Venezuela anti-Chavez cable station taken off air

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuelan cable providers,  responding to government orders, stopped showing a station yesterday critical of President Hugo Chavez that the left-wing  leader pushed off free-access television in 2007.

Cable networks halted RCTV Internacional after the  government said the station was not following broadcast  regulations that include showing Chavez’s speeches.

Venezuela’s cable industry organization said in a press  release that RCTV along with several other stations “had been  temporarily excluded from the programming schedule” because  they “had not complied with the regulations in place.”

Public Works Minister Diosdado Cabello said on Saturday  that cable networks’ programming could only include stations  that obey the Venezuelan broadcast law, which also includes  restrictions on adult content and foul language at certain  hours.

Chavez in 2007 denied RCTV a renewal of its broadcast  license, accusing the station of participating in a 2002 coup.

During that coup, networks showed nonstop footage of  anti-Chavez protests leading up to his brief ouster but turned  cameras off when loyalists restored him.

Global press freedom groups and the U.S. government, which  have accused Chavez of seeking to limit free speech, condemned  the decision to take RCTV off free-access TV.
The station in turn created a cable-based “international”  station based in Miami to avoid content restrictions.

But the government determined that station was still  subject to broadcast restrictions because most of its content  was produced in Venezuela.

“(The measure) is meant to silence the voice of protest of  the Venezuelan people in the face of the failure of the  government’s administration,” RCTV said in a statement earlier  this week.