Saturday, March 8, 2014

Ukraine Appeals to NATO for Help After Russia Approves Force

Ukraine appealed for assistance from NATO on Saturday, asking it to use all possible measures to ensure its territorial integrity and protect its people.

The call came hours after the Federation Council approved the deployment of military forces in Ukraine, in response to what Moscow claims is the threat being leveled against its servicemen and Russian citizens in the southern Crimea Peninsula.

Authorities in Ukraine have sounded the alarm over what they are calling an unwarranted act of aggression.

In addition to asking for NATO's protection, Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andrei Deshchitsa urged the trans-Atlantic military alliance to aid it in securing nuclear facilities based in Ukraine, local news agency UNN reported.

The North Atlantic Council, NATO's main governing body, was to hold an extraordinary meeting on Sunday to discuss events in Ukraine, the military bloc's secretary general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said on Twitter.

Russia has adopted increasingly combative rhetoric on Ukraine ever since an opposition movement in the country last week toppled President Viktor Yanukovych after weeks of sometimes violent protests.

Moscow accuses the West of backing the Ukrainian uprising, which it says has been directed by violent and politically extremist radicals.

On Saturday, Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin expressed the hope that the international community would apply pressure on Kiev to normalize the situation.

In addition to acting as home to Russia's strategically valuable Black Sea Fleet base, Crimea also has a substantial ethnic Russian community.

Politicians in Moscow have urged their government to act firmly on behalf of Russians in Crimea, many of who have apparently expressed a preference for the region to be annexed by their eastern neighbor.

Deshchitsa said a settlement for the situation in Crimea should be peaceful.

"We must not allow the use of force and provocations," he said.

Source:The Moscow Times
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Fresh Venezuela protests erupt in Caracas streets after violent clashes

Anti-government protesters march in Caracas, calling for the release of dozens of activists who have been arrested during three weeks of violent demonstrations in Venezuela.


Anti-government protesters took to the streets of Venezuela's capital on Saturday, calling for the release of dozens of activists who have been arrested during three weeks of violent demonstrations.

Protesters from a radical opposition group formed a convoy of cars and bikes in eastern Caracas after fresh violence on Friday saw pitched battles between security forces and demonstrators.

Eighteen people have died in the demonstrations against President Nicolas Maduro's government, according to official figures.

Protesters on Saturday vowed to boycott Venezuela's annual carnival celebrations as a mark of respect to the dead.

"We honor the dead. No carnival, there is nothing to celebrate," engineering student Argenis Arteaga told AFP at the protest.

Saturday's demonstration came after at least 41 people, including several foreign journalists, were arrested during Friday's clashes.

National Guard security forces used water cannons and tear gas to break up student-led demonstrations in the city's wealthy Chacao district.

Hooded protesters set up barricades and responded with a steady barrage of Molotov cocktails.

Maduro has labeled the protests that began on Feb. 4 as a Washington-backed attempted "coup."

He claims that radical opposition leaders have joined students angered by high inflation and goods shortage in plotting to topple his nearly year-old government.

FOREIGN REPORTERS DETAINED

Friday's arrests included eight foreigners who were being "held for international terrorism," state VTV television said in a brief statement.

Venezuela's journalist association SNTP said one of the foreigners was US freelance reporter Andrew Rosati, who writes for the Miami Herald.

Rosati was detained for half an hour and released after being "struck in the face and his abdomen" by security forces, the SNTP said on Twitter.

Also detained and released was a team of journalists from the Associated Press, it said.

The SNTP also said Italian photographer Francesca Commissari, who works for the local daily El Nacional, was being held.

Protest organizer Alfredo Romero said Saturday he had been in contact with Commissari .

"I spoke personally with Francesca Commissari. She's okay," Romero, president of the Venezuelan Penal Forum, wrote on Twitter.

Government officials released no details on the arrest of foreigners.

Friday's clashes added fuel to protests that had begun to flag after the government decreed several days of holidays to mark the start of Carnival season.

In a separate incident, Maduro said National Guard members were "ambushed" and shot at while removing debris from the streets of Valencia, Venezuela's economic hub. One died from a shot in the eye and another was shot twice in the leg.

"All these things are aimed at triggering a backlash from security forces," Maduro said.

"Justice must prevail against implacable murderers and those preparing paramilitary groups... to hide behind alleged protests and seek civil war."

The Venezuelan Penal Forum, meanwhile, said 33 cases of "cruel and inhuman treatment or torture" have been reported to the public ombudsman.

The government said it was investigating 27 cases of human rights abuses, though it provided no details of possible wrongdoing.

Some of the deaths have been attributed to violent clashes with police, but other victims have been shot by unidentified gunmen, whom the protesters have accused of being government agents.

The government has denied all links to such killings.

