Chavez's Venezuela to get its own time zone

Wed Nov 28, 2007 4:25pm EST
 
[-] Text [+]

CARACAS (Reuters) - So he did mean it.

Venezuela will roll clocks back by half an hour on December 9 as part of President Hugo Chavez's effort to give early-rising schoolchildren more daylight.

The shift to a unique time zone has been repeatedly announced and canceled in recent weeks, but this time it's official -- published on Wednesday as a new law in Venezuela's national gazette.

The change will take place a week after Venezuelans vote on Sunday in a referendum on a constitutional reform proposal that would allow Chavez, a Cuba ally leading a self-styled socialist revolution, to run for reelection indefinitely.

Venezuela's clocks will be set to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) minus 4-1/2 hours, a time zone shared by no other nation.

Chavez first announced the plan in August and said it would take effect in less than a month, then postponed it amid confusion over how it would work.

Chavez and his brother Adan, the education minister, at one point incorrectly said in a television broadcast that the plan was to move clocks forward.

Businesses will now have to reprogram computers and perhaps change work schedules to better match those of trade partners.

Critics dismissed moving the clock by half an hour as the eccentric whim of a president who has changed the official name of the country, the coat of arms and the nation's flag.

The anti-U.S. Chavez has defended the move by arguing the world's hourly divisions were imposed by the United States.

(Reporting by Brian Ellsworth; Editing by Stuart Grudgings)

 

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video

Analysis

Soldiers are silhouetted against the sunrise as they conduct a joint patrol with U.S. troops in a village of Kharuti, in the mountains of Wardak Province in Afghanistan July 16, 2009. REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov
Afghan sticker shock

War spending in Afghanistan has more than doubled over the last year, and it will cost another $1 million for each additional soldier sent as part of President Obama's hotly debated buildup.  Full Article