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Narco News: Don't Cry for Venezuela's RCTV
Yet another perspective on the Venezuela media debacle.
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Don't Cry for Venezuela's RCTV> By Charlie Hardy,
> Posted on Sun May 27th, 2007 at 04:27:42 PM EST
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> As I write this, I am looking at a Venezuelan newspaper, El Diario, from February 10, 1992. The editorial that would have occupied half of page 2 is missing. Page 4 is completely blank. The contents were censored by the government of the then president Carlos Andres Perez.
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> The newspaper is just one of many horrible memories of the pre-Hugo Chavez days in Venezuela’s “exceptional” democracy.
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> U.S. newspapers seem to overlook what Venezuela used to be like as they today discuss the actions of the current government. I have lived in Venezuela for most of the past 22 years and have never experienced such freedom as that which the Venezuelan population enjoys today under Hugo Chavez. That would include freedom of information. Never, in the past 22 years, has the mass media experienced the freedom it has had during the presidency of Chavez. One can freely buy anti-Chavez newspapers on streets and the airwaves and television channels are amply filled with anti-Chavez commentators.
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> However, today, May 27, the Venezuelan government will not renew the license of RCTV, a television station that has been on the air for over 50 years. The owner, Marciel Granier, has been running around the world crying because he is about to loose his license. Even the millionaires in the U.S. Senate feel he should get to keep the license. Interestingly, Granier was president of the censored El Diario in 1992. He didn’t complain then. I bought his newspaper. He got his money.



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 17:04 on June 1st, 2007
Angryindian, May I recall that during the Christian Democratic presidency of Rafael Caldera´s (1994-1999), astrologer Jose Bernardo Gomez was sent to jail. He had predicted some planet misalignment in President Caldera´s chart and his possible death. Such prediction was not the liking of an ageing President. Also when a journal publicized some private affair between President Jaime Lusinchi (1984-1989) and his private secretary and lover Blanca Ibáñez that journal lost its subsidies. Ibañes fled Venezuela under corruption charges. Furthermore, during the administration of Christian Democrat Luis Herrera Campins (1979-1984), RCTV banned from TV. He had regulated tobacco commercials on TV on health grounds.. RCTV lost money for that health regulation. So it promoted restrictions on the President appearance on TV for many years. Your story is Good stuff.