sábado, 28 de noviembre de 2009

Guyana se Subordina a Venezuela para poner fin al tráfico de estupefacientes y psicotrópicos



Tomado de:
Would Venezuela and a subservient Guyana put an end to drug trafficking?
http://www.kaieteurnewsonline.com/2009/11/28/would-venezuela-and-a-subservient-guyana-put-an-end-to-drug-trafficking/


November 28, 2009 By KNews Filed Under

Letters

Dear Editor,
An embattled Hugo Chavez seems to be buckling under US pressure to show that he is doing something to allay US concerns on the drugs traffic to the US.The blowing up of bridges and halting of trade relations with Columbia may be a clever ploy of shielding Venezuela from its domestic problems and away from the glare of the outside world.

The placing of his armed forces on war footing has also failed to ruffle the Columbians as Chavez seeks refuge in his belligerent antics and anti-imperialist tactics. Chavez now seems to be facing a dilemma about what next to do and it seems more about calling upon his friends to stand up and be counted.

Suddenly Guyana was dragged into the picture. Guyana security and police forces are few in number and of no consequence relative to the Venezuelans. They are also poorly equipped, poorly trained and poorly managed.It is the Venezuelans who can make claims about having overwhelming numbers in their well-trained security and police forces and with the best of military hardware, modern jet fighters and tactical air transport at their disposal. Guyana is an absolute irrelevance to Venezuela if the real objectives of the Venezuelans are to crush the drugs traffic.

A subservient President Jagdeo, dependent on subsidized Venezuelan oil, was however, called upon to dance to the tune of Chavez. Earlier this month top Guyanese security officials were hastily dispatched to a call from Caracas for the two countries to cooperate to fight against drugs (“Guyana, Venezuela to toughen the drugs fight” - SN November 23, 09.)

This is against a backdrop of President Jagdeo’s own inaction against one of his senior police officers suspected of drugs trafficking. Guyana has failed to show any sustained and strong commitment in the fight against drugs. Then there is the recent scuttling of the UK funding of $1.6 billion security and policing project, which resulted in the Guyana police being denied proper training and rendering the police incapable of delivering effective and accountable policing. The horror of police torture of a minor recently has also created a public outcry.

Would the Caracas initiative finally put an end to the growing drugs problem that is spreading across Guyana, or is it another one of Chavez’s smoke screen to divert attention elsewhere?


Venezuela is unable to deal with its own endemic corruption as Leocenis Garcia, the investigative journalist had discovered.

The journalist had spent his life investigating corruption in Venezuela and had prepared a dossier on 60 cases, which was published in the Six To Poder newspaper, and submitted to the Venezuelan National Assembly for action. It is claimed that one of the cases involved the purchase of drilling equipment from China at $5 million apiece, but invoices were submitted for $25 to $30 million apiece.

Each of the dossiers on corruption was some 300 pages long and providing all the crucial evidence needed for action to be taken. All 60 dossiers were dismissed by the Venezuelan National Assembly within 24 hours carte blanche, and not a single case was upheld. According to Leocenis Garcia the dossier on the PDVSA went missing. Even if the National Assembly had taken action against just one single case, it would have sent a wake up call to the Venezuelan people and to change the current status quo irrevocably.

If this is indicative on how to deal with endemic corruption by the Venezuelans, then what lessons could Guyana learn from them about curbing drugs trafficking? It may however play to Chavez’s favour with little to gain for Guyana. The fact remains that Venezuela has very close ties with the US and Chavez knows he could get away with it.

This has not been the same in the past for Guyana. Indeed Cheddi Jagan had paid the heavy price for doing just that when he tried. And it ended up at the cost of the lives of many.

As his biggest customer the US is buying half of the Venezuelan people’s oil. Chavez has also recruited Joe Kennedy of the Kennedy clan to ensure his relationship with the US is always alive and well. Further he is providing annual subsidies to the US to the tune of $100 millions through the Venezuelan owned CITCO based in Texas to help the poor people in that State.The people’s oil money is being used by Chavez to buy him powerful friends across the globe and at the cost of the poor, who are living in squalor and poverty in the shanty towns of Venezuela.

They were told recently by Chavez that they must bathe less to save water and to reduce water shortage.Further the PDVSA social project was meant to change the face of poverty in Venezuela.


However, with the oil revenue from the people’s oil in full flow, little seems to reach the shanty towns and the Venezuelan poor.
Guyana, Venezuela to toughen drug fight - Guyana and Venezuelan authorities agreed to strengthen cooperation to combat the drug trade during a
Venezuela says to pay $5 bln oil service debts - CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA will pay about $5 billion it owes to nationa
Venezuela moves on petrochemical, gas firms - CARACAS, (Reuters) - Venezuela is preparing to nationalize petrochemical projects and yesterday sai
What the people say about - Do you believe that the government's response to the Venezuelan attack was strong enough? We asked t

Nota del editor del blog: Al referenciarse a la República Cooperativa de Guyana se deben de tener en cuenta los 159.500Km2, de territorios ubicados al oeste del río Esequibo conocidos con el nombre de Guayana Esequiba o Zona en Reclamación sujetos al Acuerdo de Ginebra del 17 de febrero de 1966.


Territorios estos sobre los cuales el gobierno Venezolano en representación de la Nación venezolana se reservo sus derechos sobre los territorios de la Guayana Esequiba en su nota del 26 de mayo de 1966 al reconocerse al nuevo Estado de Guyana .
“...por lo tanto, Venezuela reconoce como territorio del nuevo Estado, el que se sitúa al este de la margen derecha del río Esequibo y reitera ante la comunidad internacional, que se reserva expresamente sus derechos de soberanía territorial sobre la zona que se encuentra en la margen izquierda del precitado río; en consecuencia, el territorio de la Guayana Esequiba sobre el cual Venezuela se reserva expresamente sus derechos soberanos, limita al Este con el nuevo Estado de Guyana, a través de la línea del río Esequibo, tomando éste desde su nacimiento hasta su desembocadura en el Océano Atlántico...”

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