Três Cidades Prisão privadas abrirão em Honduras

As cidades, que são países dentro de um país e são apresentados como sinais de “desenvolvimento”, levam o termo “comprar um país” a um novo nível.

ASSOCIATED PRESS | 15 SETEMBRO 2012

Nota Editorial: Os investidores podem começar a construção de três cidades privadas em seis meses. Essas cidades serão ‘governadas’ por esses investidores, e não pelo governo hondurenho, o que significa que eles serão “países” dentro do território hondurenho. As cidades terão sua própria polícia, leis, governos e sistemas de tributação. Soa inacreditável? O verdadeiro governo de Honduras deu a aprovação para o início do projeto.

Um grupo internacional de investidores e representantes do governo assinaram o memorando última terça-feira para um projeto que alguns dizem que vai trazer um crescimento econômico muito necessário para este pequeno país da América Central, e que pelo menos um crítico descreveu como “uma catástrofe”.

O projeto visa a fortalecer o frágil governo de Honduras e sua pobre infra-estrutura.Honduras é oprimido pela corrupção, a criminalidade associada à droga e instabilidade política persistente após um golpe de Estado em 2009.

O projeto “tem o potencial de transformar Honduras em um motor de riqueza”, disse Carlos Pineda, presidente da Comissão para a Promoção de Parcerias Público-Privadas. Pode ser “um instrumento de desenvolvimento típico de países de primeiro mundo.”

As “cidades-modelo” tem o seu próprio sistema judicial, leis, governos e forças policiais. Eles também terão poderes para assinar acordos internacionais de comércio e investimento e estabelecer sua própria política de imigração.

Presidente do Congresso Juan Hernandez, disse que o grupo MGK investirá US $ 15 milhões para começar a construção de infra-estrutura básica para a primeira “cidade modelo” perto de Puerto Castilla, na costa do Caribe. Essa primeira cidade iria criar 5000 postos de trabalho nos próximos seis meses e até 200 mil empregos no futuro, disse Hernandez. Coreia do Sul tem dado Honduras $ 4 milhões para um estudo de viabilidade, disse.

“O futuro vai lembrar deste dia como o dia em que iniciou o desenvolvimento de Honduras”, disse Michael Strong, CEO do Grupo MKG. “Acreditamos que esta será uma das transformações mais importantes do mundo, através do qual a pobreza finalizará em Honduras através da criação de milhares de empregos.”

Hernandez disse que outra cidade será construída no Valle de Sula, no norte de Honduras, e uma terceira no sul de Honduras, mas não deu outros detalhes.

O projeto é oposito por grupos civis e indígenas Garifuna indígenas, que dizem que não querem suas terras perto de Puerto Castilla, na costa do Caribe, sendo usadas para o projeto. As pessoas Garifuna vivem ao longo da costa caribenha da América Central. Eles são descendentes dos índios Arawak do Caribe Amazônico que escaparam da escravidão na África Ocidental.

“Esses territórios são dos Garifuna e não podem ser dados ao capital estrangeiro, em um movimento que é puro colonialismo como o vivido em Honduras durante o tempo em que o nosso país tornou-se um enclave bananeiro”, disse Miriam Miranda, presidente da Organização Fraterna Honduras Preto.

Oscar Cruz, ex-advogado constitucional, apresentou uma moção na Suprema Corte no ano passado, que caracteriza o projeto como inconstitucional e “uma catástrofe para Honduras”.

“As cidades envolvem a criação de um Estado dentro de um Estado, uma entidade empresarial com poderes de Estado, mas fora da jurisdição do governo”, disse Cruz.

O Supremo Tribunal Federal recebe a queixa

Em entrevista quarta-feira, Forte disse que, agora que o governo de Honduras deu a aprovação final para os limites das áreas, os desenvolvedores irão começar a construção de infra-estrutura em meia milha quadrada para a primeira cidade onde esperam ter duas ou três empresas como inquilinos no prazo de 18 meses.

