Venezuela's political crisis pits soldiers against police
President Chávez ordered the Army to seize control of Caracas police stations this month, raising new tensions.
By Phil Gunson | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
CARACAS, VENEZUELA - At the foot of the Avila mountain towering over this
capital city, camouflaged, helmeted soldiers rub shoulders
nervously with policemen in blue and tan. Here, at the Maripérez
headquarters of the city's police motorcycle brigade, the latest episode
in
Venezuela's deepening political crisis is playing out.
At the order of President Hugo Chávez, the motorcycle squadron's
headquarters - along with all other Caracas police precincts and
divisional headquarters - was seized by the military Nov. 16. President
Chávez has said he made the decision because the police are
becoming increasingly politicized. The 9,000-strong municipal police -
whom Chávez calls "the armed spearhead of the opposition" - has
protected opposition marches and used what the government says is excessive
force against the violent, pro-Chávez mobs that attack
them.
Rifles at the ready, the soldiers control police access to the Maripérez
station. "It's an extremely uncomfortable situation," says motorcycle
brigade commander Miguel Antonio Pinto. "We feel like we're under surveillance."
The standoff over control of the police is emblematic of the divisions afflicting Venezuela.
César Gaviría, secretary-general of the Organization of American
States, has spent most of the past few weeks in Caracas, chairing talks
between the government and the opposition officials aimed at producing
"an electoral solution" to the political crisis.The opposition has
presented a mass petition for a nonbinding referendum on Chávez's
presidency, but government negotiators reject the idea. They say the
earliest a vote can be called under the constitution is August 2003 - the
halfway point of Chávez's six-year term.
Meanwhile, the government and the opposition are accusing each other of
seeking a violent solution. The past week has seen extremist
opposition supporters block Caracas's main highway with burning barricades,
and the declaration of a general strike to force Chávez out if
no solution is found by Dec. 2.
Political analyst and Chávez expert Alberto Garrido says that the
president has yielded in the past only when faced with a superior military
force. "He surrendered on Feb.4 [1992, after a failed coup d'état]
and on April 11 [this year, when the armed forces withdrew their support
after 19 died in a street demonstration]."
"What we have here is an application of national security doctrine," Mr.
Garrido adds, referring to the use of the armed forces against the
domestic opposition - a tactic used by South American dictatorships of
the 1970s. "Now they can use provocation, in a country which is
both armed and increasingly anarchic."
In early October, the Caracas police command center was taken over by a
few dozen striking cops who said they were owed money by city
authorities. They put the police radio network out of action, forcing their
colleagues to use an inferior alternative loaned by the fire brigade. A
judge issued an injunction ordering the strikers removed. But when the
government finally ordered the national guard to execute the order, it
took the side of the strikers, lending credence to Caracas Mayor Alfredo
Peña's accusation that the dispute was invented as an excuse for
the takeover.
Peña, once an ally of the president, became an avowed foe soon after his mid-2000 election as mayor.
The police radio network is still out of action. "We're working at half-strength,"
says motorcycle brigade commander Pinto. His men are
obliged to patrol in groups, for fear of being unable to call for backup
if attacked. They are limited to sidearms, and when opposition groups
marched across town last week to protest the takeover, the motorcycle cops
were told they could patrol only on foot - and unarmed. Mayor
Peña has applied to the supreme court for a ruling that the police
takeover is unconstitutional. Meanwhile, one of the most crime-ridden
cities in Latin America is increasingly at the mercy of muggers, bank-robbers
and drug gangs.