EDITORIAL
This week I'll keep this editorial short and sweet. In our News section we have a good selection of articles about two key themes in Venezuela: violence and scarcity. In
Science, scientists discovered that the moon is younger that they thought (hope that happens to me soon!). In
Design, Business and Innovation, we talk Pinterest and soft skills. The
Culture section is all about documentaries, many of them, all free to watch (!), and also about the future of TV. And you really really can't miss the video of the week of
In Dog We Trust!
Happy Sunday and happy reading!
NEWS
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Photo: Pro-government assailants beat a student at the Central University of Venezuela on Thursday. Via Los Angeles Times.
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Although there are several news to review this week about Venezuela two themes are key as they are two of the most important reasons why people have been protesting for the past two months: violence and scarcity. It almost goes without saying that these evident violations of Human Rights you will see below, keep being ignored by the government and most of the international community, specially the Latin American one.
1. On violence: On Thursday while the
Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) of Venezuela prevented students from exiting the premises of the Central University of Venezuela (UCV), pro-government and opposition
students clashed, and shortly after the attack of armed pro-government 'colectivos' to students started. "Victor Marquez, president
of the faculty association at the Central University of Venezuela in
Caracas, said the attack Thursday on a group of about 1,200 students was
carried out by men armed with metal pipes and wooden rods as national
guard members stood by. Witnesses said the assailants also had pistols,
but no shots were fired . . . Marquez said the campus had
been invaded by motorcycle-riding vigilantes at least 10 times since
student-led protests began sweeping the country in early February. The
university, which was founded in 1721, has become a rallying point for
students and others to protest Venezuela's high crime rate, food
shortages and struggling economy." Read full article in
Los Angeles Times.
Here is
a video via BBC that shows how the 'colectivos' stripped naked and beat one of the students. And here is
another photo via AP in Yahoo News. And you can also see some photos in
The Daily Mail (is The Daily Mail, I know, but the photos are okay.)
One good news in this front is that Spain (finally) decided
to stop selling anti-riot equipment to Venezuela (link in Spanish) due to the violence that from the beginning of February had left 39 people dead, 550 injured and more than 2000 arrests, according to Amnesty International figures.
2. On scarcity: It is important to point out that Venezuela, the country with the largest reserves of oil of the entire planet, that is been benefiting from an abundant and steady flow of cash in the past 15 years (mostly coming from oil sales to our number 1 "enemy" the US), there is no food. And this is not the result of an economic war, as the government desperately try to make everyone believe; this is the consequence of an incredible corrupt exchange control system, of the expropriation and consequently poor management of companies, and of the several pacts made with other countries of the region: food and convenient silence in exchange for cheap oil.
Anyway,
the video that El Nacional publishes (link in Spanish), shows how the Venezuelan military now checks the trolleys in the supermarkets so people don't buy more than their assigned quota of food. In the entrance of the Bicentenario Supermarket of Plaza Venezuela (Caracas center) a sign warns: 2 L of cooking oil, 2 and a half packs of coffee, 2 Kg of Milk, 2 Kg of Wheat flour, and 4 Kg of Corn flour per person.
In a related subject The Economist publish an article that explains Venezuela's "bizantine foreign exchange apparatus". The article opens with an incredibly accurate paragraph, hard to find in international media: "HOW many
bolívares does it take to buy a US dollar? That
question, which in a normal economy would get an over-the-counter
answer, has everyone scratching their heads in Venezuela. It depends,
they might say, on what you want it for. Or how well connected you are.
Or even on the day of the week." It sounds crazy, but its true, and it's been true since the exchange control was implemented. The article goes on explaining the impact of this system in the economy of the country: "In an economy that exports little but petroleum and refined products,
and imports just about everything else (including most food), the
exchange rate is a crucial factor in domestic prices. Many of these are
set by the government, in a rather futile bid to control inflation,
which last year stood at over 56%. The result of these controls has been
ever-increasing scarcity. The central bank’s monthly scarcity index hit
28% in January, meaning more than one in four of the goods it tracks
was missing from the shelves. Nelson Merentes, the bank’s governor, says
the index will no longer be published since it has become “political”, a
euphemism for “too damaging to release”. Read full article in
The Economist.
Links en Español:
BBC Mundo:
El desnudo político que impacta a Venezuela. Entre las ya comunes escenas de la violencia que se
producen en Venezuela desde hace casi dos meses, este jueves una imagen
captó la atención mundial: la de un joven siendo desnudado por un grupo
rival dentro de la Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV). En videos y fotografías se captó el momento en
el que el joven no identificado es rodeado por un grupo de encapuchados
hostiles que lo zarandean, lo golpean en el piso y tras quitarle la ropa
le obligan a abandonar el lugar. Es el episodio que más ha destacado de los
violentos enfrentamientos que se produjeron dentro de la UCV entre
estudiantes afiliados a la oposición y grupos de supuestos simpatizantes
del gobierno, llamados "colectivos".
Últimas Noticias:
Así atacaron grupos armados dentro de la UCV. Este jueves un grupo de
personas armadas (algunas identificadas con ropa del oficialismo) atacaron a estudiantes de la Universidad Central de Venezuela, algunos de los jóvenes fueron desnudados y golpeados; además despojaron de sus equipos a cuatro reporteros gráficos de medios privados.
El Nacional:
Milicias inspeccionan carritos de compras. En el gran abasto Bicentenario de Plaza Venezuela los milicianos son
los encargados de chequear que los consumidores no se lleven más
productos regulados de los que se permiten por persona. En la entrada un
aviso alerta: 2 litros de aceite, 2 paquetes de medio kilo de café, 2
kilos de leche, 2 kilos de harina de trigo y 4 kilos de harina de maíz
por person.
El País:
España suspende la venta de material antidisturbios a Venezuela.
El Gobierno español ha suspendido cautelarmente y por tiempo indefinido
la exportación de material antidisturbios a Venezuela,
ante la espiral de violencia que vive dicho país
desde principios de febrero y que ha dejado un saldo de 39 muertos, 550
heridos y más de 2.000 detenidos, según datos de Amnistía
Internacional. La decisión fue adoptada por la Junta Interministerial Reguladora del
Comercio Exterior de Material de Defensa y Doble Uso (JIMDDU) –en la
que están representados los departamentos de Asuntos Exteriores,
Defensa, Interior, Comercio o Hacienda– el pasado 6 de marzo, pero no se
ha hecho pública.