Home
Home | Search | Login
Hoy May 20, 2013, 5:19 pm Havana time.
Hide Menu
SEARCH NEWS
    Language:
03/19/13 - Reuters - Venezuela's Capriles Vows to End Cuba Giveaways 

Venezuelan opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles on Monday
vowed to end the OPEC nation's shipments of subsidized oil to communist-run
Cuba, slamming acting President Nicolas Maduro as a puppet of Havana.

Capriles has berated Maduro as a weak imitation of the late Hugo Chavez,
whose death two weeks ago convulsed the country and triggered the April 14
vote. The opposition also accuses the government of failing to fight crime
and control inflation.

"The giveaways to other countries are going to end. Not another drop of oil
will go toward financing the government of the Castros," Capriles said,
referring to Cuba's present and past leaders, Raul and Fidel Castro.

"Nicolas is the candidate of Raul Castro; I'm the candidate of the
Venezuelan people," Capriles said during a speech to university students in
the oil-rich state of Zulia.

The election marks the first test of the "Chavismo" movement's ability to
maintain the late leader's radical socialism after his death, and it will
be crucial for regional allies that depend on Caracas for financing and
cheap fuel.

A victory for Capriles, 40, would likely give global oil companies greater
access to the world's largest crude reserves and offer investors more
market-friendly policies after years of state-centered economics.

Maduro, a 50-year-old former bus driver seen as having the advantage in the
vote, has vowed to continue Chavez's economic model that included frequent
nationalizations and heavy regulation of private enterprise alongside
generous social welfare programs that underpinned his popularity.

The youthful Capriles, who lost to Chavez by 11 percentage points in 2012,
faces a delicate balancing act to highlight the flaws of Chavez's
governance without appearing to be attacking the former president or
seeking to tarnish his legacy.

He has exchanged furious barbs with Maduro since launching his candidacy
and renewed his criticisms from last year's campaign over day-to-day
problems such as unchecked crime, product shortages and high cost of
living.

"Every day it's harder to find food, and every day food is more expensive,"
Capriles said. "This model is not viable."

He said halting cheap oil sales to Cuba would free up resources to boost
public employee salaries by 40 percent to make up for inflation that is one
of the region's highest.

Vicious Campaign

Ties to Cuba are likely to remain a central part of the campaign. Capriles
for months accused authorities of compromising the country's sovereignty by
letting Chavez govern for two months from a Havana hospital.

Venezuela provides close to 100,000 barrels per day of oil to Cuba in
exchange for a host of services including doctors that staff free health
clinics in slums and rural areas.

Supporters say it has helped expand access to health care, while critics
call it a mere subsidy to the Castro government.

Maduro's frequent visits to the island during Chavez's two-month
convalescence there led opposition leaders to joke that he had picked up a
Cuban accent.

The emotional outpouring of affection for Chavez following his March 5
death, along with ample use of government television broadcasts, has helped
give Maduro a leg up in the race.

Millions of bereaved supporters have lined up before Chavez's remains to
pay respects to a leader who was loved by many of the country's poor but
reviled by adversaries who called him a fledgling dictator.

Maduro Lead

Two recent opinion polls showed Capriles trailing Maduro.

Respected local pollster Datanalisis gave Maduro 46.4 percent versus 34.3
percent for Capriles in a survey carried out before Chavez's death.

He enraged Maduro by accusing him of repeatedly lying about the late
president's two-year battle with cancer, and of then cynically using his
death as a campaign tool. He later apologized to Chavez's family if his
words had offended them.

Maduro last week described a plot by "far right" U.S. elements linked to
two senior former members of the George W. Bush administration to kill
Capriles.

Both officials denied the charges.
http://www.voanews.com/content/venezuelas-capriles-vows-to-end-cuba-giveaways/1623866.html


CUBA-L FAIR USE NOTICE

This server contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of Cuba's political, economic, human rights, international, cultural, educational, scientific, sports and historical issues, among others. We distribute the materials on the basis of a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107. The material is distributed without profit. The material should be used for information, research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/ uscode/17/107.shtml.