I would say that indirectly, yes, but not directly, because in the case of the Governor of Lara, that was one of those clear cases when Chávez said in camera one day, “We want to expropriate the warehouses of Polar.” Polar is the largest producer of food in Venezuela, and it is now under severe pressure by the government. The plants and the places they wanted to take from Polar were in Lara. The governor refused to do it because he said Chávez's motive was allegedly to construct housing developments there. The governor refused to do that because he said, “This is not a place for housing, this is a place for industries, and that's part of the plan of the city. I want to talk to the people here, open a dialogue with the owners of Polar and find alternatives.” I think the word “dialogue” was not something President Chávez liked very much, so that produced a confrontation.
In the end he resigned from his party and went to another party. Now he's facing a trial and persecution. He's being openly called a traitor and everything.
So he was indirectly linked to this particular case, which also has to do with property rights.
In the case of the former director of secret protection, or whatever it's called, he didn't directly mention human rights. But he called a press conference where he made very serious accusations—I cannot give you details because it is not the area of my concern—about the presence of Cubans in the armed forces. That was all.