Don Hugo

By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in | | Comments (1) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

All we need now is a big shindig for his daughter's wedding and a semi-articulate thug hoping that Hugo Chavez's first grandchild is a masculine child and the imitation will be complete and convincing. Except that Don Corleone was a whole lot more classy than this:

While President Hugo Chavez has been molding Venezuela into his personal socialist vision, other transformations -- less visible but equally profound -- have taken hold in the country.

Venezuela has become a major hub for international crime syndicates. What attracts them is not the local market; what they really love are the excellent conditions Venezuela offers to anyone in charge of managing a global criminal network.

A nation at the crossroads of South America, the Caribbean, North America and Europe, Venezuela's location is ideal. Borders? Long, scantly populated and porous. Financial system? Large and with easy-to-evade governmental controls. Telecommunications, ports and airports? The best that oil money can buy. U.S. influence? Nil. Corrupt politicians, cops, judges and military officers? Absolutely: Transparency International ranked Venezuela a shameful 162 out of 179 counties on its corruption perception index. Chavez's demonstrated interest in confronting criminal networks during his eight years in power? Not much.

While this situation has so far been rather invisible to the rest of the world, it is patently clear to those in charge of fighting transnational crime. Anti-trafficking officials in Europe, the United States, Asia and other Latin American countries are paying unprecedented attention to Venezuela. These officials are not particularly interested in Venezuelan politics or in Chavez's policies. All they care about is that the tentacles of these global criminal networks are spreading from Venezuela into their countries with enormous power and at great speed.

The numbers speak volumes: About 75 tons of cocaine left Venezuela in 2003; it is estimated that 276 tons will leave the country this year. Before, the main destination was the United States; now, Europe is increasingly the target. Italy and Spain are two new important and lucrative end-user markets, and earning in euros is undeniably better than getting paid in dollars these days.

A senior Dutch police officer told me that he and his European colleagues are spending more time in Caracas than in Bogota, Colombia, and that the heads of many of the major criminal cartels now operate with impunity, and effectiveness, from Venezuela. The cartel bosses aren't exclusively Colombians -- there are Asians (especially Chinese) and Europeans too. Caracas' most posh neighborhoods are home to important kingpins from around the world, including some from Belarus, a country that Chavez notably has visited several times.

This is what Naomi Campbell and Sean Penn celebrated? Charming. Pity the Venezuelan people in your spare moments. They must suffer not only the incompetence of a dictator but also the indifference of the superstar set.

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I don't by cwilson

pity (the voting majority) of them. They voted this thug in not once, but three times -- and voted in a new constitution crafted to fit the thug's preferences. All the while, knowing that the thug had served a sentence for trying to overthrow the government by force back in the early 90's. Stupidity administers its own punishment.

The people I feel sorry for are the people who lost those votes. They knew what would happen and were powerless to stop it -- proving the adage that democracy, in its unrestrained form, is three wolves and two sheep discussing dinner. Can America offer asylum based on someone's past voting record in their home country?

 
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