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Caribbean-Latin America
Chavez launches new police force
2009-12-21
CARACAS, Venezuela -- President Hugo Chavez launched a federal police force on Sunday that he hopes will change the overwhelmingly negative image most Venezuelans have of their public security forces while reducing crime in one of Latin America's most violent countries.
And why would they have such a negative view in the first place?
"We are going to defeat crime," Chavez told uniformed cadets belonging to the newly formed National Bolivarian Police Force during his weekly television and radio show. "We are tackling one of our population's most sensitive problems: crime prevention."
Every politician promises to reduce crime ...
But what will the newly formed police think constitutes a crime they are meant to prevent?
The 950-agent force will initially operate in the capital's most crime-ridden neighborhoods, but the government plans to boost the number of officers to 6,000 and extend its reach beyond Caracas by the end of next year.

Justice Minister Tareck El Aissami said the nascent police force would seek to reduce crime through preventative rather than repressive measures and embrace the socialist ideals of Chavez's "Bolivarian Revolution," a political movement named after 19th-century independence hero Simon Bolivar.
Ah, now we see what's meant by a 'federal police force' ...
"The National Police will impose a culture of peace in the barrios to eliminate the violence of the capitalist, bourgeois model that we've inherited," El Aissami said.
Do as you're told, Pablo, and your mother keeps her monthly check from Hugo ...
Armed robbery, kidnapping and murder are widespread in this poverty-stricken South American country,
Certainly the first two are crimes of personal enrichment, although not in the capitalist model of willingly exchanging one's funds for an offered good or service.
and polls consistently show that most Venezuelans view violent crime as the nation's most pressing problem. Police figures released by the Justice Ministry show there were 12,257 homicides nationwide in the first 11 months of 2009 -- more than eight times higher than in Texas, which has roughly the same population as Venezuela.
Almost as bad as Messico ...
Venezuelans are generally distrustful of the country's police. Many citizens were not surprised when El Aissami revealed earlier this month that police are involved in 15 to 20 percent of all crimes, particularly kidnapping and murder.
Goodness, that's worse than Belgium!
In its annual report released this month, the local Provea human rights groups said police were responsible for more than 200 slayings over the last year, including 55 people who died of excessive force or torture.
Posted by:Steve White

#2  ION WAFF > BREAKING NEWS: COLUMBIAN FORCES BEGIN MASSING ON VENEZUELAN BORDER| CHAVEZ THREATENS WAR [threatens the "Bourgeois of Columbia"]; + HUGO CHAVEZ ORDERS MILITARY TO SHOOT AT US AIRCRAFT.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-12-21 20:00  

#1  Who wants to bet that they have a very interesting definition of "crime"?
Posted by: mojo   2009-12-21 12:32  

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