Ele disse que o investimento de US $ 15 milhões, estava sujeito a aprovação pelo governo de Honduras. Ele acrescentou que não houve inquilinos interessados ​​em se mudar para cidades privadas, mas os investidores antecipam ter manufatura têxtil, montagem de produtos e empresas subcontratadas como call centers e processamento de dados.

“As pessoas não vão gastar muito dinheiro em algo que não vai funcionar”, disse Strong. Ele não mencionou qualquer um dos investidores do projeto.

Ele disse que os trabalhadores serão capazes de viver nas cidades, e que as leis hondurenhas que criaram as áreas privadas garantem que cada cidadão do país pode viver lá.

“Pode ser uma cidade de grande escala”, disse Strong. “Uma vez que tenhamos empregos com habitação a preços acessíveis, escolas, clínicas, igrejas, lojas, restaurantes, todas as coisas que criam uma comunidade real.”

O presidente da Honduras escolherá “figuras internacionais respeitadas no mundo”, sem interesse financeiro no projeto como membros de nove conselhos independentes que irão supervisionar o funcionamento das cidades, cujas operações diárias serão administradas por um governador nomeado pelos conselhos. Futuras nomeações para o conselho deverão ser decididas pelos votos dos membros dos conselhos, disse.

Governadores estabelecerão as regras que governam as cidades inicialmente junto com investidores, disse Strong, mas essas regras podem ser alteradas no futuro por voto popular entre todos os moradores da cidade.

Strong disse que a lei hondurenha não se aplicaria nas cidades, mas teria que aderir a convenções internacionais sobre direitos humanos e outros princípios.

O representante comparouas cidades com outras governadas por melhores práticas como as zonas de livre comércio em todo o mundo, como Dubai, e espera-se que isso signifique criar empregos e apoiar o desenvolvimento de Honduras.

“Em geral, essas zonas têm sido espetacularmente bem sucedidas em termos de desenvolvimento econômico”, disse ele. “Estou muito otimista”.

Nota Final: Na verdade, as zonas francas eram projetos de formação inicial para p que hoje são “cidades-modelo”, que, como foi explicado no início, são realmente o projeto de futuro dos globalistas que procuram concentrar a população em centros urbanos  densamente povoados. Esta é a proposta do plano da ONU conhecido como Agenda 21.

Tradução: Luis Miranda. Este artigo foi publicado originalmente em 6 de setembro de 2012.

Tres Ciudades Prisión Privadas Abrirán en Honduras

Las ciudades, que serán países dentro de un país y se presentan como signos de “desarrollo”, llevan el término “comprar un país” a un otro nivel.

ASSOCIATED PRESS | 15 SEPTIEMBRE 2012

Nota editorial: Inversionistas podrán iniciar la construcción de tres ciudades privadas en seis meses. Estas ciudades serán ‘gobernadas’ por tales inversionistas, no por el gobierno hondureño, lo que supone que sean “países” dentro del territorio hondureño. Las ciudades tendrán su propia policía, leyes, gobiernos y sistemas fiscales. Suena increíble? Pues el verdadero gobierno de Honduras ha dado el visto bueno para el inicio del proyecto.

Un grupo internacional de inversores y representantes del gobierno firmaron el memorando el martes anterior para realizar un proyecto que algunos dicen que traerá un muy necesario crecimiento económico para este pequeño país centroamericano y que por lo menos un detractor describe como “una catástrofe”.

El objetivo del proyecto es fortalecer al débil gobierno de Honduras y su infraestructura deficiente, abrumados por la corrupción, la delincuencia relacionada con las drogas y la inestabilidad política persistente después de un golpe de Estado de 2009.

El proyecto “tiene el potencial de convertir a Honduras en un motor de riqueza”, dijo Carlos Pineda, presidente de la Comisión para la Promoción de Alianzas Público-Privadas. Puede ser “un instrumento de desarrollo típico de los países del primer mundo.”

Las “ciudades modelo” tendrán su propio sistema judicial, leyes, gobiernos y fuerzas policiales. También estarán facultadas para firmar acuerdos internacionales sobre el comercio y inversión y establecer su propia política de inmigración.

