Publication

17 Aug 2011

Every half hour, a person is killed in Venezuela. The presence of organized crime combined with an enormous number of firearms in civilian hands and impunity, as well as police corruption and brutality, have entrenched violence in society. While such problems did not begin with President Hugo Chávez, his government has to account for its ambiguity towards various armed groups, its inability or unwillingness to tackle corruption and criminal complicity in parts of the security forces, its policy to arm civilians "in defence of the revolution", and – last but not least – the president’s own confrontational rhetoric.

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Author International Crisis Group
Series Crisis Group Latin America Reports
Issue 38
Publisher International Crisis Group (ICG)
Copyright © 2011 International Crisis Group (Crisis Group)
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