Source:The Moscow Times
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Friday, March 7, 2014

Elías Jaua in Argentina: Venezuela "is a country of peace"

Argentine Foreign Minister Héctor Timerman, who accompanied Jaua during a news conference, confirmed "(Argentina's) total and absolute support for the path chosen by the Venezuelan people in the last election, with the message of respecting life, supporting peace and defending institutions"


Venezuelan Foreign Minister Elías Jaua on Thursday visited Argentina, where he met with President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, and argued that "Venezuela is a country of peace" and that the democratically elected government of Nicolás Maduro cannot be mapped to "the violent groups trying to overthrow him."

"Protests in Venezuela are not the result of political and social unrest, but a planned strategy, encouraged and promoted since at least five years ago, which has now entered the picture to overthrow the democratic government," Jaua said during a press conference in Buenos Aires, Efe reported.


For his part, Argentine Foreign Minister Héctor Timerman, who accompanied Jaua during the press conference, confirmed "(Argentina's) total and absolute support for the path chosen by the Venezuelan people in the last election, with the message of respecting life, supporting peace and defending institutions."

Source: El Universal
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Politics or Revenge? Billionaire Gleb Fetisov is Arrested

A Moscow court has arrested billionaire political leader Gleb Fetisov, weeks after he ramped up his political ambitions by partnering up with prominent opposition figures and launching a new political party.

A fellow leader of the party suggested that the arrest was retaliation by influential private depositors who lost millions of dollars when a bank formerly owned by Fetisov was shut down by the regulator in January.

Worth $1.9 billion, Fetisov is one of the richest people to have ever found themselves behind bars in Russia's post-Soviet history, after former Yukos chief Mikhail Khodorkovsky and media magnate Vladimir Gusinsky. He is now the only billionaire at the helm of a Russian political party, following Mikhail Prokhorov's recent handover of leadership of the Civil Platform to his sister.

The Basmanny Court on Friday ruled to arrest Fetisov for a period ending April 20, hours after Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin announced the billionaire's detention. Fetisov is suspected of fraud at Moi Bank, which he sold in December, Markin said.

A Fetisov aide denied any wrongdoing by the businessman and attributed his prosecution to the recent advances in Fetisov's political career, including his banding together with a prominent Kremlin critic to launch a new party.

"All that was done to him suggests reprisal or revenge for his political activity," the party said in a statement following Fetisov's detention at a Moscow airport, as he returned from a foreign location where he underwent medical treatment.

In January, Fetisov stepped up his independent political profile by joining forces with a vocal detractor of the government, Gennady Gudkov, and merging their parties to create the People's Political Party Green and Social Democratic Alliance. They co-chair the new political force.

Previously, the party rallied support for Greenpeace activists sitting in prison awaiting trial after climbing a Gazprom oil rig in the Arctic to protest drilling in the region's fragile ecosystem. The political group also sued Gazprom in an unrelated nature preservation case, but unsuccessfully.

Gudkov said the suspicion of fraud was a "feeble" excuse for the arrest, insisting the true reason was retaliation for teaming up with government opponents like State Duma Deputy Ilya Ponomaryov and himself. The party last week nominated Ponomaryov, who was a prominent figure in the protest movement that swept through Russia after disputed parliamentary elections in December 2011, to run for mayor of Novosibirsk after the local election commission rejected his bid as an independent.

Gudkov suggested that the government might be mopping up any pockets of political independence at home in light of the popular uprising in Ukraine, which toppled Russia's ally President Viktor Yanukovych in February.

"The authorities are scared and are throwing people in jail indiscriminately," he said by phone. "Fetisov is not the kind of a radical opposition activist that would rally furiously in the street."

The arrest will undercut the party's preparations for the elections to the Moscow City Duma and other regional elections in September, Gudkov said. He held out the hope, however, that the situation around Fetisov would not affect the finances of the party, to which the businessman is a major donor.

Andrei Kochetkov, head of political research at the Fund for the Development of Civil Society, headed by a former chief of the Kremlin's internal policy department, said the investigation of Fetisov was unrelated to politics. A relative newcomer on the scene, Fetisov has not yet shown himself as a figure to be reckoned with, Kochetkov said.

The businessman ended up in the cross hairs of law enforcement agents because of genuine concern over his role in the downfall of Moi Bank, Kochetkov said. On Jan. 31, the Central Bank decided that the lender was no longer solvent, and stripped it of its banking license, leaving the state's Deposit Insurance Agency to pay out more than 6 billion rubles ($166 million) to the defunct bank's private depositors.

Fetisov sold his 90 percent stake in Moi Bank in December, but Mikhail Sukhov, deputy chief of the Central Bank, which regulates the banking sector, said the lender had been in trouble before the change in ownership.

"One needs to make a clear distinction here between political motives, which are not visible, and the ghosts of the past, which still haunt Fetisov," Kochetkov said. "I regret that there are entrepreneurs who attempt to find shelter from prosecution by engaging in political activity."