Presidente del Congreso, Juan Hernández, dijo que el grupo MGK invertirá $ 15 millones para iniciar la construcción de infraestructura básica para la primera “ciudad modelo”, cerca de Puerto Castilla sobre la costa del Caribe. Esa primera ciudad crearía 5.000 empleos en los próximos seis meses y hasta 200.000 puestos de trabajo en el futuro, dijo Hernández. Corea del Sur ha dado a Honduras $ 4 millones para realizar un estudio de factibilidad, dijo.

“El futuro recordará este día como el día en que comenzó el desarrollo de Honduras”, dijo Michael Strong, Director General del Grupo MKG. “Creemos que esta será una de las transformaciones más importantes en el mundo, a través del cual Honduras terminará con la pobreza mediante la creación de miles de puestos de trabajo.”

Hernández dijo que otra ciudad se construirá en el Valle de Sula, en el norte de Honduras, y una tercera en el sur de Honduras, pero no dio otros detalles.

El proyecto es opuesto por grupos cívicos, así como personas indígenas Garífunas, que dicen que no quieren que su tierra cerca de Puerto Castilla sobre la costa del Caribe, sea utilizada para el proyecto. Los Garífunas viven a lo largo de la costa del Caribe de Centroamérica. Ellos son descendientes de los indios Arawak del caribe amazónico y escaparon de su esclavitud en África Occidental.

“Estos territorios son de los garífunas y no pueden ser entregado al capital extranjero en una acción que es puro colonialismo como el vivido en Honduras durante el tiempo en que nuestra tierra se convirtió en un enclave bananero”, dijo Miriam Miranda, presidenta de la Organización Fraternal Negra de Honduras.

Oscar Cruz, un ex fiscal constitucional, presentó una moción ante la Corte Suprema el año pasado que caracterizaba el proyecto como inconstitucional y “una catástrofe para Honduras”.

“Las ciudades implican la creación de un Estado dentro del Estado, una entidad comercial con poderes de Estado pero fuera de la jurisdicción del gobierno”, dijo Cruz.

El Tribunal Supremo ha recibido su queja

En una entrevista el miércoles, Strong dijo que tan pronto como el gobierno de Honduras diera la aprobación final a los límites de los lugares, los desarrolladores podrán comenzar la construcción de la infraestructura en el recorrido de media milla cuadrada para la primera ciudad, donde esperan tener dos o tres empresas como arrendatarios dentro de 18 meses.

Dijo que la inversión de $ 15 millones fue supeditada a la aprobación del gobierno hondureño. Agregó que no han habido inquilinos interesados en mudarse a las ciudades privadas, pero que los inversionistas prevén tener fabricación textil, montaje de productos y pequeñas empresas subcontratadas como centros de llamadas o de procesamiento de datos como posibilidades.

“La gente no va a gastar mucho dinero en algo que no va a funcionar”, dijo Strong. Él no mencionó ninguno de los inversionistas del proyecto.

Él dijo que los trabajadores serán capaces de vivir en las ciudades, y las leyes hondureñas que crean las áreas privadas garantizan que cualquier ciudadano del país también pueden vivir allí.

“Puede ser una ciudad de gran escala”, dijo Strong. “Una vez que hayan puestos de trabajo vamos a necesitar una vivienda asequible, escuelas, clínicas, iglesias, tiendas, restaurantes, todos los negocios que crean una comunidad real.”

El presidente de Honduras nombrará a “figuras internacionales respetadas a nivel mundial”, sin intereses financieros en los proyectos como miembros de nueve juntas independientes que se encargarán de supervisar el funcionamiento de las ciudades cuyas operaciones diarias serán administradas por un gobernador nombrado por el consejo. Nombramientos futuros a la junta serán decididos por los votos de los miembros del consejo, dijo.

Los gobernadores establecerán las reglas por las que las ciudades se regirán inicialmente en conjunto con los inversionistas, dijo Strong, pero esas reglas se pueden cambiar en el futuro por votación popular entre todos los residentes de las ciudades.

