Documents reveal multimillion-dollar funding to journalists and media in 
Venezuela






Buying the Press



By Eva Golinger
Documents reveal multimillion-dollar funding to journalists and media in 
Venezuela 

US
State Department documents declassified under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) evidence more than $4 million USD in funding to
journalists and private media in Venezuela during the last three years.
This funding is part of the more than $40 million USD international
agencies are investing annually in anti-Chavez groups in Venezuela in
an attempt to provoke regime change

The funding has been
channeled directly by the State Department through three US agencies:
Panamerican Development Foundation (PADF), Freedom House, and the US
Agency for International Development (USAID).

In a blatant
attempt to hide their activities, the State Department has censored the
names of organizations and journalists receiving these
multimillion-dollar funds. However, one document dated July 2008
mistakenly left unveiled the names of the principal Venezuelan groups
receiving the funds: Espacio Publico (Public Space) and Instituto de
Prensa y Sociedad (Institute for Press and Society “IPYS”). 

Espacio
Publico and IPYS are the entities charged with coordinating the
distribution of the millions in State Department funds to private media
outlets and Venezuelan journalists working to promote US agenda. 

The
documents evidence that PADF has implemented programs in Venezuela
dedicated to “enhancing media freedom and democratic institutions” and
training workshops for journalists in the development and use of
“innovative media technologies”, due to the alleged “threats to freedom
of expression” and “the climate of intimidation and self-censorship
among journalists and the media”.

According to the documents,
PADF’s objective is to “strengthen independent journalists by providing
them with training, technical assistance, materials and greater access
to innovative internet-based technologies that expand and diversify
media coverage and increase their capacity to inform the public on a
timely basis about the most critical policy issues impacting Venezuela”.

However,
while on paper this may appear benign, in reality, Venezuela’s
corporate media outlets and journalists, together with US agencies,
actively manipulate and distort information in order to portray the
Venezuelan government as a “communist dictatorship” that “violates
basic human rights and freedoms”. 

Nothing could be further from the truth.

Not
only do media and journalists in Venezuela have a near-absolute freedom
of expression, during the past decade, under the Chavez administration,
hundreds of new media outlets, many community-based, have been created
in order to foster and expand citizens’ access to media. Community
media was prohibited under prior governments, which only gave
broadcasting access to corporations willing to pay big money to
maintain information monopolies in the country.

Today, corporate
media outlets and their journalists use communications power to
publicly promote the overthrow of the Venezuelan government. The owners
and executives of these media corporations form part of the Venezuelan
elite that, under the reigns of Washington, ran the country for forty
years before Chavez won the presidency in 1998.

What these
documents demonstrate is that Washington not only is funding Venezuelan
media, in clear violation of laws that prohibit this type of
“propaganda” and “foreign interference”, but also is influencing the
way Venezuelan journalists perceive their profession and their
political reality. 

The State Department funding not only is
used to create and aid media outlets that promote anti-Chavez
propaganda, but also to capture Venezuelan journalists at the core - as
students – in order to shape their vision of journalism and ensure
their loyalty early on to US agenda.

FUNDING FOR ANTI-CHAVEZ WEB PAGES

One
of the PADF programs, which received $699,996 USD from the State
Department in 2007, “supported the development of independent media in
Venezuela” and “journalism via innovative media technologies”. The
documents evidence that more than 150 Venezuelan journalists were
trained by US agencies and at least 25 web pages were created with US
funding. 

During the past two years, there has been a
proliferation of web pages, blogs, and Twitter, MySpace and Facebook
users in Venezuela, the majority of whom use these media outlets to
promote anti-Chavez messages and disseminate distorted and false
information about the country’s political and economic reality. 

Other
programs run by the State Department have selected Venezuelan students
and youth to receive training in the use of these new media
technologies in order to create what they call a “network of
cyber-dissidents” against the Venezuelan government. 

For
example, in April 2010, the George W. Bush Institute, together with
Freedom House and the State Department, organized an encounter of
“activists for freedom and human rights” and “experts in Internet” to
analyze the “global movement of cyber-dissidents”. Rodrigo Diamanti,
anti-Chavez youth activist, was present at the event, which took place
in Dallas, Texas and was presided over by George W. Bush himself, along
with “dissidents” invited from Iran, Syria, Cuba, Russia and China.

In
October last year, Mexico City hosted the II Summit of the Alliance of
Youth Movements (AYM), an organization created by the State Department
to bring together select youth activists from countries of strategic
importance to the US, along with the founders of new media technologies
and representatives from different US agencies. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton presided over the event, and anti-Chavez youth
activists Yon Goicochea (Primero Justicia), Rafael Delgado, and
Geraldine Alvarez, attended as special guests. All three are members of
Futuro Presente, an organization created in Venezuela in 2008 with
funding from the Cato Institute in Washington. 

FUNDING TO UNIVERSITIES 

The
declassified State Department documents also reveal more than $716,346
USD in funding via Freedom House in 2008, for an 18-month project
seeking to “strengthen independent media in Venezuela”. This project
also funded the creation of a “resource center for journalists” in an
unnamed Venezuelan university. “The center will develop a community
radio, website and training workshops”, all funded by the State
Department. 

Another $706,998 USD was channeled through PADF to
“promote freedom of expression in Venezuela” through a two-year project
focusing on “new media technologies and investigative journalism”.
“Specifically, PADF and its local partner will provide training and
follow-up support in innovative media technologies and formats in
several regions throughout Venezuela…This training will be compiled and
developed into a university-level curriculum”. 

Another
document evidences three Venezuelan universities, Universidad Central
de Venezuela (Central University of Venezuela “UCV”), Universidad
Metropolitana (Metropolitan University) and Universidad Santa Maria
(St. Mary’s University), which incorporated courses on media studies
into their curriculums, designed and funded by the State Department.
These three universities have been the principal launching pad for the
anti-Chavez student movements during the past three years.
 
PADF
also received $545,804 USD for a program titled “Venezuela: The Voices
of the Future”. This project, which allegedly lasted one year, was
devoted to “developing a new generation of independent journalists
through a focus on new media technologies”. PADF also funded various
blogs, newspapers, radio stations and television stations in regions
throughout Venezuela, to ensure the “publication” of reports and
articles by the “participants” in the program.

USAID and PADF 

More
funds have been distributed to anti-Chavez political groups in
Venezuela through USAID’s Office for Transition Initiatives (OTI) in
Caracas, which has an annual budget between $5-7 million USD. These
millions form part of the more than $40 million USD given annually to
opposition organizations in Venezuela by US, European and Canadian
agencies, as evidenced in the May 2010 report, “Venezuela: Assessing
Democracy Assistance” published by the National Edowment for
Democracy’s World Movement for Democracy (WMD) and Spain’s FRIDE
Institute. 

PADF has been active in Venezuela since 2005 as one
of USAID’s principal contractors. PADF was created by the State
Department in 1962 and is “affiliated” with the Organization of
American States (OAS). In Venezuela, PADF has been working to
“strengthen local civil society groups”, and is “one of few major
international groups that have been able to provide significant cash
grants and technical assistance to Venezuelan NGOs”.

http://www.chavezcode.com/2010/07/documents-reveal-multimillion-dollar.html



      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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