by 
Anna Mahjar-BarducciHugo Chavez's eighteen months of special ruling powers and the new package of laws  that dramatically expand his rule in the country created a strong  debate inside Venezuela against the government. The Catholic Church has  also expressed its fears, affirming that the new Enabling Law moves the  country towards a dictatorship, similar to Cuba's with Fidel Castro.
 Cardinal Jorge Urosa Savino, Archbishop of Caracas, warned Chavez on  TV to behave in a responsible way towards Venezuela, in case Chavez  wants "to impose a totalitarian dictatorship that would certainly mean  something terrible for Venezuela,"
 This is not the first time that Cardinal Urosa courageously expressed his opinions: last summer, the Archbishop declared  that Chavez and his government are disregarding the Constitution and  "want to impose a Socialist-Marxist system in the country to control all  sectors. This system is totalitarian and is leading to dictatorship;  not to proletarian dictatorship but to dictatorship led by the elite who  are ruling the country."
 From the press:
 - Cardinal Urosa: "We are moving towards a dictatorship"
- Archbishop Luckert: Chavez's emergency power "is an abuse and a violation of the Constitution"
- Archbishop Luckert: "We are going down the same path as the Castro autocracy that has afflicted that poor country for 59 years"
- Venezuelan archbishop Porras denies WikiLeaks report, claiming that  he requested the U.S. government to make known its criticism of Chavez
- Porras denies allegation on offering the U.S. access to the infrastructure of the Church
- Archbishop Porras: Emergency powers would endanger the cause of freedom
December 26, 2010
 Cardinal Urosa: "We are moving towards a dictatorship"
 The new package of laws which was approved by the National Assembly  presents, according to Cardinal Jorge Urosa Savino, an unprecedented  situation. "This is something that demands some reflection, and I am  saying this to government officials, since they are creating an  intolerable situation and [they are displaying] lack of respect for  human rights and for the will of the people."
 Urosa calls for a change in the name of social peace. "The enabling  laws, as well as the reform of the internal and debates regulations in  the National Assembly, are all aimed at cancelling the legislative  powers and to concentrate all legislative capacities upon the person of  the President of the Republic" says Urosa. "And this, for sure, is not  democratic, because it cancels and does not recognize the will of the  people, as expressed on September 26th and it represents an attack against peace in the country."
 Cardinal [Urosa] is afraid that the enabling [law] will put an end to  the figure of members of parliament as we know it today: "Elected  people, whether in government or in the opposition, will be simply  annihilated by such a law and because of the changes concerning the  internal and debates regulations."
 Urosa had already expressed, during his interview with [the media outlet] Globovisión on December 24th,  his views on the package of laws that were approved during the course  of this month by the National Assembly. "We are moving towards a  dictatorship, without the slightest doubt," he said on Christmas Eve.  "My call to those who guide the destiny of the nation is that they  should realize the very high responsibility that they will carry before  History and before God, in case they want to impose a totalitarian  dictatorship that would certainly mean something terrible for  Venezuela."
 Despite his perception of political reality, Cardinal [Urosa]  rejected the idea that violence should be used "because this would not  be the right path and would be totally harmful for the people who intend  to practice it;" and indicated [the adoption] of peaceful resistance,  which does not necessarily mean passive. "It is not up to me to say how  this peaceful resistance should be articulated, because I am not a  political agent," he explained. El Universal (Venezuela)
 December 21, 2010
 Archbishop Luckert: Chavez's emergency power "is an abuse and a violation of the Constitution"
 Venezuela's National Assembly approved President Chavez's request to  rule by decree for 18 months. The additional power, the president  argued, would help him address the damaging floods within the country.
 The law comes just weeks before the new National Assembly, elected  earlier this year, takes office. During the elections on Sept. 26,  Chavez's ruling party only won 95 of the 165 seats in the Assembly,  which is not enough to maintain a majority. Although three Assembly  members from other parties are expected to vote with the ruling party,  with just 98 votes, Chavez would still fall short of a two-thirds  majority needed to get his measures passed.