Strong dijo que la legislación hondureña no se aplicaría en las ciudades, sino que tendrían que adherirse a las convenciones internacionales en materia de derechos humanos y otros principios básicos.

El representante comparó las ciudades con otras que se rigen por mejores prácticas de las zonas de libre comercio en todo el mundo, como en Dubai, y se espera que esto signifique la creación de puestos de trabajo y ayude al desarrollo de Honduras.

“En general, las zonas francas han sido un éxito espectacular en términos de desarrollo económico”, dijo. “Soy muy optimista”.

Nota Final: En realidad, las zonas francas fueron proyectos iniciales de entrenamiento para lo que son hoy “ciudades modelo” las cuales, como explicado al comienzo, son en realidad el proyecto a futuro de los globalistas quienes pretenden concentrar a la población en ciudades prisión densamente pobladas. Esta es la propuesta de las Naciones Unidas en su plan conocido como Agenda 21.

Traducción: Luis Miranda.  Este artículo fue publicado originalmente el 6 de Septiembre de 2012.

Three Private Prison Cities to Open in Honduras

The cities, which will be countries inside a country and are being presented as signs of ‘development’, take the saying buying off a country to a whole new level.

By ALBERTO ARCE | ASSOCIATED PRESS | SEPTEMBER 6, 2012

Honduras (AP) — Investors can begin construction in six months on three privately run cities in Honduras that will have their own police, laws, government and tax systems now that the government has signed a memorandum of agreement approving the project.

An international group of investors and government representatives signed the memorandum Tuesday for the project that some say will bring badly needed economic growth to this small Central American country and that at least one detractor describes as “a catastrophe.”

The project’s aim is to strengthen Honduras’ weak government and failing infrastructure, overwhelmed by corruption, drug-related crime and lingering political instability after a 2009 coup.

The project “has the potential to turn Honduras into an engine of wealth,” said Carlos Pineda, president of the Commission for the Promotion of Public-Private Partnerships. It can be “a development instrument typical of first world countries.”

The “model cities” will have their own judiciary, laws, governments and police forces. They also will be empowered to sign international agreements on trade and investment and set their own immigration policy.

Congress president Juan Hernandez said the investment group MGK will invest $15 million to begin building basic infrastructure for the first model city near Puerto Castilla on the Caribbean coast. That first city would create 5,000 jobs over the next six months and up to 200,000 jobs in the future, Hernandez said. South Korea has given Honduras $4 million to conduct a feasibility study, he said.

“The future will remember this day as that day that Honduras began developing,” said Michael Strong, CEO of the MKG Group. “We believe this will be one of the most important transformations in the world, through which Honduras will end poverty by creating thousands of jobs.”

Hernandez said another city will be built in the Sula Valley, in northern Honduras, and a third in southern Honduras. He gave no other details.

The project is opposed by civic groups as well as the indigenous Garifuna people, who say they don’t want their land near Puerto Castilla on the Caribbean coast to be used for the project. Living along Central America’s Caribbean coast, the Garifuna are descendants of the Amazon’s Arawak Indians, the Caribbean’s Caribes and escaped West African slaves.

“These territories are the Garifuna people’s and can’t be handed over to foreign capital in an action that is pure colonialism like that lived in Honduras during the time that our land became a banana enclave,” said Miriam Miranda, president of the Fraternal Black Organization of Honduras.

Oscar Cruz, a former constitutional prosecutor, filed a motion with the Supreme Court last year characterizing the project as unconstitutional and “a catastrophe for Honduras.”

“The cities involve the creation of a state within the state, a commercial entity with state powers outside the jurisdiction of the government,” Cruz said.

The Supreme Court has not taken up his complaint.

In an interview Wednesday, Strong said that as soon as the Honduras government gives final approval to the boundaries of the sites, the developers will begin building infrastructure on the first half square mile of the first city, where they hope to have two or three businesses as tenants within 18 months.

He said the $15 million investment was contingent on Honduran government approval. He added that no tenants have made commitments to locating to the future private city yet, but the investors envision textile manufacturing, small-product assembly and outsourced businesses like call centers or data processing as possibilities.

