guardian.co.uk,
Associated Press in Caracas, Monday 23 July 2012
President
Hugo Chávez has urged Venezuelans to drink fruit juice produced by a state-run
company rather than Coca-Cola or Pepsi.
He says
people should buy Uvita, a grape juice made by Corpozulia as a means of
increasing the consumption of Venezuelan-made products instead of buying sugary
sodas made by foreign companies.
Chávez often
dispenses advice to supporters during his marathon televised speeches, calling
on them to eat healthy foods, exercise and avoid drugs and alcohol.
During
Sunday's speech, he said Venezuela was trying to boost consumption of domestic
goods as a means of reducing imports. Chávez is also promoting a Venezuelan
wine. The South American nation imports most of the food and drinks Venezuelans
consume.
The
president also vowed not to stop using the country's airwaves for his
addresses, despite complaints from his challenger that it gives him an unfair
advantage during the election campaign.
Opposition
candidate Henrique Capriles has demanded that election officials prevent Chávez
from taking political advantage of the special broadcasts, which all networks
are required by law to air, before Venezuela's election on 7 October.
Directors
of the National Electoral Council have approved campaign regulations that
prohibit TV and radio messages that favour a presidential candidate to run
longer than three minutes. But it is unclear whether the president's frequent
and lengthy special broadcasts, known as "cadenas", will be affected.
"The
cadenas are part of the national government's information strategy," said
Chávez, speaking during one of the special broadcasts. "The bourgeoisie
wants me to give up something that's the faculty of the president of the
republic. I'm not going to do it."
Chávez, a
former paratroop commander, argued that most of Venezuela's privately owned TV
channels, radio stations and newspapers are biased in favour of Capriles and he
accused the independent media of ignoring his government's achievements.
"The major part of the radios, television channels and newspapers are in
the hands of the bourgeoisie," said Chávez, who is seeking re-election to
a fresh six-year term.
When Chávez
took office in 1999, he referred to four major TV channels – RCTV, Venevision,
Globovision and Televen – as the "four horsemen of the apocalypse".
He accused the channels supporting a short-lived 2002 coup by broadcasting
cartoons and films instead of the protests that aided his return to power.

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