Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Last anti-Chavez TV station to be sold

FILE - In this Oct. 3, 2003 file photo, an employee at Globovision, a 24-hour television news channel, works behind a glass reading "News" with Globovision's logo "G" at the channel's headquarters in Caracas, Venezuela. Employees of the last remaining opposition television channel in Venezuela said on March 11, 2013 that it is being sold to a businessman friendly to the government. The employees said the sale would occur after April 14 elections, which Hugo Chavez's hand-picked successor is favored to win. (AP Photo/Leslie Mazoch, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 3, 2003 file photo, an employee at Globovision, a 24-hour television news channel, works behind a glass reading "News" with Globovision's logo "G" at the channel's headquarters in Caracas, Venezuela. Employees of the last remaining opposition television channel in Venezuela said on March 11, 2013 that it is being sold to a businessman friendly to the government. The employees said the sale would occur after April 14 elections, which Hugo Chavez's hand-picked successor is favored to win. (AP Photo/Leslie Mazoch, File)

(AP) ? The last remaining television station critical of Venezuela's government is being sold to an insurance company owner who is apparently friendly with the ruling socialists, its owners announced Monday, following an unrelenting official campaign to financially strangle the broadcaster through regulatory pressure.

The announcement, which civil liberties advocates called a crushing blow to press freedom, comes a month ahead of crucial elections to replace Hugo Chavez, with the opposition candidate accusing the late president's political heirs of multiple violations of the constitution, and repeated lying, to seek unfair advantage.

The editorial line of Globovision is expected to change under new management, employees told The Associated Press.

Many journalists on the staff of 450 sobbed when informed of the sale, certain some would lose their jobs for openly confronting the government.

"We are economically unviable because our income doesn't cover our expenses. We can't even raise salaries enough to compensate for inflation," owner Guillermo Zuloaga wrote in a letter to employees.

Politically, the station is unviable because "we are in a completely polarized country on the opposite end of an all-powerful government that wants to see us fail," he added. Third, Globovision's license expires two years from now under a recent government rule change.

The sale will wait until April 14 elections, which Chavez's hand-picked successor, Nicolas Maduro, is highly favored to win. But there is fear that journalists at the channel could exercise self-censorship, a common phenomenon under the Chavistas.

The feared disappearance of Globovision's independent voice would strengthen the hand of a government that began showing increasing intolerance for dissent even before Chavez died after a nearly two-year bout with cancer.

Zuloaga informed staff of the planned sale at a meeting Monday, naming the buyer as Juan Domingo Cordero, president of the insurance company La Vitalicia.

One employee told the AP that Cordero is friendly with government officials such as National Assembly speaker Diosdado Cabello. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of losing his job.

Cordero did not respond to AP attempts for comment, including a visit to his Caracas office, where his assistant said he was in a meeting.

Chavez supporters were heartened by the news.

"We don't deserve a channel like Globovision. They lie, deceive, can never say anything good about the revolution," said Luis Pina, an unemployed 29-year-old who had attended a rally Monday to celebrate Maduro's formal registration for the election.

Under constant state pressure for alleged violations of media laws passed under Chavez, Globovision has been forced to pay millions of dollars in fines while its viewership on the public spectrum was reduced to just two cities: Caracas and Valencia.

In the meeting with employees, Zuloaga said that "politically, economically and legally" Globovision was no longer a viable business, in part because it had no access to dollars at preferential rates to buy equipment, as Cordero's business does, the employee said.

The employee said the buyers had presented themselves as politically neutral.

"A lot of journalists were crying and surely more than one of them will have to go," he said.

The state telecommunications agency has repeatedly sanctioned Globovision and threatened to shut it down, with eight administrative cases currently pending against it that could have led to additional fines and even closure orders.

In June, it was fined $2.2 million for running supposedly incendiary reports on a 2011 prison riot.

In the most recent case, it was accused of sowing panic for running spots challenging the constitutionality of the government's decision to postpone the swearing in of Chavez, which was supposed to have occurred Jan. 10, due to the cancer that ultimately killed him.

Globovision also faces possible sanctions for alleged tax evasion. And it was accused by the Chavez government of backing a 2002 attempt to overthrow him.

The Americas director of Human Rights Watch, Jose Miguel Vivanco, said the sale caps a disturbing trend.

"After years of going after its critics, the government of Venezuela has created an environment in which journalists weigh the consequences of what they say for fear of suffering reprisals in the form of abusive or arbitrary state action," he said via email.

"If the channel changes its editorial line after this sale, Venezuelans will have even more limited information in the coming weeks before the elections," Vivanco added.

In print, two major national newspapers, El Nacional and El Universal, remain highly critical of the government, but in the all-important television sector Globovision was that last major critical voice. Four private channels exist in Venezuela, all ostensibly neutral, while the government has four state-run channels and the regional news network Telesur.

