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View Full Version : Why is Hugo Chavez's face on tuna fish cans for Peruvian quake survivors?



Snoshi
08-22-2007, 08:05 AM
A humanitarian crisis is a great excuse for a few rounds of political point-scoring. And last week's massive earthquake in Peru has proved to be no exception.

It isn't so unusual for donors to stamp their mark on food aid, but thousands of cans of tuna reportedly distributed in the Peruvian quake zone south of Lima appear to have taken the practice to a new level.

Peru's Expreso newspaper carries a photo of a tin with a label sporting photos of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Peruvian opposition politician Ollanta Humala, who lost to Alan Garcia in last year's presidential election.

According to a report in the Los Angeles Times, a message on the label reads: "The Peruvian government acts in an inefficient, slow and heartless manner, notwithstanding the pain of the victims, leaving them to the mercy of hunger, thirst and delinquency."

Not surprisingly, the offending cans have stirred up a political storm.

Humala's Nationalist Party - whose logo also features on the label - has denied responsibility, blaming a "weak and cowardly" campaign to damage its image, according to the Miami Herald. President Garcia said he didn't believe Humala was behind the fishy propaganda. But the Expreso newspaper said the cans were handed out from Nationalist Party trucks, fuelling the theory they could be the brainchild of local Humala or Chavez supporters.

The Venezuelan ambassador to Peru was quick to disassociate his government from the controversial labels. "This is a damaging manipulation, a vile manipulation because Venezuela has brought humanitarian aid, not party politics," he reportedly told Lima's CPN Radio.

The LA Times said the row was symptomatic of a wider divide between South Americans who support the policies of powerful socialist leader Chavez and those who disapprove of his anti-U.S. rhetoric.

President Garcia is a Washington ally who has accused his Venezuelan counterpart of interfering in Peru's affairs. During last year's presidential campaign, he also branded Humala "a Chavez lackey", according to the newspaper. But while there's no love lost between Garcia and Chavez, the Peruvian president has publicly thanked Venezuela for the quake aid it's sent.

As long as the perpetrators of "tuna-gate" remain shrouded in mystery, it's hard to know whether the cans were a roaring a success or a political own-goal.

Either way, the controversy makes Bolivian President Evo Morales look like a saint in comparison. He and his cabinet have promised to donate between 25 percent and half of their pay this month to the tens of thousands of families left homeless by the devastating Peru quake.

"International aid is not always enough when there is a natural disaster, but a small contribution will always help the families affected by the earthquake," Morales said.

Big natural disasters can make or break governments. They can make a town mayor a hero who'll go on to be president, or they can expose the faultlines of state corruption and fuel a revolution.

Sometimes tragedies persuade long-standing enemies to unite and help each other out. Other times governments score goals by giving aid to traditional enemies to highlight their weakness.

In the case of Peru, some quake survivors have got so fed up waiting for help to arrive that they've packed up and left town. According to a report in the Christian Science Monitor, aid workers say there's actually plenty of relief to go round, but the problem lies with distribution bottlenecks.

Some have criticised a decision to put ministers in charge of the relief effort. "Local authorities, the ones who know the area best, and titular head of the civil defense system, have no role. They have been replaced by ministers," Frank Boeren of Oxfam International told the paper.

To those still waiting for relief to trickle through, the tuna scandal must seem like a cruel and cynical sideshow.
http://www.alertnet.org/db/blogs/20316/2007/07/21-171339-1.htm

muck
08-22-2007, 08:17 AM
Maybe he is a tuna fish?



Sorry, I could not resist. The answer to that question is so obvious.

LMAV
08-22-2007, 08:19 AM
Did anyone catch the daily show and the segment about Hugo and how cool he really is?

starboardside
08-22-2007, 08:27 AM
They should put the fat commie bastards face on toilet paper:)

sp2c
08-22-2007, 08:32 AM
he (well his country) paid for them so as long as there is actual food inside he could put photos of his granny giving him a buttnaked lapdance on them for all I care.

Mike Keenan
08-22-2007, 08:36 AM
Maybe he likes being on stuff.

Rakki
08-22-2007, 08:52 AM
....Or Chavez, like tuna, both smell fishy....

Telmar
08-22-2007, 10:02 AM
Why the outrage. He was already on cheese boxes..

