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Chavez you've let us down...

Hugh O'Shaughnessy

Published 14 October 2008

'You shut down Joint X’s hamburger joints for a mere 48 hours. The sanction was all too brief.' Hugh O'Shaughnessy writes an open letter to Hugo Chávez

Presidente, you’ve let us down! Hugo, we expected better of you!

We learnt last week that you had closed down hundreds of hamburger joints in Venezuela run by a foreign company which for legal reasons I choose to call Joint X. You cited as your reason tax evasion.

At a time when many bonus-laden business leaders, not least in Wall Street and the world’s myriad financial boltholes, are seen as making a mockery of other taxpayers by their secret manoeuvres to evade payments, a cheer went up in many homes and offices round the world.

At least, in Venezuela - a South American country whose government was briefly overthrown in 2002 with the help of George Bush and José María Aznar, the then prime minister of Spain, and which is consistently threatened, insulted and ridiculed in the US media and by US non-governmental organisations - someone has not been afraid to take a stand.

Throughout Venezuela the joints – I refuse to call them “restaurants” – were closed down. Inspections by SENIAT, your revenue people, had apparently thrown up evidence against Joint X of offences against VAT or value added tax regulations. The owners were fined a modest sum for each joint closed. Something similar had happened at the beginning of 2005 and Joint X was also temporarily shut down.

The cheer celebrating the closures was taken up by those who are aghast at the rise of child obesity which some experts link to junk foods like hamburgers particularly among the poor in many rich countries – there are 1,000 million overweight people in the world of whom 300 million are obese and, according to the UN World Health Organisation, 500,000 die every year from illness linked to obesity.

Professor Alan Marion Davis of the Faculty of Public Health in London says he particularly fears the effect of hamburgers on youngsters. “As fatty foods they don’t do much for Venezuelans’ – or anyone else’s - waistlines and I’m worried about the effect on the future generations,” he says.

The cheer was echoed by those who have followed Joint X’s record of litigation against its critics. It was repeated by those who campaign here and elsewhere for the rights of trade unionists and against low pay. There was applause among those who have constantly to be on their guard against the visual pollution threatened by Joint X’s attempts to litter streetscapes and motorways with its great big signs.

Your action, presidente, was part of a constant and laudable drive against tax fraud which started in 2004 and which pushed up tax collection by 50 per cent in its first year. As the oil price sinks, Venezuela needs the money. Understandably enough, those penalised by SENIAT have included a large range of firms, more of them Venezuelan-owned than foreign.

The fact, however, than foreign companies with their phalanxes of lawyers have been fined for tax offences would point to the fact that such bodies are trying to infect countries such as Venezuela with some of the practices which have been rife in Wall Street for a long time.

So, if the Venezuelan government has been so rapid and efficient on tax matters what am I, and many others like me, complaining about? Why do we feel let down? Why did we expect better?

The answer lies in the fact that you shut down Joint X’s hamburger joints for a mere 48 hours. The sanction was all too brief. You can’t reduce obesity by such transitory measures, you can teach an offender to reform his corporate habits with such a tiny penalty. Something more is needed, something more draconian for tax dodgers in Venezuela of all sorts. What about making the closures go on for longer? What about making the fines bigger?

I respectfully suggest that giving SENIAT sharper teeth to bite with would soon have people round the world cheering once again.

Adelante, presidente.

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4 comments from readers

Surreal MC
15 October 2008 at 05:01

Finally, a leader willing to fight against the tactics used by the rich that allow them to continue stealing such massive sums of money/resources from the poor and eternalize the status quo. I agree that Joint X should have been shut down for longer, with larger fines, but also recognize the difficulty faced by Chavez in action regaurding foreign owned corporations and the backlash from misinformed international media sources, as well as the likelihood that international capital will continue to find ways to undermine the stability of the Venezuelan attempt to bring power back to the people, likely through violent means (as seen in the past, 2002 coup and various CIA attempts at destabilization since that time). I applaud your article,

Sincerely,

Surya McEwen

DC
15 October 2008 at 14:26

Mr. O'Shaughnessy wears his communist credentials on his sleeve, and I and other realists are thankful for that. What is happening in Venezuela these days is not due to the machinations of America or its president, but to the dreams of dictatorship carried in the bosom of every Marxist---the hope that some Napoleonic hero will finally rescue them from the need to compete among men and, thus, redeem their mediocre lives. British Marxists have passed beyond redemption long ago, of course, as that nation's decay demonstrates. I can only hope that, as a real journalist in Venezuela recently warned, that Mr. Chavez ends his career on a lamp post, as did that other Marxist a half-century ago. Thank you for your attention. Don Carlson, New Jersey

jfy
15 October 2008 at 22:21

To Mr. O'Shaughnessy; Why don't you SHUT UP! don't speak about something you know nothing about because it falls in line with your ideology. I dare you to stay in Venezuela and see in your own eyes what this Chavez had done in that country, chances are that the reason Those stores were closed was because the payoff bribe was not enough to the officials in power, Venezuela has become more corrupt now under Chavez than ever before, I have lived in Venezuela and racketeering, extorsion, kidnapping, and contract killings are as much part of Venezuelan life as your Tea time in England.

tmcarden
15 October 2008 at 23:00

I would think that the critical shortage of beef and bread that Chavez has caused his country would be far worse for the joints, than the symbolic closure of joints that are actually owned by a Venezuelan company. Mr. O'Shaughnessy seems to like people poor and thin rather than fat and happy.

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