“People are not going to put up big money for something that could fall through,” Strong said. He did not name any of the investors in the project.

He said workers will be able to live in the cities, and the Honduran laws setting up the private areas guarantees that any citizen of the country can also live there.

“It can be a full-scale city,” Strong said. “Once we have jobs then we will need affordable housing, schools, clinics, churches, stores, restaurants, all the businesses that create a real community.”

The president of Honduras will appoint “globally respected international figures” without financial interests in the projects to nine-member independent boards that will oversee the running of the cities, whose daily operations will be administered by a board-appointed governor. Future appointments to the board will be decided by votes by standing board members, Strong said.

The governors will establish the rules by which the cities are initially run in conjunction with the developers, Strong said, but those rules can be changed in the future by popular votes among all residents of the cities.

Strong said Honduran law would not apply in the cities but they would have to adhere to international conventions on human rights and other basic principles.

He called the cities based on the best practices of free-trade zones around the world, like in Dubai, and he expected that they would successfully create jobs and help the development of Honduras.

“In general, free zones have been a spectacular success in terms of economic development,” he said. “I’m very optimistic.”

D.E.A Commandos Attack Cartels that Cut Into Its Profits

Charlie Savage
New York Times
October 8, 2011

Late on a moonless night last March, a plane smuggling nearly half a ton of cocaine touched down at a remote airstrip in Honduras. A heavily armed ground crew was waiting for it — as were Honduran security forces. After a 20-minute firefight, a Honduran officer was wounded and two drug traffickers lay dead.

Several news outlets briefly reported the episode, mentioning that a Honduran official said the United States Drug Enforcement Administration had provided support. But none of the reports included a striking detail: that support consisted of an elite detachment of military-trained D.E.A. special agents who joined in the shootout, according to a person familiar with the episode.

The D.E.A. now has five commando-style squads it has been quietly deploying for the past several years to Western Hemisphere nations — including Haiti, Honduras, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala and Belize — that are battling drug cartels, according to documents and interviews with law enforcement officials.

The program — called FAST, for Foreign-deployed Advisory Support Team — was created during the George W. Bush administration to investigate Taliban-linked drug traffickers in Afghanistan. Beginning in 2008 and continuing under President Obama, it has expanded far beyond the war zone.

“You have got to have special skills and equipment to be able to operate effectively and safely in environments like this,” said Michael A. Braun, a former head of operations for the drug agency who helped design the program. “The D.E.A. is working shoulder-to-shoulder in harm’s way with host-nation counterparts.”

The evolution of the program into a global enforcement arm reflects the United States’ growing reach in combating drug cartels and how policy makers increasingly are blurring the line between law enforcement and military activities, fusing elements of the “war on drugs” with the “war on terrorism.”

Bruce Bagley, a University of Miami professor who specializes in Latin America and counternarcotics, said the commando program carries potential benefits: the American teams could help arrest kingpins, seize stockpiles, disrupt smuggling routes and professionalize security forces in small countries through which traffickers pass drugs headed to the United States.

But there are also potential dangers.

“It could lead to a nationalist backlash in the countries involved,” he said. “If an American is killed, the administration and the D.E.A. could get mired in Congressional oversight hearings. Taking out kingpins could fragment the organization and lead to more violence. And it won’t permanently stop trafficking unless a country also has capable institutions, which often don’t exist in Central America.”

Read Full Article…

Mossad in South America

Wayne Madsen Report

“N”, a correspondent from an Iranian media agency, whom I met in the association of foreign journalists in Caracas, told me that he Israeli Mossadused to work in Buenos Aires for some time. Things were going well, N’s employer was satisfied with the job he did, and he planned to spend a few more years in Argentine, but eventually had to change his plans. After a while “N” noticed that he was under surveillance and that his mail regularly got stolen. Uninvited guests started to frequent his office. He talked to the local police and counterintelligence service, but both replied they had nothing to do with the problem. They did mention to “N” cautiously that he was in the sphere of interests of «the Zionists». He told me: «The people in my agency in Tehran knew that Iranian citizens often encounter such problems and concluded that the Mossad was planning a provocation against me. This is why I relocated to Venezuela. It is a country friendly to Iran, one enjoys a certain level of security guarantees here and can expect to be protected in case of need».

