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Venezuelan army enters crime fight; revolution orders toilet paper

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Venezuela’s army has been deployed to fight organised crime, which new president Nicolas Maduro has called the greatest threat to the country. Three thousand soldiers of the national armed forces are spread around the capital Caracas as part of a plan launched earlier this week, called ‘Safe Homeland’.

In one neighbourhood with a high crime rate, a programme commander described the mission now entrusted to men trained for war: “The Venezuelan Bolivarian national police and military police will work body and soul to protect the people and guarantee their safety, as they deserve.”

Opposition critics say promoting social order is a matter for civilian institutions to work on. The government said this is a short-term measure to guarantee the conditions for peace and justice. According to the UN, Venezuela has the world’s fifth-highest homicide rate.

In 2012, the government says the country had more than 16,000 murders. One non-official source says there were far more: well over 21,000.

In a recent survey, the Gallup institute said it found that public fear had remained remarkably high over the past six years, suggesting that the Chavez government, before Maduro, left important aspects of governance unaddressed.

Gallup and other observers also cite Chavez’s stance toward businesses as threatening. The state’s role in the economy, such as through nationalisation and controlling prices, has contributed to acute shortages of basic consumer goods.

One Caracas shopper said: “I have spent two weeks looking for toilet paper. The army guys on the street told me there was some here, so here I am, queuing up.”

Maduro is blaming what he calls anti-government forces for intentionally destabilising supply. Economists say government controls on foreign currency don’t help, and that goods go where people can afford them. Here’s another government bid to cover itself.

Minister for Commerce Alejandro Fleming says: “The revolution will import 50 million rolls of toilet paper in the coming days. We’ll be getting the first shipment this Friday of 20 million rolls, to cover the demand for one week, or even more than a week.”

Companies don’t have free access to foreign currencies, which they need to pay to import consumables, raw materials, equipment and parts. There was a clampdown when Chavez began expropriating land and assets ten years ago and people tried to get their capital out. Now many less well-off Venezuelans are hitting the wall.

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro blasts ‘devil’ Obama

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Venezuelan committee dismisses opposition demands for vote audit as ‘impossible’

The President of the Venezuelan electoral committee Tibisay Lucena dismissed Capriles’ demands for an audit as “impractical” and unconstitutional. “After a long analysis by the National Voting Council, we can say that it is impossible to approve the request with the current conditions,” Lucena said on Venezuelan state television, adding that such demands are not provided for in the Venezuela’s judicial system. She went on to say that starting on Monday, there will be an audit of 46 percent of the votes that had not been previously checked. Addressing Capriles’ claims of “stolen votes,” Lucena stated that the opposition leader had not provided sufficient evidence to back up his allegations. Capriles said that the Venezuelan presidential elections had been sullied by thousands of irregularities including voting intimidation, and demanded a recount of the ballots. He claimed that by his calculations he had won the election, and slammed the Maduro government for its “desperate lies.” He stressed that if the necessary paperwork from polling stations was not included in the audit, then the opposition would not participate in the “joke” of the electoral process.On Thursday, Capriles criticized the Commission for not setting a date for the audit, and said that the next step would be to formally challenge the elections. The Venezuelan Electoral Committee stated on April 20 that despite the audit, the results of the presidential elections were irreversible and there would not be a recount.Late leader Hugo Chavez’s successor Nicolas Maduro won the Venezuelan election on April 14 by a narrow margin of 1.8 percent, with 50.66 percent of the vote. Capriles refused to accept the results until there was a full recount and claimed that he had won.“We won in many of the states of Venezuela and according to these results we won in the main areas of the country, the loser in the government, they are the losers,” the ex-presidential candidate said after the results were announced.Maduro agreed to an audit of the vote but has denied all allegations of foul play. Chavista deputies also founded a commission this week to investigate so-called “fascist aggression” during protests in the run-up to the elections.Pedro Carreno, one of the members of the new commission, says the opposition had a hand in inciting the violence in which nine people died and over 80 were injured. Furthermore, he accused the opposition of trying to conceal their involvement. The government has arrested two people so far it has accused of inciting violence during the election protests.Both Maduro and Capriles have called on their followers to rally on May 1, a potentially inflammatory situation that could lead to clashes. Read More

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Venezuela’s Supreme Court rejects recount of votes

http://www.youtube.com/v/oJqT-06yi-A?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Taken from:  Venezuela’s Supreme Court rejects recount of votes