Chávez Says He Chews Coca Daily A Regular Cokehead

by mpress | January 21, 2008 at 06:24 am
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Chávez Says He Chews Coca Daily A Regular Cokehead

Chávez Says He Chews Coca Daily A Regular Cokehead

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Chavez admits he is addicted to the coca. Maybe that is why Hollywood loves him so much? Sean Penn must have great conversations about how evil the US is while enjoying the natural mind altering candy Chavez seems to love. Maybe that is why he is a danger to his own people. What a great role model for the children of Latin America?

Venezuela's controversial President Hugo Chávez has revealed that he regularly consumes coca -- the source of cocaine -- raising questions about the legality of his actions.

Chávez's comments on coca initially went almost unnoticed, coming amid a four-hour speech to the National Assembly during which he made international headlines by calling on other countries to stop branding two leftist Colombian guerrilla groups as terrorists and instead recognize them as ``armies.''

''I chew coca every day in the morning . . . and look how I am,'' he is seen saying on a video of the speech, as he shows his biceps to the audience.

Chávez, who does not drink alcohol, added that just as Fidel Castro ''sends me Coppelia ice cream and a lot of other things that regularly reach me from Havana,'' Bolivian President Evo Morales ``sends me coca paste . . . I recommend it to you.''

It was not clear what Chávez meant. Indigenous Bolivians and Peruvians can legally chew coca leaves as a mild stimulant and to kill hunger. But coca paste is a semi-refined product -- between leaves and cocaine -- considered highly addictive and often smoked as basuco or pitillo.

''It is another symptom that [Chávez] has totally lost the concept of limits,'' said Aníbal Romero, a political scientist with the Caracas Metropolitan University. ``It shows Chávez is a man out of control.''

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rahul

Remember Panama´s Noriega? Do you drink Coke? From a different perspective than anticastro Miamiherald, another story emerges. The US administration attempt to link Chavez to drug trafficking.


Venezuela to Denounce the U.S. in the OAS Due to False Accusations of Drug Trafficking
January 23rd 2008, by Telesur
The Venezuelan government will denounce the USA to the Organization of American States (OAS) because it accused the South American country of allowing drug trafficking in the region.

According to a communiqué drafted by Venezuela's National Anti-drug Office (ONA in Spanish), the Venezuelan Ambassador to the OAS, Jorge Valero, will ask the body to denounce the U.S. attacks against Venezuela.

The ONA President, Néstor Reverol, labeled the U.S anti-drug Czar's statements as irresponsible and demanded not to use the fight against drug trafficking and consumption as a political weapon. He also assured that the Venezuelan state has carried on an acknowledged fight against this problem.

"The 2007 World Report on Drugs shows that Venezuela is the third country with the most drug seizures in three years in a row. 50% of Colombia's drugs use the Pacific ocean as passage and we do not border the Pacific. It is important not to use this issue as a political weapon," he said to the multi-state TV station TeleSUR

In 2007, Venezuela seized 52 tons of drugs, arrested over 4,000 people and destroyed 11 laboratories manufacturing one ton of drugs per month. Likewise, international cooperation regarding this issue has become stronger.

"Venezuela has endorsed over 50 agreements and it will sign most of them as long as three basic elements and the sovereignty of peoples are respected."

Venezuelan authorities claim that Colombia is the main drug producer, the U.S. the main drug consumer, and that Venezuela is used as a transit route.

According to Jesús Antonio Bermúdez, an official in the National Anti-drug Command, they "are trying to hit big drug cartels operating on the border."


TeleSUR / Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Source URL:
Printed: January 26th 2008

Chavez Attacks Latest U.S. “Media Offensive” Against Venezuela
January 21st 2008, by Kiraz Janicke - Venezuelanalysis.com

Caracas, January 21, 2008 (venezuelanalysis.com) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez compared his Colombian counterpart Alvaro Uribe to a Mafia boss and accused him of being a "sad pawn of US imperialism," in response to what he called a "Colombian media offensive" and the recent visit of top US authorities to Colombia, such as Pentagon Joint Chief of Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen and head of the US's Office of National Drug Control Policy, John Walters. Walters had accused Chavez of "making Venezuela a haven" for drug smuggling.

