CARACAS, Tuesday January 15, 2008 | Update
The operations conducted by the Anti-kidnapping Command along the Venezuelan border areas have been unsuccessful, according to the Venezuelan Federation of Cattle-raisers (Photo: Fernando Sánchez / El Universal)
EL UNIVERSAL
The Venezuelan Federation of Cattle-raisers (Fedenaga) rebuffed
President Hugo Chávez's claims that the guerrilla groups
in Colombia had not kidnapped Venezuelan citizens, and rather
Fedenaga's vice-president Manuel Cipriano Heredia underscored
that 68 Venezuelans are held in captivity, "and many of them
are in the hands of the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces
(FARC)."
"The FARC are sending letters to them (the relatives of the
hostages) to provide information and ask for a ransom. Therefore,
for us, President Chávez's statement that the Colombian
guerrilla groups have no Venezuelan held in captivity, is
outrageous," Heredia asserted.
He added that Fedenaga forwarded a letter to the newly appointed
Minister of the Interior and Justice Ramón Rodríguez
Chacín. Farmers want to meet with Rodríguez Chacín
to ask him to mediate with the Venezuelan ruler to meet with
the relatives of the Venezuelan hostages.
According to Heredia, the hostages' relatives have unsuccessfully
used "every possible means" to request a meeting with Chávez.
"President Chávez needs to know he has to solve Venezuela's
domestic problems first and then he may take of others. Chávez
has a historic responsibility to meet with the relatives of
the people who are held as hostages," Heredia said, as quoted
by Efe.
Further, he reminded that last September they met with former
Interior Minister Pedro Carreño, the predecessor of Rodríguez
Chacín, to address this issue, but they made no progress
whatsoever.
During his weekly radio and TV show last Sunday, Chávez
argued that the kidnappings the FARC performs in Colombia
have a political reason, while most of the kidnappings in
Venezuela have economic motivations and are performed by organized
criminals who ask for a ransom.
According to the latest report published by Fedenaga, dated
December 29, 2007, last year 264 people were kidnapped in
Venezuela, most of them (77) in northwestern Zulia state,
on the border with Colombia.
The list with the states recording the highest rate of kidnappings
in Venezuela includes Táchira (34), Barinas (31), Yaracuy
(25), Capital District and Miranda (20), Mérida (16),
Bolívar (15), Apure (10), Carabobo (10), Falcón
(4), Portuguesa (4), Cojedes (3). Two people were kidnapped
in the states of Aragua, Sucre, Trujillo, Anzoátegui,
Nueva Esparta, Lara and Guárico, and one was kidnapped
in Vargas state.
Translated by Maryflor Suárez R.
msuarez@eluniversal.com
04:17 PM. Western Hemisphere. "Damned empire; I curse you one thousand times; some day you will be finished off and wrecked. I curse you one thousand times, empire." This is the least that President Hugo Chávez has uttered to refer to the US government. In urging the Bolivarian Armed Forces to prepare for war, he said that a US raid on Venezuela through Colombia would trigger and spread over the region "the 100-year war."