Who really jailed Alvarez Paz?
BY CARLOS ALBERTO MONTANER
www.firmaspress.com
Oswaldo Alvarez Paz is imprisoned in Caracas, but the tip of the chain 
is in Havana. He is in a cell of the political police, denied the right 
to bail.
The matter is serious. He may be the living Venezuelan politician most 
respected outside his country. The international clamor against this 
abuse has been enormous, and the price Chavismo is paying is high. Even 
the White House has issued a statement in protest.
Now 67, this Christian Democratic lawyer with a well-earned reputation 
as an honest man, has been everything in Venezuela, except president. He 
headed the Chamber of Deputies, was governor of Zulia and, in 1993, lost 
the presidential election by a narrow margin against Rafael Caldera, his 
former mentor and fellow party member.
The excuse made for jailing him is ridiculous. He is accused of 
conspiring against the security of the nation, instigating others to 
disobey the law, disseminating false information and encouraging others 
to commit crimes.
On what basis? According to his jailers, on a popular program on 
Globovisión directed by Leopoldo Castillo, Alvarez Paz commented that 
the image of the Venezuelan government has been seriously tarnished by 
its alleged links to the FARC narcoterrorists and the ETA terrorists, 
while the country sinks amid the murderous violence of the criminals, 
the corruption of many officials, and the almost astounding inefficiency 
of the public sector.
In other words, exactly the picture described by almost all the 
international organizations, investigated by the Spanish judicial 
apparatus, and the target of the complaints of millions of Venezuelans 
every day.
Why did Hugo Chávez order such a stupid step? The answer may have been 
provided by Roger Noriega, former U.S. ambassador, a great expert on 
Latin America, and a person with access to information that few people 
possess. Because of the denunciation made by Alvarez Paz about the 
presence in Venezuela of Gen. Ramiro Valdés, a document in which the 
Christian Democratic leader foretold the possible ``arrival of regular 
troops from Cuba to reinforce the defense of the Chavista revolution.''
Alvarez Paz touched a sensitive nerve.
In reality, Oswaldo Alvarez Paz is a prisoner of the Cubans. In 
Venezuela, the orders are issued by the intelligence apparatus operating 
from the third floor of Castro's embassy in Caracas.
Years ago, Chávez realized that his permanence in power depends on Cuban 
support and has delivered himself, bound hand and foot, to Havana. Cuba 
is the metropolis that commands and plunders, and Venezuela is the 
colony that obeys and pays.
It is the Cubans who decide whom to arrest, whom to intimidate and who 
should conveniently be removed from the country. It is they who design 
the political and police strategy of expanding social control.
It is they who spy on the opposition, the military brass and 
functionaries, the ones who tap their phones and film them, the ones who 
compile compromising information to neutralize or blackmail them. It is 
they who set the pace for the growing construction of a totalitarian 
state copied, more or less, from the Soviet-Cuban model.
There are Cuban advisers in all institutions, but the most sensitive 
zones of intervention are the army and the political police. 
Simultaneously, hundreds of Venezuelan youngsters are being taught in 
Cuba the techniques of social repression and political control that the 
Cubans learned from the KGB and the East German Stasi. The training 
lasts from six months to a year, and they will be given the task of 
managing the totalitarian state once the cage has been completed.
The Cuban government is intent on accelerating the creation of the 
totalitarian state. Chávez is in agreement. The information conveyed by 
the Cuban agents to the Castro brothers indicates that popular support 
for Chávez is swiftly collapsing. If the partial elections in September 
are true and transparent, he would suffer a crushing loss.
The Cubans' suggestion is to ``rapidly deepen the revolution,'' which 
implies eliminating any vestige of democracy and freedom that remains in 
the country. They may even find some excuse to suspend the election. 
That is why they detained Oswaldo Alvarez Paz. He was an obstacle to the 
Cuban plans.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/03/30/1554335/who-really-jailed-alvarez-paz.html
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