"This is the only broadcast media in the country that informs us accurately," said Noral Villereal, a 53-year-old insurance broker, about Globovision. "I think we're going to be left without any kind of trustworthy news."

Opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles, who lost to Chavez in October elections, is already at a severe disadvantage in the April 14 vote. The government has the national treasury of an oil-rich nation at its disposal and takes over the public airwaves at will.

The Zuloaga family owns 80 percent of Globovision. The other 20 percent belonged to a banker but was expropriated years ago by Chavez. Zuloaga had been living outside of Venezuela since 2010 after a court ordered his arrest for allegedly illegally storing 24 automobiles at one of his homes.

It had become the lone opposition channel that year after RCTV was forced off cable and satellite networks. Its public airwaves license had been stripped three years earlier.

Carlos Lauria of the Committee to Protect Journalist said the slow strangling of Globovision followed a pattern nationally.

"Over the last 14 years the Venezuelan press has been gradually weakened and debilitated by an array of laws, restrictions, regulatory measures and judicial decisions that have really weakened the ability of the private media to report the news without official interference," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Fabiola Sanchez and Vivian Sequera contributed to this report.

___

Frank Bajak on Twitter: http://twitter.com/fbajak

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-11-Venezuela-Globovision/id-c0c98294215f4eccaac7b5062a2098d7

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Online betting site InTrade abruptly shuts down

The popular however inevitably controversial online betting site InTrade shut down abruptly on Sunday, citing an ongoing investigation and casting skepticism on Irish law in a vaguely worded statement. "With sincere regret we must inform you that due to circumstances recently discovered we must immediately cease trading activity on?www.intrade.com," the statement says, detailing that all trading on the site must cease, accounts must be settled and all transactions stopped immediately. There's nothing in the statement that boldly says InTrade is gone for good, and the company ends the statement on an almost optimistic note, asking customers to "bear with us as we do all we can to resume operations as promptly as possible." If they can't figure it out, that means no more betting on election results or Oscar winners or anything fun. Back to boring old cards and horses.

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Now, the InTrade shutdown was abrupt but not altogether surprising. The Dublin-based company's been in United States regulators' sights for ages, and last November, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission sued InTrade for running an informal exchange and accused it of breaking an online gambling settlement. This also meant that InTrade would have to cease its U.S. operations prompted pundits to start wondering when the whole house would come crashing down. But then, just over a week ago, those same pundits started wondering if the new wave of states legalizing online gambling could bring InTrade back to the fun, legal center of things. While nothing is final or really even clear at this point, things aren't looking great for InTrade right now. They are however looking pretty good for?Archbishop Angelo Scola, an Italian cardinal favored to succeed Benedict XVI. At least, according to InTrade's numbers they are.

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Full Statement from InTrade

With sincere regret we must inform you that due to circumstances recently discovered we must immediately cease trading activity on?www.intrade.com.

These circumstances require immediate further investigation, and may include financial irregularities which in accordance with Irish law oblige the directors to take the following actions:

  • Cease exchange trading on the website immediately.
  • Settle all open positions and calculate the settled account value of all Member accounts immediately.
  • Cease all banking transactions for all existing Company accounts immediately.

During the upcoming weeks, we will investigate these circumstances further and determine the necessary course of action.

To mitigate any further risk to members? accounts, we have closed and settled all open contracts at fair market value as of the close of business on March 10, 2013, in accordance with the Terms and Conditions of our customers? use of the website. You may view your account details and settled account balances by logging into the website.

At this time and until further notice, it is not possible to make any payments to members in accordance with their settled account balance until the investigations have concluded.

The Company will continue the maintenance and technology operations of the exchange system so that all information is preserved properly.

We are not able to provide telephone support or live help services at this time, please contact the company by email at:?accountservices@intrade.com

We appreciate your custom and support over the years. We are committed to reporting faithfully the status of things as they are clarified and hope you will bear with us as we do all we can to resume operations as promptly as possible.

Sincerely,

The Board of Directors of Intrade the Prediction Market Limited

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/online-betting-adventure-intrade-over-010223134--finance.html

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Jen Hilman Interview, Yoga & Massage Therapy for Relaxation ...

Jen Hilman Interview, Yoga & Massage Therapy for Relaxation & Stress Management Jen Hilman talks about her involvement with massage therapy, yoga and medication about how these things can be used to relax a person and manage stressful life situations. This video was produced by Psychetruth www.youtube.com Music By Jimmy Gelhaar www.jimmyg.us ? Copyright 2010 Target Public Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. Jen Hilman interview yoga massage therapy relaxations stress management stressful life manage relax
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