Reporters Without Borders is concerned about new attacks on privately-owned media by President Hugo Chávez immediately after the closure of Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV). Globovisión director Alberto Federico Ravell and presenter Leopoldo Castillo have been accused of “conspiring” against the regime.
Reporters Without Borders today accused President Hugo Chávez of aiming to eliminate all the opposition press after he publicly threatened independent TV station Globovisión and CNN, claiming they were instigating a “vast destabilisation plan,” just two days after the closure of Radio Caracas Televisión (RCTV).
“By calling Globovisión's staff ‘enemies of the motherland' and by clearly threatening participants in its broadcasts ‘if they don't calm down,' President Chávez is displaying paranoia and intolerance,” the press freedom organisation said.
“Unfortunately, there is no longer any doubt about his goals,” Reporters Without Borders added. “RCTV's closure was just the prelude to the progressive disappearance of all the opposition press. Media that criticise the government will be snuffed out one by one until only the pro-government media are left.”
Communication and information minister William Lara brought a complaint against privately-owned Globovisión on 28 May, accusing it of broadcasting content “inciting violence.” The station broadcast footage of the 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul at a time when Chávez was criticising Pope Benedict. Lara said this was tantamount to calling for the president's assassination.
The station's director, Alberto Federico Ravell, and the host of its programme “Aló, Ciudadano” (Hello Citizen), Leopoldo Castillo, have received judicial summonses and face prosecutions.
The continuing demonstrations by students, journalists and opposition activists against RCTV's closure, in which several members of both opposition and pro-government press have been injured, have been branded as a “fascist attack” by Chávez. The president continually likens the present situation to the April 2002 coup in which he was ousted for 48 hours. Thousands of students demonstrated on 29 May against RCTV's closure and around 200 were arrested.
Reporters Without Borders also condemns the activities, reported by the Agencia Bolivariana de Noticias, of a group of pro-Chávez journalists called “Periodistas por la Verdad,” who have been trying to get people to believe that two supposed Reporters Without Borders members - Enzo Pierini et Carlos Folchi - were distributing leaflets containing hate messages targeted at President Chávez.
These allegations are unfounded and ridiculous, and the press freedom organisation does not know these two people.
“It is easy for the authorities to condone this kind of slur while refusing our requests for a meeting during the fact-finding trip we made to Venezuela from 24 to 28 May,” Reporters Without Borders said. “And it seems they did not agree that the news conference we gave on the last day should be broadcast live and in full by Globovisión.”