Lagniappe
Gustavo
Coronel: Hugo Choice:
Democracy or dictatorship
Venezuelan novelist
Arturo Uslar Pietri coined the term “magical
realism” to define the mixture of fact and fantasy, physical
and psychological realities that characterized Latin American fiction
in the 20th century. In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Colombian
writer Gabriel Garcia Márquez maintained that Latin American
reality was stranger than fiction.
How right
they are. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has been known to
keep an empty chair by his side in cabinet meetings,
for revolutionary leader Simón Bolívar. On Sunday,
Venezuelans will participate in an event so bizarre it could
only be defined as magical realism. They will vote in a democratic
referendum to decide if the country remains a democracy or if
it becomes something akin to a tropical monarchy. President Chavez’s
proposal to reform the constitution would transform Venezuela’s
liberal democracy into a socialist dictatorship, a model of government
that is expressly prohibited by the existing constitution. The
referendum slated for Sunday amounts to asking Venezuelans to
vote for their own political and social suicide.
In the last
two weeks, the percentage of Venezuelans who have decided to vote “no” has
increased so rapidly that all polls taken by the five most credible
Venezuelan polling agencies show
the vote to reject the reform leading by eight to ten points. The
trend is so decisive that the Chavez government has ordered the
agencies to stop publishing the polls altogether.
I have just
received information that the Chavez government has already
printed, at significant expense, some eight million
copies of the “new” constitution, one that has not
yet been approved and could well be rejected. How’s that
for transparency?
Chavez’s proposed reform violates core articles of the
existing constitution (2,3 and 6), which stipulate that Venezuela
will always be democratic, politically pluralistic, and have
alternating political leadership. If approved, Chavez’s
plan would convert Venezuela into a dictatorial state with no
other possible ideology than socialism, and allow him be reelected
indefinitely.
Among other negative changes, the reform calls for rigid administrative
and political centralization as well as complete executive authority
over financial matters, military promotions, the naming of regional
vice presidents in charge of political and economic management
and the selection of community leaders, dispensing with the popular
election of these public officers. The reform also introduces
severe restrictions to private property and private economic
activity. School children and workers would be politically indoctrinated.
Faced with
the necessity of rejecting the reform, which they consider
immoral, Venezuelans are split between those who will
vote “no” and those who refuse to vote on the grounds
that it would validate an illegal proposal. Those who refuse
to vote argue that the National Electoral Council is completely
controlled by the government, and that a fraud is in the making.
The Electoral Registry is, in fact, deeply corrupted and includes
millions of registered voters without known addresses.
Close to two million voters without proper identification or
known adresses have been added to the Registry in the last three
years. Many counties show more voters than population. Almost
40,000 voters are reported as being over 100 years old, more
than in the U.S., which has a population ten times higher. Thousands
of voters show multiple ID papers, allowing them to vote more
than once. Colombian terrorist Rodrigo Granda is registered to
vote under ID card 22942118.
I recently presented detailed proof of these distortions, compiled
by Venezuelan experts, to the Organization of American States.
What will happen Sunday? Under normal circumstances, the rejection
of the constitutional reform proposed by Chavez would be all
but assured. However, the tight control the regime maintains
over the Electoral Council, the army, the media, and most public
institutions could enable the government to claim victory. If
this is the case, the level of civic resistance by freedom-loving
Venezuelans could well approach open rebellion.
Gustavo
Coronel is
a 28 years oil industry veteran, a member of the first board
of directors (1975-1979) of Petroleos de Venezuela
(PDVSA), author of several books. At the present Coronel is
Petroleumworld associate editor and advisor on the opinion
and editorial content of the site. All Coronel's articles can
be read at its blog lasarmasdecoronel. Petroleumworld not necessarily
share these views.|
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Petroleumworld
News 12/03/07
Copyright© 2007
Gustavo Coronel. All rights reserved.
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