 The new law gives Chavez the power to enact laws on land use, the  military and police forces, transportation and public services. He will  also have greater control over the treasury and the tax code, urban and  rural development, international relations and the emergency response to  the flooding.
 Archbishop Luckert […] [said] that the measure is "an abuse and a  violation of the Constitution," as Chavez already has "many ways in  which he can do what he wants" to address the crisis caused by flooding.  The new law has turned the National Assembly into "a congress of  political eunuchs who will not be able to do what they are supposed to  do," he stated.
 The tasks of lawmakers are "to pass laws, to legislate - not to sit  on their hands and act like useless fools or mute dogs in a congress in  which they won't be able to do anything," the archbishop continued.
 Archbishop Luckert: "We are going down the same path as the Castro autocracy that has afflicted that poor country for 59 years"
 "Personally I think they want to turn this new Legislative Assembly -  which the ruling party will not have the majority - into a pack of dogs  with no bark. They won't be able to speak up when they should and they  won't be able to pass laws that will truly benefit the country. "Why do  we want lawmakers who will have their hands tied?" he asked.
 Archbishop Luckert said the new law has turned the country into "a  constitutional democratic dictatorship" that is being set up under the  cover of law. Venezuela is following the lead of Cuba, he warned.
 "All of these laws or norms are part of the Cuban package and the  Cuban advisors are trying to impose them on Venezuela," he said. "We are  going down the same path as the Castro autocracy that has afflicted  that poor country for 59 years," the archbishop warned. Catholic News Agency
 December 17, 2010
 Archbishop Porras: Emergency powers would endanger the cause of freedom
 A Venezuelan prelate has expressed concern that the new extraordinary  powers sought by President Hugo Chavez could aggravate the severe  divisions within the country.
 Archbishop Baltazar Porras, the vice-president of the Venezuelan  Episcopal conference, said that the emergency powers that Chavez has  requested would endanger the cause of freedom, encourage corruption in  government, and exacerbate political tensions between the Chavez  government and its critics. Catholic Culture
 December 16, 2010
 Venezuelan archbishop Porras denies WikiLeaks report, claiming  that he requested the U.S. government to make known its criticism of  Chavez
 The vice president of the Venezuelan Bishops' Conference has  characterized the information in a recently released WikiLeaks cable as  "a science fiction movie script."
 The report, released Dec. 13, accused Archbishop Baltazar Porras of  seeking help from the United States to contain the "regional  aspirations" of Venezuelan President Chavez.
 WikiLeaks published an excerpt of a 2005 cable from the U.S. embassy  in Caracas, Venezuela according to which Archbishop Porras allegedly  requested that the U.S. government make known its criticism of Hugo  Chavez. The archbishop purportedly warned that the Venezuelan president  was intending to dismantle democratic civil society, organized  employment, the business sector and the Church.
 Archbishop Porras explained […] that the WikiLeaks cable which was  reprinted by the Venezuelan News Agency read like "a science-fiction  movie script that has absolutely no basis."
 Porras denies allegation of offering the U.S. access to the infrastructure of the Church
 He said allegations that he offered the U.S. access to the  infrastructure of the Church are not in keeping with "the actions of the  Church" or with his actions as then-president of the Venezuelan  Bishops' Conference. "None of these things took place," he said.
 Archbishop Porras expressed regret that the Venezuelan News Agency  decided to reprint the allegations along with negative comments about  the bishops. The government-run media has been engaged in an  "orchestrated" campaign against numerous Church leaders in the country,  he said, including Cardinal Jorge Urosa of Caracas and Archbishop  Roberto Luckert of Coro.
 Such actions are intended to merely undermine the credibility of the  Church among Venezuelans, he added. Church leaders in the country only  seek "to serve and to simply be a voice crying out in the wilderness to  make the commandment to love God and neighbor a reality," the archbishop  concluded. Catholic News Agency
Original URL:http://www.hudson-ny.org/1762/venezuela-church-chavez-dictatorship
Anna Mahjar-BarducciCopyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.