Showing posts with label Piedad Cordoba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Piedad Cordoba. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

How Slanders Start


Piedad stands by her man. 

The other day, Colombia's leftist ex-senator Piedad Cordoba gave an interview in which she charged that Venezuelan opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles had recieved aid from Venezuelan businesses in Colombia and from Colombian ex-President Alvaro Uribe.

All of which sounds very believable. Venezuelan businesses, whereever they may be, certainly have a right to support the Venezuelan presidential candidate of their choice, and that's not likely to be the leftist Chavez. Uribe's politics are just as predictable - his hate for Chavez verges on paranoia. But I'd bet that any support from Uribe would cost Capriles more votes than it would get him. 

Cordoba apparentely offered no evidence or examples to back her claims. But that didn't stop her interview from generating sensationalist headlines. Ultimas Noticias, which I remember as a generally balanced Caracas newspaper, headlined its story: 'Cordoba Asserts that Capriles is Advised by Narcos,' and reported that Capriles was 'advised by businesses related to narcoparmilitarism in Colombia.

But I've read about a dozen news stories about Cordoba's comments - most of them, admittedly, copies of Ultmas Noticias' story - and found not a single quote from Cordoba actually making this assertion. (I can't find the original video at all).

Yes, ex-Pres. Uribe has been credibly linked to paramilitaries, and he has consulted with Venezuela's anti-Chavez opposition. And Venezuelan businesses in Colombia (where many have come fleeing Chavez's policies) most likely support Capriles. But this doesn't add up to Capriles being advised by narcoparamilitaries. And, in any case, Cordoba apparently didn't even say this.

But the headline's there, anyway, and will come up in Google searches forever. 

It reminds me of responses I got to a blog post about Wikileaks founder Julian Assange's seeking asylum in Ecuador, whose government has been no friend of free speech. One critical commentator claimed that the Swedish women who have accused Assange of sexual crimes of 'having connections to the U.S. CIA.', again offering no evidence. When I asked for evidence, a commentator pointed me to some Internet pages saying that the women had written articles critical of the Cuban government on websites or other publications supposedly supported by the CIA. Those publications may or may not actually be backed by the CIA, but that's beside the point.

There are plenty of reasons to criticize the repressive Cuban dictatorship, and doing so doesn't make you a CIA tool - even if you do it, probably unknowingly - on a CIA-backed website.

Returning to Colombian ex-Sen. Cordoba, who can't seem to resist defending everything the Chavez government does: The Venezuelan government appears to have gotten caught red-handed meddling in another government's internal affairs with a video showing Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolás Maduro meeting privately with a group of Paraguaya's top generals just before that nation's parliament tried and convicted its leftist Pres. Fernando Lugo and replaced him with the country's vice president. Officials in Paraguay's new government allege that Maduro was urging the generals to rise up and block the parliament's action. Whatever the legality of the Parguayan parliament's dubious ousting of Lugo, one country's foreign minister's meeting with another's generals in the midst of a crisis seems even less acceptable.

But Cordoba had no doubts about Maduro's actions, and called the accusations against him "anecdotes." Maduro "represents a new form of diplomacy," she said, adding: "I am absolutely convinced that this doesn't involve the most minimal interference in another country."

Perhaps Cordoba should bcome Venezuela's media spokeswoman.


By Mike Ceaser, of Bogotá Bike Tours

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Pietyless?

 In Caracas, Buddying up with a FARC leader.

Congresswoman Piedad Cordoba was just banned from public office for 18 years for allegedly collaborating with theFARC guerrillas. Cordoba was well-known - to many Colombians notorious - for her numerous meetings with guerrilla leaders. Her leftist ideology and sympathy for the guerrillas (and for Hugo Chavez) were easy to see. And, the laptops recovered after the Colombian raid on FARC leader Raul Reyes camp produced evidence of Cordoba collaborating with the guerrillas, according to Colombian officials. On the other hand, Cordoba was able to arrange the liberations of several prominent hostages held by the FARC - altho those served as P.R. platforms for the guerrillas and Chavez.
Whatever the truth about Cordoba's relationship with the guerrillas, casting her out just a few days after the government dealt probably its strongest blow ever against the FARC by killing 'Mono jojoy,' their second in command, cripples hopes for a negotiated end to the guerrillas' violent and senseless insurgency - exactly when they're at their weakest ever and perhaps most likely to talk.

Cordoba's punishment may be correctly legally, but it deals low blow to Colombia's hopes for peace.
Pietyless? Congresswoman Piedad Cordoba was just barred from politics for 18 years for allegedly collaborating with the FARC guerrillas. Cordoba was well-known - to many Colombians notorious - for her numerous meetings with guerrilla leaders. Her leftist ideology and sympathy for the guerrillas (and for Hugo Chavez) were easy to see. And, the laptops recovered after the Colombian raid on FARC leader Raul Reyes camp produced evidence of Cordoba collaborating with the guerrillas, according to Colombian officials. On the other hand, Cordoba was able to arrange the liberations of several prominent hostages held by the FARC - altho those served as P.R. platforms for the guerrillas and Chavez. Whatever the truth about Cordoba's relationship with the guerrillas, casting her out just a few days after the government dealt probably its strongest blow ever against the FARC by killing 'Mono jojoy,' their second in command, cripples hopes for a negotiated end to the guerrillas' violent and senseless insurgency - exactly when they're at their weakest ever and perhaps most likely to talk. 
Cordoba's punishment may be correctly legally, but it deals low blow to Colombia's hopes for peace.