2Sheds_Jackson
08-22-2007, 04:51 PM
I think it's fair to say that the very instant that personality cults like this begin to manifest themselves - that those nations are in big trouble.

sp2c
08-22-2007, 04:54 PM
Why the outrage. He was already on cheese boxes..

weeeehehehehehehehehehiiiiiwhiiiiihihihahahahe*cough*hiiii

post of the year

chintin
08-22-2007, 07:02 PM
if i was one of the ppl who suffered the earthquake and i had nothing left, i wouldnt give a **** about eating tuna fish with the face of chavez in the cans. Hes sending help to those ppl and i think thats what it matters.


And no, i dont agree with chavez.

PaulClift
08-22-2007, 07:06 PM
Could you imagine the international uproar if Bush stuck his face on something like that, even if it was aid for disaster victims.

SeanAshi
08-22-2007, 07:49 PM
Really how do people eat tuna fish when it smells so damn bad?

Kilgor
08-22-2007, 08:29 PM
Could you imagine the international uproar if Bush stuck his face on something like that, even if it was aid for disaster victims.

Exactly, its fine to have USA Wheat, and it wouldn't be a issue if it was "Venezuela Tuna", but its one of the many signs that the place is turning into a cult of personality socialist paradise.

Alpheus
08-22-2007, 09:21 PM
Really how do people eat tuna fish when it smells so damn bad?

Add lots of mayo and it tastes great.

pedro_rafael
08-22-2007, 10:23 PM
mmmmm.....the Venezuelan Ambassador to Peru is saying that they are being framed.

Or collectively being taken for fools ... you choose.


... Seems to me that somebody (Mr NN) in Peru wised up and took the chance to trash Chavez a bit.


Saludos,

PaulClift
08-22-2007, 11:09 PM
Exactly, its fine to have USA Wheat, and it wouldn't be a issue if it was "Venezuela Tuna", but its one of the many signs that the place is turning into a cult of personality socialist paradise.

It does seem a very Fidel Castro type of thing to do.

Alan
08-22-2007, 11:29 PM
Folks, I am not any expert about south-american politics or whatnot, and I don't know anything much about Hugo Chavez, nor do I really care about him.

However, if I were hungry, and somebody gave me food, I seriously wouldn't care who's face is on it.

Bush, Chavez, Hitler, The Spagetti Monster, Some random dude from the street... I wouldn't care. It's food.

Is it really that important?

Chulo
08-22-2007, 11:34 PM
Folks, I am not any expert about south-american politics or whatnot, and I don't know anything much about Hugo Chavez, nor do I really care about him.

However, if I were hungry, and somebody gave me food, I seriously wouldn't care who's face is on it.

Bush, Chavez, Hitler, The Spagetti Monster, Some random dude from the street... I wouldn't care. It's food.

Is it really that important?
lookin beyond the personal issues i would say it would be a good indication of some future problems, as kilgor said "personality socialist paradise."

Alan
08-22-2007, 11:39 PM
Chavez isn't immortal. He's just some ugly fat guy who rides on a wave of idiotic anti-americanism.

I mean, politics aside, he's just a stupid human being with a bad attitude. Not some monster. I personally believe I could kick his ass. :)

In all seriousness, if he DOES get out of hand, how hard would it be to.. oh... let's say... squish his dictatorial ass?

Kilgor
08-22-2007, 11:57 PM
Folks, I am not any expert about south-american politics or whatnot, and I don't know anything much about Hugo Chavez, nor do I really care about him.

However, if I were hungry, and somebody gave me food, I seriously wouldn't care who's face is on it.

Bush, Chavez, Hitler, The Spagetti Monster, Some random dude from the street... I wouldn't care. It's food.

Is it really that important?

What would you think if they changed the picture of USA Wheat to George Bush's ugly mug ?

Regardless of political stance, I would consider it a very dubious thing to do.

pedro_rafael
08-23-2007, 12:07 AM
However, if I were hungry, and somebody gave me food, I seriously wouldn't care who's face is on it.

Bush, Chavez, Hitler, The Spagetti Monster, Some random dude from the street... I wouldn't care. It's food.

Is it really that important?


Well, i don't see those hungry people in Ica complaining anytime soon. Don't worry so much about it.


Regards,

signatory
08-23-2007, 12:26 AM
Good news.

Quake victims get some food and we get some media-friendly visual evidence of a regional arsehole. Good for the Anti-Chavez campaign.

ZhukovG
08-23-2007, 01:16 AM
LoL chavez wants to make his own brand
next time we are going to see CIA Tuna, kill for it ;)

Mike Keenan
08-23-2007, 02:19 PM
You know if you take the two letter "ez" away from Chavez, His name would be Hugo Chav.