8A February 6, 2003 WORLD THE BATTAL1 Chavez vows to punish strikers with strict exchange controls N. Korea reactivates nuclear facilities By Jae-Suk Yoo THE ASSOCIATED PRESS By Fabiola Sanchez THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Strike aftermath in Venezuela CARACAS, Venezuela — Smarting from a failed strike to oust President Hugo Chavez, Venezuelan businessmen warned Wednesday that plans to restrict access to foreign currency will bury the reeling economy. Chavez’s leftist government plans to announce the restrictions on Thursday, to try to stop a devaluation of the bolivar and protect Venezuela’s foreign reserves, which shrank $2 billion during the two-month strike. Details have not been released. But Chavez vowed Tuesday to punish strike leaders by restricting their ability to purchase U.S. dollars, an essential in a nation heavily dependent on imports. He accused those he calls “coup plotters” of stashing billions of dollars abroad — “our international reserves, belonging to the nation, to the Republic.” That could force thousands of businesses to close for lack of sup plies and leave tens of thousands jobless, business leaders warned. Already, analysts say the failed two-month strike to oust Chavez will close more than 20,000 businesses and leave 200,000 people jobless. Strike leader Carlos Fernandez, head of the Fedecamaras busi ness federation, said Chavez was trying to impose control over the struggling private sector, which relies on imports for 60 percent of its supplies and raw materials. Lope Mendoza, president of the Conindustria business chamber, urged citizens in the import-crazy nation to buy Venezuelan prod ucts to keep the economy afloat. “The industrial sector isn’t going to please the president, who wants to see a cemetery of business es,” Mendoza said. Chavez’s threat on Tuesday to provide “not one more dollar for the coup plotters” showed he will devise a discretionary system that will “hand out prizes and punishments,” said analyst Luis Vicente Leon. “He is going to control his enemies’ income. Venezuela is too dependent on imports,” Leon said. Chavez’s government suspended dollar purchases on Jan. 22 after the bolivar lost more than 30 percent of its worth during the President Hugo Chavez announced currency controls Wednesday that he says will punish those who led a 10-week strike seeking his ouster. Dec. 2, 2002: Strike begins. More than 80 percent of businesses close their doors. Dec. 5: Captains of the PD VS A. tanker fleet join strike by refusing to enter port. Jan. 17, 2003: Venezuelan troops raid bottling plants, seizing drinks to stave off shortages. Feb. 1: Under international pressure, opposition agrees to ease the 2-month-old strike but not in the oil industry. Feb. 5: Venezuelans brace for currency controls that Chavez says will punish strikers. 2003 Hill Dec. 4: Workers at the state- run oil monopoly Petroleos de Venezuela S.A., or PDVSA, join the strike. Dec. 6: Jan. 28: More Feb. 3: Banks, A lone gunman than 5,000 shopping malls, kills three striking workers factories and are sacked schools opened from PDVSA by as opponents of Chavez. Chavez eased a 64-day-old strike. people at an opposition rallying point. SOURCE: Associated Press AP strike, which began Dec. 2 and ended in all sectors but oil this week. Foreign reserves dropped $2 billion in part because the govern ment was spending $60 million a day to prop up the bolivar. The bolivar last traded at 1,830 to the dollar. On the black mar ket, it’s 2,500 per dollar. Devaluation, in turn, sent inflation past 30 percent, and many economists forecast a 25 percent recession this year. Finance Minister Tobias Noriega said a fixed rate — between 1,600 and 1,850 bolivars per dollar — will be adopted for imports of food, medicines and government transactions. It wasn’t known how many dollars the government will make available to citizens and businesses, what conditions they must meet to buy dollars, and how many dollars they can buy. Some newspapers speculated Wednesday that citizens will face restrictions on the amount of dollars they can buy for business travel abroad. SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Wednesday it has reactivated its nuclear facilities, a surprise announcement that raised questions whether it was trying to take advantage of Washington’s preoccupation with Iraq to ratchet up pressure in its own standoff with the United States. In Washington, the State Department said that if the announcement was true, "this would be a very serious devel opment.” It demanded the North “reverse this action ... North Korea must visibly, verifiably and irreversibly dismantle its nuclear weapons program.” A North Korean spokesman announced the reactivation, deepening the crisis over Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions, just before Secretary of State Colin Powell spoke at the U.N. Security Council, presenting the U.S. case against Iraq. The North said the reactivated facilities would "for the pres ent stage” be used only to produce electricity — but the United States says the facilities can produce nuclear weapons within months. Even as it presses toward war with Iraq over alleged hidden weapons of mass destruction, the United States has insisted it wants a peaceful solution in its standoff with North Korea. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer discounted that Pyongyang was timing the issue with Iraq developments. “North Korea has a history of doing things like they didin the 90s, outside of the context of Iraq,” he said. The North’s announcement came hours after South Korea took a new step in its policy of trying to ease tensions by pur suing reconciliation with the isolated communist regime. Earlier Wednesday, the South opened a road across the heavily fortified border for the first time in more than half a century. Pyongyang wants direct talks with Washington, something U.S. officials have resisted. Analysts say North Korea, which often accuses the United States of plotting to invade it, fears Washington will turn up pressure on it if a war against Iraq is successful. The North may hope that heightening the stand-off at a time when Washington is trying to concentrate on Iraq could prompt the United States to make concessions. 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