Jacqueline Faría

Jacqueline Coromoto Faría Pineda is a Venezuelan politician. She was the head of the state mobile phone company Movilnet[3] Minister of Environment and Natural Resources (2005–2007), and head of Caracas' water company, Hidrocapital. She is a hydraulic civil engineer by profession.

Jacqueline Faría Pineda
Minister of Popular Power for Communication and Information
In office
October 13, 2014  April 28, 2015[1]
PresidentNicolás Maduro
Preceded byDelcy Rodríguez
Succeeded byDesirée Santos Amaral
1st Head of Government of the Venezuelan Capital District
In office
April 15, 2009  October 13, 2014
PresidentHugo Chávez
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byErnesto Villegas
Minister of Environment and Natural Resources
In office
January 2005  January 2007[2]
PresidentHugo Chávez
Preceded byAna Elisa Osorio
Succeeded byYubirí Ortega
Personal details
Political partyUnited Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV)

Career

After the election of Antonio Ledezma as Metropolitan Mayor of Caracas, the Venezuelan National Assembly passed a Capital District Law on April 30, 2009 that transferred most functions, funding, and personnel to the control of Jacqueline Faría, an official directly appointed by Hugo Chávez. A legal challenge was filed and a request was filed with the National Electoral Council to hold a referendum, but these did not stop the transfer. Opponents of Chavez described the move as a deliberate negation of the popular vote, while supporters described the political and budgetary reorganization as an "act of justice" for Libertador Bolivarian Municipality, the largest and poorest of the five municipalities making up Caracas.[4]

In 2009, Faría was also for a time President of the state telephone company CANTV.[5]

After the Mother of All Marches on 19 April 2017, where opposition protesters had to leap into the sewage-filled Guaire River in Caracas in order to flee barrages of tear gas, a Twitter user asked Faría where the $14 billion supposedly invested into the Guaire River went, with the Faría stating "They were completely invested, just ask your people who had a tasteful bath!"[6] As the 2017 Venezuelan protests intensified, demonstrators began using "Puputovs", a play on words of Molotov Cocktail, with glass devices filled with excrement being thrown at authorities after Faría mocked protesters who had to crawl through the Guaire River.[7][8]

References

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