In November 2010, Hugo Chávez in a Hello President announced the release of two fishing boats "Pescalba" called Simón Bolívar and José Martí from the port of La Guaira.
Last December, the ships were detained in Colon, Panama for the canal transit, because it allegedly did not have the money needed for transit.
Last April, the same ships were anchored at Balboa (Isla Flamenco) on the Pacific side, detained by the Maritime Authority of Panama, which has resulted in incalculable losses for Venezuela if we take into account that each ship has a crew 40 people paid monthly, plus of course the inherent loss inputs, fuel, and never has been caught and is considered the object of the voyage of ships.
Hugo Chavez's government has announced that in 2012 the state plans to capture 55 thousand tons of tuna.
But beyond these two boats have only losses, and the Ministry of Popular Power for Agriculture and Land (MAT) has announced that it will spend a total of 131,519,598 Bs for the acquisition of four vessels more and next year will be used to purchase 120,400,000 VEB other two boats. Until now has eight ships Pescalba (Bermudez, Marino, Mariscal Sucre, Urdaneta, Miranda, Luisa Cáceres de Arismendi, Simón Bolívar and José Martí), and the latter two are arrested without cause, and was intended to catch mackerel in the Pacific Ocean. The reality, as shown by the graphs published in this column, the two ships are in the Pacific, but in the Flamenco anchorage (in Balboa).
FOTOLEYENDA: The graph shows the boat anchored in Flamenco Simón Bolívar.
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