Lagniappe
Simon Romero:
In
Chávez territory, signs of dissent
Three
days before a referendum that would vastly expand the powers
of President Hugo Chavez,
this city's streets were packed with tens of thousands of opponents
to the change on Thursday, a sign that Venezuelans may be balking
at placing so much authority in the hands of one man.
Even some of Mr. Chavez's most fervent supporters are beginning
to show signs of hesitation at supporting the constitutional
changes he is promoting, including ending term limits for the
president and greatly centralizing his authority.
New fissures are emerging among his once-cohesive supporters,
pointing to the toughest test at the polls for Mr. Chavez in
his nine-year presidency.
In the slums of the capital, where some of the president's staunchest
backers live amid the cinder block hovels, debate over the changes
has grown more intense in recent days.
"Chávez is delirious if he thinks we're going to
follow him like sheep," said Ivonne Torrealba, 29, a hairdresser
in Coche who supported Mr. Chávez in every election beginning
with his first campaign for president in 1998. "If this
government cannot get me milk or asphalt for our roads, how is
it going to give my mother a pension?"
Both Mr.
Chávez and his critics say opinion polls show
they will prevail, suggesting a highly contentious outcome. For
the first time in years, Venezuela did not invite electoral observers
from the Organization of American States and the European Union
, opening the government to claims of fraud if he wins.
Violence
has already marked the weeks preceding to the vote. Two students
involved in antigovernment protests claimed they
were kidnapped and tortured this week by masked men in Barquisimeto,
an interior city. And in Valencia, another city, a supporter
of Mr. Chávez was shot dead this week in an exchange of
gunfire at a protest site.
Tension has
also been heightened by rare criticism of the constitutional
overhaul from a breakaway party in Mr. Chávez's coalition
in the National Assembly and former confidants of the president,
and the government has reacted to this dissent by describing
it as "treason."
Meanwhile,
Mr. Chávez and senior officials here have
exhibited increasingly erratic behavior ahead of the referendum.
Mr. Chávez has lashed out at leaders in Colombia and Spain
and asked for an investigation into whether CNN was seeking to
incite an assassination attempt against him.
Reports of
such plots are not in short supply here. State television also
broadcast coverage this week of a memorandum in Spanish
claimed to be written by the C.I.A. in which destabilization
plans against Mr. Chávez were laid out. A spokesman for
the United States embassy here was unavailable for comment on
the report.
Other analysts,
including investigators who had previously uncovered financing
of Venezuelan opposition groups by the United States
government, expressed doubts about the authenticity of the memo,
dubbed by Venezuelan officials as part of a plan called "Operation
Pliers."
"I find the document quite suspect," said Jeremy Bigwood,
an independent researcher in Washington. "There's not an
original version in English, and the timing of its release is
strange. Everything about it smells bad."
The simple
home of Ms. Torrealba, the hairdresser, located near open sewage
alongside a deafening highway in southwestern Caracas,
is a case in point. Last December, she and her siblings awoke
at dawn with fireworks to celebrate Mr. Chávez's re-election
to a six-year term, which he won with 63 percent of the vote.
This year,
the mood in Ms. Torrealba's home is glum. Her sister, Yohana
Torrealba, 20, said she was alarmed by what she viewed
as political intimidation by teachers in Misión Ribas,
a social welfare program where she takes remedial high-school-level
courses.
"The instructors told us we had to vote in favor and demonstrate
on the streets for Chávez," Yohana Torrealba said. "They
want Venezuela to become like Cuba."
Throughout
the slums of Coche, confusion persists about how life could
change if the constitutional changes are approved.
Many residents who own their homes, however humble they may be,
fear the government could take control of their property, despite
efforts to dispel those fears by Mr. Chávez's government.
Others wonder
what will happen to the mayor and the governor they elected
if Mr. Chávez wins the power to handpick
rulers for new administrative regions he wants to create. Still
others said they were afraid of voting against the proposal out
of concern the government could discriminate against its opponents
if their vote is made public.
But Mr. Chávez also commands an unrivaled political machine,
with his supporters controlling every major institution of government
and the loyalty of many voters in Coche and elsewhere. "It's
a lie that they're going to take our houses away," said
Yanelcy Maitán, 40. "No one has done more for the
poor than Chávez."
Simon
Romero is
the New York Times' Andean correspondent, base in caracas. Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
note: This commentary was originally published by The New
York Times,
on November 29, 2007. Petroleumworld
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News 11/30/07
Copyright© 2007
Simon Romero. All rights reserved.
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