Venezuelan TV station is stormed by supporters of Hugo Chavez
Dozens of militant supporters of President Hugo Chavez stormed an opposition TV station yesterday in an escalation of Venezuela's "media war".
Around 30 activists with red berets forced their way into the Caracas headquarters of Globovision, lobbed tear gas and threatened staff with handguns.
The raid came amid a government crackdown on critics of Chavez's socialist revolution, a campaign which human rights groups have condemned as an attack on free speech. In recent days the government has revoked the licences of dozens of radio stations and proposed a law which would jail people deemed guilty of "media crimes" for up to four years.
Footage aired on Globovision showed activists from the UPV, a radical left-wing party which backs the president and dresses in quasi-military gear, arriving on motorbikes and rushing on foot into the station.
The intruders, led by a prominent "Chavista" named Lina Ron, waved banners and reportedly injured a guard and a police officer while tear gas seeped through the complex.
Chavez has repeatedly assailed Globovision – the South American country's last opposition TV network – as an instrument of oligarchs and US imperialists who are waging "media terrorism".
However, the government swiftly distanced itself from the raid. "We condemn this attack energetically and reject this type of violent action against Globovision," said the interior minister, Tareck El Aissami. "We don't accept that violence is the instrument to solve our differences."
Network executives rejected the condemnation as hollow. "I can only think [the attack] was an order from Miraflores," said Guillermo Zuloaga, in reference to the presidential palace. The government has named Globovision as its main target in a "media war" to rebut what it says is a campaign of lies and smears against the revolution. Authorities last month fined Globovision $2m for back taxes and officials have twice raided its president's property, saying he illegally resold cars and broke environmental regulations by keeping stuffed animals.
The government also opened an investigation against the channel for "inciting panic" after it reported on a small earthquake recently which affected Caracas.
RCTV, another channel which criticised Chavez, went off the air in 2007 after its licence was not renewed. Other private networks which have stayed neutral in Venezuela's polarised political climate continue operating. Chavez, a former tank commander with a flair for communication, has greatly expanded state media during his decade-long rule.
Last week he moved to further clip the wings of private media. A draft law was unveiled which threatens to jail journalists and broadcasters who "harm the interests of the state", "cause panic" or "disturb social peace". Some 34 radio stations had their licences revoked, the first of 240 which have been targeted, allegedly over irregular paperwork.
Dozens of militant supporters of President Hugo Chavez stormed an opposition TV station yesterday in an escalation of Venezuela's "media war".
Around 30 activists with red berets forced their way into the Caracas headquarters of Globovision, lobbed tear gas and threatened staff with handguns.
The raid came amid a government crackdown on critics of Chavez's socialist revolution, a campaign which human rights groups have condemned as an attack on free speech. In recent days the government has revoked the licences of dozens of radio stations and proposed a law which would jail people deemed guilty of "media crimes" for up to four years.
Footage aired on Globovision showed activists from the UPV, a radical left-wing party which backs the president and dresses in quasi-military gear, arriving on motorbikes and rushing on foot into the station.
The intruders, led by a prominent "Chavista" named Lina Ron, waved banners and reportedly injured a guard and a police officer while tear gas seeped through the complex.
Chavez has repeatedly assailed Globovision – the South American country's last opposition TV network – as an instrument of oligarchs and US imperialists who are waging "media terrorism".
However, the government swiftly distanced itself from the raid. "We condemn this attack energetically and reject this type of violent action against Globovision," said the interior minister, Tareck El Aissami. "We don't accept that violence is the instrument to solve our differences."
Network executives rejected the condemnation as hollow. "I can only think [the attack] was an order from Miraflores," said Guillermo Zuloaga, in reference to the presidential palace. The government has named Globovision as its main target in a "media war" to rebut what it says is a campaign of lies and smears against the revolution. Authorities last month fined Globovision $2m for back taxes and officials have twice raided its president's property, saying he illegally resold cars and broke environmental regulations by keeping stuffed animals.
The government also opened an investigation against the channel for "inciting panic" after it reported on a small earthquake recently which affected Caracas.
RCTV, another channel which criticised Chavez, went off the air in 2007 after its licence was not renewed. Other private networks which have stayed neutral in Venezuela's polarised political climate continue operating. Chavez, a former tank commander with a flair for communication, has greatly expanded state media during his decade-long rule.
Last week he moved to further clip the wings of private media. A draft law was unveiled which threatens to jail journalists and broadcasters who "harm the interests of the state", "cause panic" or "disturb social peace". Some 34 radio stations had their licences revoked, the first of 240 which have been targeted, allegedly over irregular paperwork.
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