|
U.S. Tax Dollars
Continue to Finance Venezuelan Opposition Movements
Your Help Needed!
From the Venezuela Information Office
An
investigation by the Associated Press
shows that millions of U.S. dollars continue to be funneled to
Venezuelan opposition movements in the lead up to this year’s
presidential elections through a secretive branch of the development
agency U.S. AID. The Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI) confirms
that it has spent $26 million dollars in
Venezuela since 2002, but refuses to disclose which
organizations they have financed.
Operating out of the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, OTI describes its
mission as “to provide fast, flexible, short-term assistance targeted
at
key political transition
and stabilization needs” [Emphasis added]. It currently funds 132
separate projects in the country, but aside from a few politically
neutral projects, like setting up little league teams through the U.S.
embassy, it will not make public a list of its beneficiaries.
In recent years, pro-Venezuela activists have focused on funding from
the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) to Venezuelan opposition
organizations, yet the OTI funding dwarfs the $3 million dollars that
NED has spent in Venezuela since 2002. What’s more, while NED is
ostensibly bound by its own bylaws to fund non-partisan work, OTI has
no such restrictions. In a
report by the Christian Science Monitor early this year, OTI
officials explain that their work is “‘overtly political" and
particularly tied to foreign-policy goals.
Your Help Is
Needed! You have a right to know how
your tax dollars are spent.
Visit our action center today to make your voice heard.
It’s fast and easy!
Elections
Update
Our 2006 Elections Center provides you with all the information you
need to stay up to date with Venezuela’s presidential elections,
slated for this December. New additions this week include analysis of:
Voter Registry:
The Venezuelan government has invested in a massive campaign to
register citizens to vote, with a particular focus on traditionally
marginalized communities. Find out more about
“Mission Identity,” which is helping millions of poverty-stricken
Venezuelans gain ID cards and voter registration.
Today Vs. the
Past: Learn how voting in
Venezuela today
compares with the pre-Chavez era, in terms of participation,
transparency, efficiency and voter access.
Click here for a listing of
all our
2006 Elections materials.
September 5, 2006 |