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Amaunet

11/20/04 9:35 AM

#2333 RE: Amaunet #2332

Look what Chavez was up to

Now for the not so obvious reasons….

Dated excerpt:
Iran started thinking about switching too; Venezuela, the 4th largest oil producer, began looking at it and has been cutting out the dollar by bartering oil with several nations including America's bete noir, Cuba.
#msg-4131138

And now, November 20th, 2004.
Chavez and Fernandez said with the price of oil at record-high levels ($50-plus per barrel), 25% of the oil sales between the two countries would be financed at 2% annual interest for 15 years, with a one-year grace period to pay the principal. In addition, the D.R. may pay the credits in goods and services, and the one-year agreement is automatically renewable.

-Am

Chavez oil deal popular in D.R.

Saturday, November 20th, 2004.

By John Collins of Caribbean Business
During his recent whirlwind visit to the Dominican Republic (D.R.), Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez signed an agreement with President Leonel Fernandez reinstating the suspended Accord of Caracas between the two countries.

Under the accord, Venezuela commits to supply 50,000 barrels of oil or equivalent forms of fuel per day to the D.R. The new agreement complements the San Jose Accord, which establishes credits based on 20% of oil sales to recipient countries.

Chavez and Fernandez said with the price of oil at record-high levels ($50-plus per barrel), 25% of the oil sales between the two countries would be financed at 2% annual interest for 15 years, with a one-year grace period to pay the principal. In addition, the D.R. may pay the credits in goods and services, and the one-year agreement is automatically renewable.

The accord also includes a commitment by the Venezuelan government to collaborate in the exploration for oil in the D.R. and to train Dominican technicians. “This agreement is an expression of generosity and solidarity not very common in today’s world, in which market conditions prevail,” said Fernandez.

The D.R. currently sources fuel from Venezuela at $40 a barrel. At the current price levels, the new accord could represent annual savings of $200 million in the trade balance between the two countries. There is some concern about what could happen if the price of oil begins to drop, but most Dominicans, who have endured chronic blackouts and fluctuating prices, welcome the agreement, hoping it will help to stabilize the bad economic situation in the D.R.

The D.R. consumes an average of 140,00 barrels of oil daily, of which 110,000 are imported from Venezuela. The imports from Venezuela, however, were suspended in September 2003 after Chavez clashed with former D.R. President Hipolito Mejia, accusing Mejia of permitting former Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez to use the territory of the D.R. to conspire against Chavez.


http://www.puertoricowow.com/html/businessnews-detail.asp?amaspHidden_listActive=true&amaspField....

S American nations sign oil deal

Last Updated: Thursday, 18 November, 2004, 23:57 GMT

Venezuela will sell the oil at a preferential rate

Venezuela, the world's fifth largest oil exporter, has signed an agreement to supply Paraguay with more than 18,000 barrels of oil per day.

The agreement was signed by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and his Paraguayan counterpart Nicanor Duarte.

Mr Chavez said such agreements were important to create an energy alliance across South America.

Paraguay will pay for 75% of the oil on delivery and will have 15 years to pay the balance.

After signing the deal, President Duarte said it would allow Paraguay to invest US $75m in social programmes.

Venezuela says it produces some 3.1m barrels of oil a day but critics say it produces closer to 2.6m barrels.

Mr Chavez says regional integration is one of the arms of his "peaceful revolution".

He has proposed the creation of two regional energy companies to boost oil production and distribution in South America and the Caribbean.

Venezuela already has deals for preferential oil rates with more than 15 countries in the region.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4024349.stm





















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otraque

11/20/04 5:05 PM

#2337 RE: Amaunet #2332

The thing about this it is yet another ticking bomb that Bush has started as we know this story landed in Beijing on the ricochet in a moment.
The more abundant the things that can go wrong the higher the chances they will go wrong.
My count of things that can go wrong has reached the critical mass point where i can say things will go wrong.
Cripes i see the nightmare in the Pistons/Pacers basketball game last night even an event that is predictable in the mad arrogant in your face "my blankety-blank is bigger than your blankety-blank" ambient tension emanating from these dangerous blood soaked Ugly Cartoons we now have leading this nation.
( Was that a run over sentence??LOL!) Max
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otraque

11/20/04 5:30 PM

#2339 RE: Amaunet #2332

Just checked if anyone else is seeing what happened in Detroit as being symptomatic regards our country's state of mind.
And found this

<<Detroit player-fan brawl: Ugly sign of violent times
STEVE WILSTEIN, AP Sports Columnist

Saturday, November 20, 2004

Blame the frightening melee in Detroit -- perilously close to escalating into a full-blown riot -- on the players, the fans, the NBA and the times.

