FEDECAMARAS Defy Supreme Court Order to Reopen the Oil Industry

Yoshie Furuhashi furuhashi.1 at osu.edu
Thu Dec 19 22:11:41 PST 2002


Agence France Presse December 20, 2002 Friday 10:30 PM Eastern Time SECTION: International News LENGTH: 586 words HEADLINE: Venezuela heads to new confrontation as strikers defy order to resume work DATELINE: CARACAS, Dec 19

BODY: Venezuela headed toward new confrontation as government opponents rejected a Supreme Court order to reopen the oil industry crippled by a general strike that headed to its 19th day Friday.

"The oil strike remains active and will not stop," Carlos Fernandez, head of the Fedecamaras business group and one of the top strike leaders, after the court issued the ruling Thursday.

The Supreme Court ordered that government decrees to reopen idled oil production and distribution facilities be enforced.

But strike organizers insisted they will defy the ruling.

"We the oil workers are willing, if that is necessary, to spend Christmas and New Year's Day in front of our factories," said Juan Fernandez, spokesman for the strikers at the Petroleos de Venezuela state oil company.

The protest has severely affected crude output and shipments from Venezuela, the fifth largest oil exporter. This has caused serious concern in the United States, which is closely watching the strike and potential impact of events on its preparations for a possible conflict in Iraq.

The tense stand-off between the government and its opponents has triggered fears of violence....

Ali Rodriguez, who heads Petroleos de Venezuela said earlier crude production was down to one third of its normal level, while the firm's striking managers said output had dropped to 200,000 barrels a day.

Venezuela usually produces around 2.8 million barrels a day, of which it exports 2.5 million barrels

Many gasoline stations across Venezuela remained closed and motorists waited for hours outside the few stations that remained open.

About 70 percent of service stations in Caracas and 60 percent nationwide shut down after running out of fuel, according to Juan Vaquero, who heads the Fenegas association of gasoline station owners.

But Chavez has again insisted he would not give in to the right-wing opposition and has called on the country to back him.

Chavez has deployed troops to keep oil trucks moving. Military forces also boarded oil tankers, but many crews have refused to resume work.

The government insists it can ride out the crisis.

"The population is almost 24 million, and we have 15 billion dollars in reserves, which is enough to resist as long as it takes to get out of the crisis," said Interior and Justice Minister Diosdado Cabello.

Miguel Perez Abad, who heads the Fedeindustria employers group, estimated the strike had cost Venezuela five billion dollars so far.

Strike leaders planned to stage another "megamarch" in Caracas Friday, following several massive protests in the capital.

Suggestions the protesters could head to the Miraflores presidential palace triggered fears of clashes with Chavez supporters and security forces.

The interior minister has said demonstrators would not be allowed near the palace.

During a similar march on April 11, shots were fired at protesters and government supporters, leaving 19 people dead and hundreds wounded. A few hours later Chavez was ousted, but loyal forces returned him to power after 47 hours. -- Yoshie

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