NED Back on the Offensive in Venezuela
by Eva Golinger
http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=23482
On November 8, 2004, National Endowment for Democracy (NED) president Carl Gershman made an historic visit to Venezuela with a very peculiar purpose. Gershman traveled to the South American nation to request President Chavez to influence the outcome of a legal case brought against NED direct grantee Sumate ... currently in the hands of the independent Attorney General's office.
But much to Gershmans surprise, no meetings had been authorized with the Venezuelan President or cabinet members and therefore he was unable to exert the weight of the US-backed NED over the popular head of state.
Gershman did meet with Attorney General Isaias Rodriguez and Chief Justice Ivan Rincon. However, both legal chiefs were unwilling to succumb to NED pressure and, instead, made very clear that Venezuelas judiciary is independent of the Executive and that international influence will not be allowed to interfere with, or impede, due process of law.
The case brought against NED-grantee Sumate has caused uproar in the ranks of the US State Department and the quasi-governmental NED (which receives all of its financing from the US Congress and is obliged to report annually on its activities and use of funds).
On occasion, such as in Venezuela, the State Department issues special funds to the NED to finance its activities in nations of "key interest." In April 2002, just days after the failed coup d'etat against Venezuela President Hugo Chavez, the State Department gave the NED a US$1 million grant entitled Special Venezuela Funds .. which was distributed to many of the very same groups that had just led and participated in the coup.
In fact, since President Chavez's election to highest office in 1998, the NED has consistently funded just one sector in Venezuela: the opposition to President Chavez.
Once George W. Bush assumed the US presidency in 2000, funding to opposition groups in Venezuela was quadrupled. Those organizations receiving NED funding, such as the Confederacion de Trabajadores Venezolanos (CTV), the Asamblea de Educacion, Primero Justicia, Fedecamaras, CEDICE, Sumate and others have used the millions in US taxpayer dollars to lead a coup against President Chavez, devastate Venezuela's economy through an illegal 64-day long strike and, later, lead a failed recall referendum attempt.
All of the NED-funded initiatives have shared just one goal: remove President Chavez from power ... be it through legal or illegal means.
The case against Sumate was brought earlier this year by the Attorney General's office alleging violation of Article 132 of the Penal Code, which makes it a crime to conspire to destroy the government and to solicit international intervention in international politics or to incite civil war or defame the President or diplomatic representatives in the foreign press.
The Attorney General alleges that Sumate committed a crime by soliciting financing from the NED, an arm of the US government to campaign for and lead a recall referendum against President Chavez.
Furthermore, the Chief Prosecutor alleges that Sumate violated the Constitution by usurping functions of the Electoral Power through its creation of a parallel Electoral Registry and database that it used to collect and count signatures during stages of the referendum process. Though charges have been filed with the court, and an arraignment hearing to set, a trial date has yet to be announced.
Due to a massive campaign in defense of Sumate that has been launched by the US State Department, the case has experienced interesting delays. Gershmans visit came one week after the arraignment hearing had been postponed from November 2 to November 24, as a result of the resignation of one of the defendant's attorneys.
Subsequently, the case experienced another development after US Ambassador to Venezuela, William Brownfield, visited Chief Justice Ivan Rincon and requested he intervene to prevent the case from proceeding. Although Rincon was clear about his respect for due process and the jurisdiction of the Attorney General (a separate power), one of the other justices in the Penal Chamber of the Supreme Court decided to review the case for clarity and merit before allowing it to continue.
But Gershman's visit ... the first visit by the NED president to a foreign nation to defend the organization's interests ... was an apparent last chance offer to the Venezuelan government to stop the case or face the wrath of the US government.
Even presidential candidate John Kerry got on the Sumate defense bandwagon in the days prior to the US elections, criticizing Chavez for political persecution and accusing him of heading towards a dictatorship.
by Eva Golinger
http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=23482
On November 8, 2004, National Endowment for Democracy (NED) president Carl Gershman made an historic visit to Venezuela with a very peculiar purpose. Gershman traveled to the South American nation to request President Chavez to influence the outcome of a legal case brought against NED direct grantee Sumate ... currently in the hands of the independent Attorney General's office.
But much to Gershmans surprise, no meetings had been authorized with the Venezuelan President or cabinet members and therefore he was unable to exert the weight of the US-backed NED over the popular head of state.
Gershman did meet with Attorney General Isaias Rodriguez and Chief Justice Ivan Rincon. However, both legal chiefs were unwilling to succumb to NED pressure and, instead, made very clear that Venezuelas judiciary is independent of the Executive and that international influence will not be allowed to interfere with, or impede, due process of law.
The case brought against NED-grantee Sumate has caused uproar in the ranks of the US State Department and the quasi-governmental NED (which receives all of its financing from the US Congress and is obliged to report annually on its activities and use of funds).
On occasion, such as in Venezuela, the State Department issues special funds to the NED to finance its activities in nations of "key interest." In April 2002, just days after the failed coup d'etat against Venezuela President Hugo Chavez, the State Department gave the NED a US$1 million grant entitled Special Venezuela Funds .. which was distributed to many of the very same groups that had just led and participated in the coup.
In fact, since President Chavez's election to highest office in 1998, the NED has consistently funded just one sector in Venezuela: the opposition to President Chavez.
Once George W. Bush assumed the US presidency in 2000, funding to opposition groups in Venezuela was quadrupled. Those organizations receiving NED funding, such as the Confederacion de Trabajadores Venezolanos (CTV), the Asamblea de Educacion, Primero Justicia, Fedecamaras, CEDICE, Sumate and others have used the millions in US taxpayer dollars to lead a coup against President Chavez, devastate Venezuela's economy through an illegal 64-day long strike and, later, lead a failed recall referendum attempt.
All of the NED-funded initiatives have shared just one goal: remove President Chavez from power ... be it through legal or illegal means.
The case against Sumate was brought earlier this year by the Attorney General's office alleging violation of Article 132 of the Penal Code, which makes it a crime to conspire to destroy the government and to solicit international intervention in international politics or to incite civil war or defame the President or diplomatic representatives in the foreign press.
The Attorney General alleges that Sumate committed a crime by soliciting financing from the NED, an arm of the US government to campaign for and lead a recall referendum against President Chavez.
Furthermore, the Chief Prosecutor alleges that Sumate violated the Constitution by usurping functions of the Electoral Power through its creation of a parallel Electoral Registry and database that it used to collect and count signatures during stages of the referendum process. Though charges have been filed with the court, and an arraignment hearing to set, a trial date has yet to be announced.
Due to a massive campaign in defense of Sumate that has been launched by the US State Department, the case has experienced interesting delays. Gershmans visit came one week after the arraignment hearing had been postponed from November 2 to November 24, as a result of the resignation of one of the defendant's attorneys.
Subsequently, the case experienced another development after US Ambassador to Venezuela, William Brownfield, visited Chief Justice Ivan Rincon and requested he intervene to prevent the case from proceeding. Although Rincon was clear about his respect for due process and the jurisdiction of the Attorney General (a separate power), one of the other justices in the Penal Chamber of the Supreme Court decided to review the case for clarity and merit before allowing it to continue.
But Gershman's visit ... the first visit by the NED president to a foreign nation to defend the organization's interests ... was an apparent last chance offer to the Venezuelan government to stop the case or face the wrath of the US government.
Even presidential candidate John Kerry got on the Sumate defense bandwagon in the days prior to the US elections, criticizing Chavez for political persecution and accusing him of heading towards a dictatorship.