Chavez to nationalize Venezuelan gold industry

CARACAS,  (Reuters) – Venezuela will nationalize its  gold industry and is moving its international reserves out of  Western countries, President Hugo Chavez said yesterday in a  combative step ahead of his re-election bid next year.

The moves will make the finances of South America’s biggest  oil exporter even murkier as the 57-year-old socialist leader  gears up for an election battle that was looking increasingly  close even before he was recently diagnosed with cancer.

Chavez has put large parts of Venezuela’s economy under  state control and is now targeting the gold industry after his  government quarreled with foreign companies who complained that  limits on how much gold they could export hurt their efforts to  secure financing and develop projects.

Chavez seems to have lost patience and decided to put the  whole industry into state hands.

“We’re going to nationalize the gold and we’re going to  convert it, among other things, into international reserves  because gold continues to increase in value,” the authoritarian  but charismatic president said in a phone call to state TV.
“I’m going to approve a law to begin taking the gold areas,  and there I count on (the military) because there continues to  be anarchy, mafias, smuggling,” he said.

Toronto-listed Rusoro, owned by Russia’s Agapov family, is  the only large gold miner operating in Venezuela. It produced  about 100,000 ounces of gold in Venezuela last year.

The nationalization of the gold industry fits with Chavez’s  broader plan to repatriate his country’s bullion and shift most  of its cash reserves out of Western nations to political allies  including China, Russia and Brazil.

“It is a question of prudence and protection,” Finance  Minister Jorge Giordani said yesterday.

Chavez, who has undergone two sessions of chemotherapy in  Cuba since he announced in June that he had cancer, has often  railed against Venezuela’s reliance on the U.S. dollar as the  global reserve currency of choice.

The move is in line with Chavez’s ideological world view:  during his 12 years in power he has often bashed the United  States and sought to align Venezuela with emerging powers and  opponents of Washington such as Iran.