Roberto Giusti is a Venezuelan journalist. He worked at numerous newspapers including El Nacional and El Universal. He has written a lot of books including Yo Lo Viví, Memorias Inconclusas, and Pasión Guerrilla. He worked for Globovisión TV and was the host of Primera Página and Grado 33.[1]
Born in Rubio, Venezuela
On 13 May 2003, Giusti, host of the Radio Caracas Radio program Golpe a Golpe ("coup to coup") with Fausto Masso, filed a complaint with the Public Prosecutor’s Office denouncing the death threats he had been receiving. On 2 May, a group of about fifty people entered the studios of Radio Caracas Radio and began shouting offensive slogans at the journalist and calling him a "murderer". The attackers sprayed graffiti on the building’s walls and Giusti’s car. Giusti called for an investigation into the incident and possible links to his reports on the presence of the government of Hugo Chávez and Colombian guerrillas in Venezuela.[2] [3]
In the state of Táchira, Venezuela, the guerrilla was kidnapping and was taking money from the farmers that lived there. Giusti, which grew up in that state, knew some of the farmers and decided to do something. He went to Táchira from Caracas and started investigating. After talking to some of the local farmers, he decided to interview some members of the Guerrilla. After a year of negotiations, the members of the Guerrilla and Giusti agreed on an interview in a Guerrilla camp. He was interviewing Commander Alexis. While interviewing him, Commander Alexis admitted to killing eight members of the Venezuelan Marine Corps in the famous Cararabo Massacre in 1995. He then passed the border to Colombia to interview Raul Reyes an important FARC member. Reyes said that he was like Hugo Chávez, a Marxist-Leninist. Giusti later found a Colombian Guerrilla camp in Venezuela and reported it through the El Universal newspaper. When the Government of Colombia was going to Venezuela to the reunion between Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez and Colombian president Álvaro Uribe, they invited Giusti to it in Puerto Ordaz. The Colombian Government gave him a map of all the camps of the Guerrilla in Venezuela and he released it. He later received threats from the Venezuelan Government and the Guerrilla, but they didn't mess with him.[4]