Jailed DirecTV Execs Accused of Destabilizing the Economy in Venezuela
Three DirecTV executives have been arrested in Venezuela and
accused of fraud and destabilizing the economy after parent company AT&T
abruptly severed television service in the country last month, leaving millions
of Venezuelans disconnected from popular news and entertainment programming.
In a statement last month, AT&T announced that it had
become impossible to balance U.S. sanctions against Venezuela with the
Venezuelan government demands to carry state-backed TV networks and censor
international channels critical of Nicolás Maduro's regime.
“Because it is impossible for AT&T’s DIRECTV unit to
comply with the legal requirements of both countries, AT&T was forced to
close its pay TV operations in Venezuela, a decision that was made by the
company’s U.S. leadership team without any involvement or prior knowledge of
the DIRECTV Venezuela team,” AT&T said in a statement.
With a 44 percent market share of the Venezuelan TV market,
the decision sparked scattered protests in cities like Caracas among frustrated
customers who’ve been homebound since March as part of the country’s efforts to
slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.
Three days after AT&T’s announcement, the Venezuelan
Supreme Court ordered that all of the company’s assets in the country be
seized.
Things escalated further over the weekend, after the
Venezuelan government arrested three local Venezuelan DirecTV executives last
week. In an announcement posted to Facebook and its website on Tuesday, the Venezuala
Supreme Tribunal of Justice accused the trio of fraud and efforts to
destabilize the Venezuelan economy.
"I hope there is justice in this country," DirecTV
Vice President of strategy Carlos Villamizar told reporters before surrendering
to authorities.
Former DirecTV employees expressed solidarity with the
jailed executives via the #DIRECTVSomosTodos (we are DirecTV) hashtag on
Twitter.
AT&T did not respond to a request for comment on the
arrests.
The telecom giant has found itself increasingly caught
between the Trump administration’s efforts to undermine the Maduro
administration, and Venezuela’s demands to censor at least 10 channels since
2017 that aired content critical of the Venezuelan government.
Venezuelan regulators had accused the channels of violating
Venezuela’s 2004 Law on Social Responsibility on Radio and Television,
purportedly crafted to ensure the airing of socially responsible programming,
but long criticized by human rights and press freedom groups as a tool for
media and political censorship.
Last year, DirecTV was quick to censor both BBC and CNN at
the Venezuelan government’s behest, after both networks aired the brutal murder
of protesters in Caracas.
An Associated Press report from last January found that the
Trump administration had been pressuring AT&T to not only restore censored
channels in the country, but take on a more active role in undermining the
Maduro administration and its use of state television to broadcast propaganda.
Despite sharing some similar authoritarian tendencies, the
Trump administration’s efforts to undermine Maduro have included both criticism
of Venezuela’s brutal oppression of its citizens, as well as unsubstantiated
allegations that the Maduro administration had helped stoke recent protests in
the United States.
AT&T is one of several companies—including Kellogg and
GM—that have departed the country in the last few years. Currently facing
massive debt due to a series of U.S. mergers, and limited profit due to
Venezuelan regulations that limit the cost of television service, AT&T
decided a full retreat was its best opinion.
Roughly 700 Venezuelans were employed by DirecTV in
Venezuela, and 2 million Venezuelans have lost access to programming courtesy
of the standoff.



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