Venezuela will nationalize coffee roasters-Chavez

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuela’s President Hugo  Chavez said yesterday that the country’s two largest coffee  roasters would be nationalized.

The government took control on Monday of the two roasters,  Fama de America and Cafe Madrid, to help supply the domestic  market. The companies denied government accusations they  illegally exported coffee.

“We intervened in these big companies and are preparing a  study to expropriate them,” Chavez said during a televised  speech at a military ceremony.

“They will become property of the people, property of the  nation — enough is enough!”

Chavez, a former paratrooper who has been in power for more  than a decade, said he would continue nationalizing monopolies  to convert them into “productive companies in hands of the  workers.”

Chavez has nationalized large swathes of OPEC member nation  Venezuela’s economy, including a rice mill owned by Cargill Inc  earlier this year and dozens of oil service companies this  spring.

Fama de America and Cafe Madrid are two of the best known  coffee brands in Venezuela, a traditional coffee exporter.

Producers and roasters had said the South American country  faced a shortage of around 300,000 quintales to ensure supply  until the 2009/2010 harvest begins in October. Each quintal  equals a 46-kg bag.

The government had accused roasters and growers of  speculating and illegally exporting to neighboring Colombia,  where prices are much higher than those fixed in Venezuela.