Venezuela
sues CNN for linking Chavez to Al-Qaeda (update)
ABN/Luis Racine
Venezuelan
information Minister William Lara at a press conference showing and
CNN footage
displaying pictures of Chavez juxtaposed with those
of
an Al-Qaeda
leader.
AFP
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
05 29 07
Venezuela said Monday it was filing charges against
US cable network CNN for linking President Hugo Chavez to Al-Qaeda, and against
a Venezuelan TV network for encouraging Chavez's assassination.
The move comes one day after popular TV network RCTV went off the air after the
Chavez government yanked its broadcast license.
Information Minister William Lara presented at a press conference what he said
was CNN footage displaying pictures of Chavez juxtaposed with those of an Al-Qaeda
leader.
CNN also aired a story about the Venezuelan protests, but used images taken in
Mexico of an unrelated story, Lara said.
"CNN broadcast a lie which linked President Chavez to violence and murder," Lara
said.
CNN issued a statement late Monday in which they "strongly deny" being "engaged
in a campaign to discredit or attack Venezuela."
The news network acknowledged a video mix-up, and "aired a detailed correction
and expressed regret for the involuntary error."
Regarding the Al-Qaeda leader, the networks that "unrelated news stories
can be juxtaposed in a given program segment just as a newspaper page or a news
web site may have unconnected stories adjacent to each other."
The Venezuelan government also filed charges against local network Globovision
for what they said was indirectly encouraging Chavez's murder by airing footage
of the 1981 assassination attempt on the late pope John Paul II.
"In my view, this television network, in this specific part of its programming,
committed the offense of incitement to assassination, against the Venezuelan
head of state," Lara said.
The charges comes amid protests against Chavez's shutdown of RCTV, a privately-owned
broadcaster of popular comedy and drama shows that was boldly critical of Chavez.
After 54 years on the air, RCTV went black at midnight Sunday after the government
refused to renew its license. It was promptly replaced by TVes, a state-backed "socialist" station
which began broadcasting cultural shows.
On Monday several people were injured as police in Caracas fired rubber bullets
and tear gas to put down a demonstration against the RCTV shutdown.
AFP 29 0301 GMT 05 07
Copyright© 2007
AFP. All
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