez to Idi Amin, Mussolini, or Hitler. While unruly and threatening
chavista demonstrators are called "turbas" (mobs),
middle-class demonstrators who beat up journalists from pro-government
media or who nearly lynched government officials during April's
brief interregnum are labeled "civil society."
Rarely are positive actions on the part of Chavez acknowledged.
After the official Venezuelan press agency, VenPress, accused three
journalists of involvement in drug trafficking, the three took their
protests to the U.S. embassy and then on to Washington. The VenPress
report was repudiated publicly both by Chavez and his defense minister,
and the director of VenPress was censured and fired. This action was
little noted by international observers.
Adriana Oviedo, a psychology professor at the Central University,
says the Venezuelan private media have for months carried out
"systematic attacks on the psyche of the citizenry in order to
impede thought and reflection about the events of April 11. On the
contrary, it has fed the population day and night a permanent campaign
of incrimination of the government for the deaths that occurred on that
bitter day."
"The media, perhaps at this moment the most powerful political
organizations in the country," writes Margarita Lopez Maya, a
historian at the Central University, "lacks both rationality and a
culture of tolerance; defense of its private interests have become
central in its political activities."
On Dec. 6, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) wrote a
letter to Chavez detailing recent physical assaults on journalists. CPJ
criticized Chavez for failing to take "firm and decisive action to
investigate attacks against journalists and media outlets." CPJ
also included threats and assaults on the part of the opposition against
reporters for the government-owned network.
In its 2002 annual report, Reporters sans Frontieres (RSF) did not
list the threats and assaults of the opposition press. It states,
"The repeated verbal attacks of Hugo Chavez have continued,
although they have not been followed by acts of repression. Nonetheless,
the President's politics of intimidation have adopted new forms:
threatening to revoke the broadcasting license of a television station,
threatening tax audits, a proposal to limit freedoms ..."
In contrast to CPJ, which has sent teams to Venezuela to consult
with local human rights groups, RSF has tended to shoot from the hip. In
its 2002 annual report the latter organization fails to mention any
incidents threatening community journalists. The report recites a litany
of incidents and threats on the part of Chavez supporters and security
forces on several reporters. The report omits entirely the reference to
the open embrace of the attempted coup by some reporters, most notably
Patricia Poleo of the daily El Nuevo Pais.
Harshest in its condemnation of Chavez has been the Inter American
Press Association (IAPA). At its 58th General Assembly in Peru in late
October, the IAPA criticized the new Bolivian constitution for creating
a public right to truthful and objective information, a proposed law to
create a National Mass Media Oversight Council, and threats by the
president "to suspend the transmission signals of private radio and
television outlets, because of disagreement with their news
content." The IAPA also accused the president's supporters of
physically assaulting and threatening journalists and insinuated their
responsibility for the murder of a photojournalist.
The IAPA, aided by funds provided by the CIA, represents media
owners more than working journalists. The association has been
implicated in the successful destabilization orchestrated by the United
States.
Dan Hellinger, professor of political science at Webster University
is co-editor of Venezuela in the Chavez Era, just published by Lynne
Rienner.