I had a similar conversation with “F”, a journalist from Syria. He told me frankly that he preferred to stay on the alert even in Venezuela because the Israeli intelligence service watches over all Syrians working in Latin America and often attempts to compromise them. Like most of his countrymen, “F” believes that hostile acts by the Mossad — drugs put in his pocket, allegations of links to Arab terrorists, the emergence of «documentary evidence» of connections to Colombian guerrillas — are likely. “F” said: «I am ready to face whatever happens. I’m not paranoid, I just look at things realistically. I even obtained a gun permit» and showed me a gun he wore under his jacket.

The Mossads’s objectives are listed on its official web site. They include secret collection of operative, political, and strategic information abroad, termination of terrorist activity targeting Israeli and other Jewish installations, prevention of development or acquisition of nuclear weapons by countries hostile to Israel, and covert operations abroad. The January, 2010 killing by the Mossad of the leader of the the paramilitary wing of Hamas Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in a Dubai hotel gives an idea of what the term «covert operations abroad» refers to.

A Mossad hit squad of 11 agents disguised as tourists blocked the corridor leading to the hotel room where al-Mabhouh stayed. Then the Israeli hitmen got inside, electroshocked and strangulated the man. In several hours the Mossad agents left the Emirates with fake British, Canadian, Irish, and Australian passports.

The demonstrative character of the act was supposed to highlight the Mossad’s capability to score with the enemies of Israel in any part of the world. The operation drew extensive coverage in Latin American media, most of which published the photos of the Mossad agents and, of course, that of their chief – the 64 year old Meir Dagan who has long deserved the nickname of «a man with a knife between his teeth». Among other operations, hundreds of killings of Iranian and Iraqi scientists who were involved in military-related research and were regarded as potentially dangerous to Israel are tracked to Dagan.

According to ALAI (Latin America Information Agency), the Mossad is using at least 40 Israeli companies (as well as embassies and other official institutions of the state of Israel) as fronts for its activity. The total number of the Mossad operatives in Latin America is not greater than 100-110, but an extensive network of agents and the cooperation with Jewish organizations and communities ensure the Mossad’s presence across Latin America and the Caribbean.

The Mossad’s interests gravitate to the regions south of the Rio Grande which are densely populated by Arab immigrants. The Mossad analysts believe that the epicenter of the potential «Muslim terrorism» in Latin America is located in the Zone of Three Borders between Paraguay, Argentina, and Brazil. Venezuela’s Isla Margarita, a place where Lebanese and Syrian immigrants hunting for pearls started to settle down in the early XX century, is viewed similarly. When a free trade zone was opened on Margarita Island, the Arab populations switched to selling shoes, textile, and bijouterie. The Venezuelan government was a number of times forced to disprove allegations that Chavez hosts Muslim terrorists. In reality, Margarita is a small island where more or less everybody knows everybody else and no secret activity — least the operation of Hezbollah training camps — is possible.

Over the years of spying on the above «terrorist centers» Mossad never discovered the networks that could present a threat to Israel. Nevertheless, the Mossad’s efforts were not wasted, at least since the Israeli «reliable» data were invariably used by Washington in planning its struggle against terrorism in Latin America. This is the mechanism of ideological support for the establishment of increasing numbers of US military bases on the continent in the proximity of the Latin American countries with «populist» regimes.

In many cases, Israeli intelligence operatives are involved in legal arms trade business which they use to gain connections in local military circles and security services.

The Mossad also uses affiliated companies to advise its Latin American colleagues on fighting terrorism, «leftist extremism», guerrilla groups and their support networks, as well as to help intelligence services modernize their technical base. A company most often mentioned in the context is Israel’s Global CST, whose CEOs are retired high-ranking Mossad operatives. In July, 2009 the Peruvian government hired the company to help reorganize the country’s intelligence community in order to boost the efficiency of its struggle against «subversive and terrorist organizations» including the re-emerging Sendero Luminoso Maoist group. Global CST is also helping the Peruvian government create a joint system of control over mobile communications, Internet, and other communications media.

