Anti-Chavez TV channel removed from cable

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By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER, Associated Press WriterSun Jan 24, 7:16 pm ET

CARACAS, Venezuela – A cable-television channel critical of President Hugo Chavez was yanked from the air early Sunday for defying new government regulations requiring it to televise some of the socialist leader's speeches.

Venezuelan cable and satellite TV providers stopped transmitting Radio Caracas Television Internacional, an anti-Chavez channel known as RCTV, after it did not show the president's speech Saturday to a rally of supporters.

While five other channels were also dropped from cable, some say the government took broader action to disguise its mission to shut down a popular, critical media outlet ahead of congressional elections and amid rising discontent over inflation, crime and electricity shortages.

Venezuelan pollster and analyst Luis Vicente Leon said the message is clear: "The government is willing to do everything to destroy its adversaries."

RCTV already was forced to switch to cable in 2007 after the government refused to renew its license for regular airwaves. Chavez accused the station then of plotting against him and supporting a failed 2002 coup.

Chavez said Sunday the latest action is about following the law.

"Whoever refuses to comply with the law, that's what must be done," he said on his weekly broadcast, calling for a round of applause for the telecommunications agency.

If channels don't comply, he said, they won't be allowed back on the air: "It's their decision, not ours."

Under the new rules, two dozen local cable channels, including RCTV, must carry government programming when officials deem it necessary, just as channels on the open airwaves already do. Chavez regularly uses that legal power to order broadcast TV and radio stations to carry his marathon speeches, which can last up to seven hours.

Though Chavez remains Venezuela's most popular politician, he has slipped in the polls and is campaigning against an emboldened opposition to keep control of the National Assembly in September elections.

RCTV has asked the Supreme Court to block the new regulations. RCTV called the government's actions illegal in a statement, saying the channel has done nothing wrong and has a right to defend itself.

In Caracas neighborhoods, Chavez opponents leaned out apartment windows early Sunday to bang on pots and pans. Others shouted epithets and drivers joined in, honking car horns.

The national journalists' association called it a violation of human rights and freedom of speech. Its president, William Echeverria, condemned it as an "increase in censorship."

The U.S. Embassy also saw cause for concern.

"Access to information is a cornerstone of democracy," U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Robin Holzhauer said. "By restricting yet again the Venezuelan people's access to RCTV broadcasts, the Venezuelan government continues to erode this cornerstone."

Five international channels — Ritmo Son, Momentum, America TV, American Network and TV Chile — also were suspended after not providing authorities with required information about their programs and ownership, said Mario Seijas, president of Venezuela's subscription television chamber. He said other cable channels are in similar situations and could be taken off the air if they don't turn in required documents in the coming days.

Government figures say about 37 percent of Venezuelan homes received cable television in 2008. But some private companies say their research shows about six out of every 10 households have subscription TV service.

RCTV has a smaller audience than it did in 2007 but has remained popular. The channel claims that 90 percent of cable viewers say they watch RCTV.

"A hard-line current within the Chavez movement would have the government permanently take Radio Caracas off the air," said Steve Ellner, a political science professor at Venezuela's University of the East. "There are some Chavez movement leaders, however, who believe that the measure is ill-timed given the government's current woes such as the rationing of electricity."

Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington said Chavez's aim is censorship. "He is nervous about mounting problems and slipping popular support, so he is moving aggressively to tighten his grip on all fronts," Shifter said.

In August, Chavez's government forced 32 radio stations and two small TV stations off the air, saying some owners had failed to renew their broadcast licenses, while other licenses were no longer valid because they had been granted to owners who are now dead.

Globovision — the last opposition-aligned TV channel on the open airwaves — is also the target of multiple government investigations that authorities say could lead to the revocation of its broadcast license.

___

Associated Press Writers Ian James and Fabiola Sanchez contributed to this report.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100125/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_media/print
 
Six TV stations forced off air in Venezuela



CARACAS (AFP) – An opposition TV station in Venezuela along with five others were taken off the air early Sunday for violating rules issued by President Hugo Chavez's government, a station spokeswoman said.

The new rules require stations to air Chavez's speeches, among other mandates.

A spokeswoman for opposition channel RCTV, Gladys Zapiain, said all Venezuelan cable television providers dropped the station and the other channels from their line-ups.

"We have just been taken off the air," said Zapiain. "There was no prior notification."

Mario Seijas, president of the Venezuelan Chamber of Cable Television, told AFP that in addition to RCTV, the dropped channels include Ritmo Son, Momentum, America TV, American Network and TV Chile.

The providers argued that they had failed to comply with a government regulation issued in December, Zapiain said.

Under the measure, every television or radio station whose programming is at least 30 percent Venezuelan-made is considered a "national" media outlet.

As such, they are obligated to carry speeches by the president and other officials, as well as official government announcements.

Chavez critics view many of those speeches, which can last for hours, as government propaganda.

On Saturday, RCTV failed to comply with the regulation for a second time.

That day, Chavez addressed thousands of followers in western Caracas, demanding "absolute loyalty" and telling them he embodied the heart and soul of the Venezuelan people.

"I am not an individual, I am the people," Chavez told a crowd of supporters. "It's my duty to demand respect for the people.

The president asked for voters to renew the ruling party's control of both National Assembly houses in upcoming elections in order to be able to "continue building our new socialist state."

Venezuela will hold crucial legislative elections in September, in which Chavez hopes to secure at least two thirds of seats to maintain his current legislative majority.

According to opinion polls, the president's popularity, which approached 60 percent approval at the beginning of 2009, stands now at less than 50 percent.

Chavez, a vocal critic of US influence in the region, has been in power since 1999.

The largest oil producer in South America, Venezuela slipped into a recession in 2009 for the first time in six years due to a drop in oil prices and production.

Amid the economic downturn, Venezuela recently devalued its currency.

The bolivar devaluation was the first since 2005, and was designed in part to bolster public finances that have withered amid dwindling oil revenues and a rapidly contracting economy.

Critics said the move would allow Chavez to boost public spending ahead of elections in September but would severely damage the health of the economy.

Chavez has shuttered more than 600 retail stores in a campaign to keep a lid on prices in the wake of the bolivar's devaluation, which will make it more costly to import goods.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100124/wl_afp/venezuelapoliticsmedia_20100124121102/print
 
Removal of anti-Hugo Chavez channel spurs protests


Caracas, Jan 26 (AP) Police and supporters of President Hugo Chavez clashed with students in cities across the country during protests over the government forcing an opposition channel off cable TV. One youth was reported killed and 16 people suffered injuries.

The biggest confrontation occured in Caracas yesterday, where police fired tear gas and plastic bullets to scatter thousands of students who tried to march on the headquarters of Venezuela's state-run telecommunications agency. At least six demonstrators and a journalist were treated for injuries.

In the western city of Merida, a youth was killed during fighting between anti- and pro-Chavez forces and clashes when police tried to separate the rival groups, Justice Minister Tareck El Aissami said late yesterday.

Merida Governor Marcos Diaz told the state-run ABN news agency that the victim was a high school student named Jossimir Carrillo Torres
 
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