Relations between Venezuela and Colombia deteriorated in November last year after Uribe abruptly terminated Chavez's mediating role in negotiations with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) for the release of 45 hostages. Despite Chavez's success in securing the release of two hostages, Clara Rojas and Consuelo Gonzalez de Perdomo on January 10, tensions heightened again last week after Chavez said the FARC should be removed from the list of terrorist organizations of Colombia, the U.S., and the EU., upon which Colombia accused Chavez of "interference."

While he criticized Venezuela, Walters praised Colombia - the world's number one cocaine exporter, producing 60% of all cocaine - for its efforts to combat drug trafficking.

Walters' comments are part of an international campaign "against Venezuela, against the revolution, against the Venezuelan people," Chavez said during his weekly Sunday TV program Alo Presidente.

"They attack me, they accuse me of being a narco-trafficker and they are repeating this to the whole world, but such is life, one that goes around fighting for peace they accuse of being a threat," he added.

In reality, Chavez argued, it is President Uribe who is linked with drug trafficking paramilitary groups, "He has strong connections with paramilitaries, only the gringos protect him because he is their pawn."

Thirty-five Colombian legislators, including many of Uribe's political supporters and family members are currently under investigation by the Colombian Supreme Court for links to the paramilitaries and in 1991 Uribe himself appeared on the US State Department's list of the top 100 drug traffickers.

US criticism of Venezuelan drug interdiction efforts have increased ever since Venezuela suspended cooperation with the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in 2005, saying DEA operatives were carrying out illegal political espionage.

However, Venezuela has repeatedly ratified its determination to combat drug trafficking and in 2007 intercepted and decommissioned 57.5 tons of drugs and destroyed 13 illegal cocaine laboratories near the border region with Colombia.

Vice President Ramón Carrizalez also announced a plan on Saturday to increase National Guard operations in collaboration with Justice and Interior Minister Rodríguez Chacín and the governors of Merida, Apure, Tachira, Zulia and Barinas to combat crime and insecurity along the border region with Colombia, a problem which he said is a direct result of the military operations of Plan Colombia in the neighboring country.

"We are working...to combat insecurity in the frontier that translates into hired assassinations, smuggling, the presence of paramilitaries, homicides...an effect of the implementation of Plan Colombia."

The announcement comes after 145 tons of contraband food items headed for Colombia were found in San Cristobal, Tachira last week in an anti-smuggling operation by Venezuelan intelligence services. The items included a number of basic food products that are regulated by the government such as powdered milk, rice, sugar, cooking oil, cereal and canned fish. The government says that speculation and hoarding by private producers has contributed food shortages of basic products.

The regional daily, Panorama, reported that every night 50 to 60 trucks load up with Venezuelan food products such as rice and milk, leave the Las Pulgas market in Maracaibo in the opposition controlled state of Zulia and cross over the Colombian border illegally where they sell the products at up to five times the regulated price in Venezuela.
 
"No one says anything because the business is very big," said an anonymous vendor in the Las Pulgas market to Panorama. "In order to not have any problems in transporting it is necessary to pay what they ask [the border guards], but in the end they earn a lot more there than here because of the regulation of prices implemented by the government," he added.

As part of the measures adopted to combat smuggling and crime in the frontier zone a further 500 tons of food loaded onto 18 semi-trailers that were destined for Colombia were intercepted today and a clandestine landing strip near the border, along with a camp thought to be used for narco-trafficking logistics were uncovered.
 
Source URL:
Printed: January 26th 2008
License: Published under a Creative Commons license (by-nc-nd). See creativecommons.org for more information.

Swan
Swan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:37 on January 26th, 2008

Hello Mpress,

It's long been suspected that Chávez is an addict, often by his animated, erratic behavior and custom of contradicting himself.  While the CIA., have also been linked with drug trafficking, it's often because of events such as when the CIA plane crashed in the Yucatan Peninsula last year on October 24th.  It's a really interesting story, and you can read more about it here.

Hello Rahul,

Thank you for your wonderful contribution to Mpress' article - that too was GOOD STUFF!
      ~ Swan

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René

That explains a lot.

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First Flagged at 1:36 PM, Jan 26, 2008 by Swan
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