Global CST has grown notably more active in Colombia. The Israeli company familiarizes the country’s military intelligence and political police (DAS) officers with new techniques in the spheres of anti-terrorist activity and espionage. Over recent years, Columbia’s intelligence services have been increasingly assertive outside the country, evidently imitating the modus operandi of their CIA and Mossad peers. Columbia maintains intelligence networks in Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama, and other Latin American countries. The FARC and ELN envoys are finding themselves under permanent surveillance, routinely kidnapped and sometimes — assassinated.

International Security Agency (ISA) mainly staffed by former Israeli special forces officers and intelligence operatives is also active in Latin America. The agency (in tight cooperation with the CIA and the Mossad) took part in the coup that displaced M. Zelaya, the legitimate President of Honduras. Currently ISA specialists are working in the security service of the current President of Honduras P. Lobo, who was propelled to presidency as the result of an imitation of free elections like those Washington realized in Iraq and Afghanistan.

There is a consensus among experts that the Mossad’s number one adversary and target in Latin America is Hugo Chavez, the political leader condemning Israel’s attempts to resolve conflicts in the Middle East by force. Chavez suspended Venezuela’s diplomatic relations with Israel in August, 2006, following the Israeli aggression against Lebanon. At that time Israeli Ambassador Shlomo Cohen and the embassy staff (mostly Mossad operatives) left Caracas. In several months Chavez took steps to normalize the relations with Israel, largely in response to the requests made by Venezuela’s 12,000 Jewish community.

The diplomatic relations between Venezuela and Israel were severed again in January, 2009 when the former protested the crimes committed by the Israeli army in the Gaza Strip, where the Israeli operation resulted in the killing of over 1,000 Palestinians, a third of them — children. In a televised address, Chavez criticized Israel as a country guilty of genocide and inhumane persecution of Palestinians. Not surprisingly, Israel’s reaction was negative. In November, 2009 Shimon Peres addressed a thinly veiled threat to Chavez by saying that «Chavez will soon disappear». The Venezuelan leader remarked that Perez had to undertake a long journey to Latin America to say the words and wondered publicly what would have happened if similar words were said about Peres in Venezuela.

TV commentator and former Venezuelan Vice President José Vicente Rangel often warns in his TV show that the Mossad is planning to assassinate Chavez. Agents with the corresponding qualifications were sent to Columbia, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Panama, and Curacao Island. In Rangel’s view, the greatest threat emanates from Colombia as DAS — instigated by the CIA — already conspired quite a few times to kill Chavez. Alarming comments were also made by US journalist Eva Hollinger who is a renown expert in operations against Venezuela. Author of CIA in Venezuela Hose Sant Ross calls the Venezuelan authorities to be mindful of the Mossad’s operations in the country.

As a rule, the efforts of Venezuelan security services to identify the Mossad agents echo with carefully orchestrated protests staged by the country’s Jewish community and with «solidarity» campaigns across Latin America. Media synchronously respond by charging Chavez with antisemitism and collusion with Muslim extremism.

Actually, the theme of antisemitism recurs due to a range of causes, for example whenever the Venezuelan government takes measures to scrutinize the country’s financial sphere. For decades, there used to be a number of jewelry stores in La Francia building in downtown Caracas, not far from the Venezuelan Foreign ministry, where gold and jewelry were bought and sold with practically no fiscal control. The administration’s attempts to make the business take legal shape and to subject the accounting documents of the stores to the long-overdue audit were condemned by the opposition media as persecution of Jewish businessmen. Nevertheless, the announcement of the coming audit had an explosive effect: in a matter of hours La Francia building was completely abandoned. The most valuable stuff was evacuated secretly at night.

Venezuelan counterintelligence agents watched the process from a distance, occasionally taking pictures. They did not expect to learn anything new — it was known that the Mossad used La Francia to carry out its financial transactions.

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