It's the latest in a series of increasingly ugly incidents in sports, raising fears that the worst is yet to come.

Blame the Detroit Pistons' Ben Wallace for the first angry shove Friday night, the Indiana Pacers' Ron Artest for crossing the line by climbing into the stands, Stephen Jackson and Jermaine O'Neal for the reckless punches that followed.

Blame the fools in the crowd who threw beer, ice, a chair and punches of their own, and the ones who took to the court to confront the Pacers.

There's blame aplenty to account for the brawl in the final minute of Indiana's abbreviated 97-82 victory at The Palace in Auburn Hills, Mich. It started with Artest's hard foul from behind on Wallace and should have ended there. Instead, Wallace wheeled around and pushed Artest in the face to set off a tussle.

When that settled down, Artest, no stranger to roughhousing and controversy, retreated to neutral territory and sprawled on the scorer's table.

Then came a full cup from the stands that hit him. Artest jumped up in a rage to pummel the offender -- though he mauled the wrong guy. Jackson went to help his teammate. Then another seemingly confrontational fan strolled onto the court. That set off O'Neal, flinging punches.

By the time it was over, children were crying, police resorted to pepper spray, and a half-dozen people were treated for injuries -- none serious.

"I felt like I was fighting for my life out there," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said.

Pistons coach Larry Brown picked up a microphone to try to calm the crowd but put it down in disgust.

"I've just never seen anything like that," Brown said. "I didn't know what to do myself."


Blame the security, or not enough of it. Blame drinking, or too much of it.

Blame the thuggish image of players the NBA has cultivated and marketed.

Blame the zooming costs of tickets and the attitude by some fans that they can get their money's worth by heaping endless abuse -- verbal and physical -- on players.

Blame our violent times -- the streaming images of war and terrorism on TV, the edginess of daily life -- and the continuing decline of civility.

NBA commissioner David Stern called the brawl, one of the worst in league history, "shocking, repulsive and inexcusable" on Saturday, when he suspended Wallace, Artest, Jackson and O'Neal indefinitely.

That's a smart first step. A month's suspension wouldn't suffice, even if it means the injury-depleted Pacers won't have enough healthy players left to finish a game.

The next step is a police investigation, possible charges against players, most probably lawsuits.

What will it take to prevent a death, a stampede, a riot the next time tempers get out of control?

In basketball's early days, courts were surrounded by chicken wire -- hence, the players' nickname of "cagers." Must the game construct new barriers between players and fans?

Must baseball build bullpens away from the stands to avoid a repeat of the Texas Rangers' Frank Francisco's chair-throwing incident that broke the nose of an Oakland Athletics fan?

Must police in riot gear be stationed at every game?

It's bad enough when players attack each other, such as in March when Vancouver Canucks star Todd Bertuzzi was charged with assault for a sucker-punch that broke Colorado Avalanche center Steve Moore's neck. Bertuzzi's trial is set for January.

We've come to expect violence in hockey, learned to grudgingly accept that parents of Little Leaguers set bad examples for the kids by verbally, sometimes physically, abusing umpires. (edit-in my time this crap would be beyond belief, hell our parents rarely ever came to the games---it THEN was just a game--wl)

Even on Saturday, Clemson and South Carolina football players brawled late in the game, with skinny 67-year-old coach Lou Holtz diving into the pile as peacemaker in his regular-season finale with the Gamecocks.

And last week in the NFL, Cleveland's William Green and Pittsburgh's Joey Porter were ejected and fined for spitting at each other and fighting -- before the opening kickoff.

There's more at work here than just a few isolated incidents on the field, the courts and the ice. There's a disturbing increase in player violence and player-fan confrontations:

* The bullpen brawl involving New York Yankees pitchers and a groundskeeper cheering for the Boston Red Sox at Fenway last year in the playoffs.

* The father and son who burst onto the field at Chicago's Comiskey Park in 2002, slammed Kansas City Royals first-base coach Tom Gamboa to the ground, punched and kicked him.

* And, most famously, the 1993 courtside stabbing in Hamburg, Germany, of top-ranked tennis player Monica Seles by a deranged fan of Steffi Graf.

We live in strange and dangerous times, sport no more separated from the violence of the world than any other endeavor. The brawl in Detroit was as bad as the NBA has ever seen but there's no sense that we won't see more in the future.>>



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Steve Wilstein is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at swilstein(at)ap.org >>