In the 1 1/2 years prior to the sale of his stake in Moi Bank, Fetisov was not involved the bank's management, the businessman's party said in its statement Friday.

Oleg Mitvol, chief of the party's executive committee, said some of the lender's well-connected depositors might have pushed for Fetisov's apprehension, Forbes reported. Certain individuals who kept their money at the bank have enough clout with the Investigative Committee, the magazine reported Friday, citing a wealthy businessman acquainted with Fetisov.

One of the victims of the bank's flop was film director Nikita Mikhalkov. According to Vedomosti, he had 200 million rubles ($5.5 million) of his personal money and 100 million rubles more belonging to companies he controls on the bank's accounts.

Fetisov said he also lost money, more than 2 billion rubles, when the bank collapsed. He threatened in early February to take the lender's owners and executives to court if they did not pay him back.

Moi Bank is just one of the business assets that Fetisov sold last year to focus on politics, saying the possessions might provide a convenient target for his opponents in the government, a precaution that does not seem to have helped.

During the sell-off, he unloaded the largest of his holdings, a stake in telecoms holding company Altimo. Fetisov made his fortune from building the company with Mikhail Fridman's Alfa Group in late 1990s.

Fetisov was a member of the Federation Council, the parliament's upper chamber, between 2001 and 2009, chairing the committees for financial and economic policy. After a brief stint in business, Fetisov returned to politics in 2012, when he registered a party jointly with Mitvol, and has since then been building up his political presence.

His new ally Gudkov has given the party a greater oppositional flavor the pro-Kremlin State Duma ousted Gudkov from its ranks after he proved to be one of the most vocal supporters of the street protests two winters ago.

Source:The Moscow Times
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Excerpts of column "Runrunes" of Thursday, February 27

LOATHSOME.  
Reference is made to how Diosdado Cabello, the Speaker of the Venezuelan National Assembly (AN), referred in his show aired on Monday to engineer Alejandro Márquez. Cabello claimed that Márquez was a hit man in possession of war weapons; commanded by ex Colombian President Álvaro Uribe (the Colombian  Foreign Office fired back on Wednesday, February 26); trained in US territory; intent on killing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. In his explanation, Cabello showed pictures collected by government "intelligence services" as proof against engineer Márquez. The truth? Márquez was a member of a group comprising more than 1,500 Venezuelans who play a novel game known worldwide as "airsoft," where non-lethal replicas of arms are used. Márquez's relatives and dozen Venezuelans, many members of the very government who practice such sport are deeply indignant. They have borne witness to a real infamy, starred by the AN Speaker who said adamantly that Márquez was killed by one of his own team members, out of revenge, in retaliation. The truth:  Alejandro Márquez succumbed to the battering received from National Guard officers. These officers took his mobile off him when he was lying, wounded, in the street. And they continued beating him inside Vargas Hospital.

Low


REDS. Several agencies are making headway with the investigation of killings perpetrated over the past few days, particularly the former two of February 19, one of which seems to be tied to an active leader of ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV). Neighbors, stealthily, collected evidence that security bodies failed to observe in the middle of uncertainty after accurate shots and the ensuing mess... Who did order collectives to shatter stores only in the municipalities with mayors of opposition Voluntad Popular party? Why are they getting rid of Maximilian Arbeláez by sending to him to the United States, a country which has never refused an accreditation?

Source: El Universal
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Thursday, March 6, 2014

European Parliament calls on Venezuelan gov't to disband armed groups

In a resolution adopted with 463 votes in favor, 45 against, and 37 abstentions, the European Parliament urged "the Venezuelan authorities to immediately disarm" and dissolve "the uncontrolled armed groups that have a pro-government character" and to end impunity

The European Union condemned on Thursday the violence emerging in Venezuela since February 12, and expressed its sympathy for the relatives of all the victims.

The European legislators made an appeal on Venezuelan authorities to disarm and break up pro-government armed groups, and to release students and opposition leaders detained during demonstrations taking place in Venezuela for three weeks now.

In a resolution passed by a wide majority, the European Parliament made an appeal on stakeholders in Venezuela to "maintain calm in both actions and words." It also stated that "new protests could lead to more acts of violence that would only further separate the positions of the government and the opposition," DPA informed.

The resolution calls on "the Venezuelan authorities to immediately disarm" and dissolve "the uncontrolled armed groups that have a pro-government character" and to "end impunity."

It reminded "the government of Venezuela that freedom of expression and the right to participate in peaceful demonstrations are fundamental human rights in a democracy as recognized in the Venezuelan Constitution."

The European policymakers also called on Nicolás Maduro's government for the "immediate release" of students and opposition leaders, and to leave aside baseless accusations and arrest warrants against opposition leaders.


Further, they asked for a delegation of the European Parliament to visit Venezuela as soon as possible.

Source: El Universal
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