Why he crushed the oligarchs "The
importance of Hugo Chávez" |
The turn-out in Venezuela last Sunday was
huge. 94.9 percent of the electorate voted in the recall referendum. Venezuela,
under its new Constitution, permitted the right of the citizens to recall
a President before s/he had completed their term of office. No Western democracy enshrines this right in a written or unwritten constitution. Chavez' victory will have repercussions beyond the borders of Venezuela. It is a triumph of the poor against the rich and it is a lesson that Lula in Brazil and Kirchner in Argentina should study closely. It was Fidel Castro, not Carter, whose advice to go ahead with the referendum was crucial. Chavez put his trust in the people by empowering them and they responded generously. The opposition will only discredit itself further by challenging the results. The Venezuelan oligarchs and their parties, who had opposed this Constitution
in a referendum (having earlier failed to topple Chavez via a US-backed
coup and an oil-strike led by a corrupt union bureaucracy) now utilised
it to try and get rid of the man who had enhanced Venezuelan democracy.
They failed. However loud their cries (and those of their media apologists
at home and abroad) of anguish, in reality the whole country knows what
happened. Chavez defeated his opponents democratically and for the fourth
time in a row. Democracy in Venezuela, under the banner of the Bolivarian
revolutionaries, has broken through the corrupt two-party system favoured
by the oligarchy and its friends Some foreign correspondents in Caracas have convinced themselves that Chavez is an oppressive caudillo and they are desperate to translate their own fantasies into reality. They provide no evidence of political prisoners, leave alone Guantanamo-style detentions or the removal of TV executives and newspaper editors (which happened without too much of a fuss in Blair's Britain). A few weeks ago in Caracas I had a lengthy discussion with Chavez ranging
from Iraq to the most detailed minutiae of Venezuelan history and politics
and the Bolivarian programme. It became clear to me that what Chavez is
attempting is nothing more or less than the creation of a radical, social-democracy
in Venezuela that seeks to empower the lowest Just under a million children from the shanty-towns and the poorest villages
now obtain a free education; 1.2 million illiterate adults have been taught
to read and write; secondary education has been made available to 250,000
children whose social status excluded them from this privilege during
the ancien regime; three new university campuses As far as healthcare is concerned, the 10,000 Cuban doctors, who were
sent to help the country, have transformed the situation in the poor districts,
where 11,000 neighbourhood clinics have been established and the health
budget has tripled. Add to this the financial support provided to small
businesses, the new homes being built for the poor, And one can't help but notice that it is not simply a division between
the wealthy and the poor, but also one of skin-colour. The Chavistas tend
to be dark-skinned, reflecting their slave and native ancestry.The opposition
is light-skinned and some of its more disgusting supporters denounce Chavez
as a black monkey. A puppet show to this effect with a The bizarre argument advanced in a hostile editorial in The Economist
this week that all this was done to win votes is extraordinary. The opposite
is the case. The coverage of Venezuela in The Economist and Financial
Times has consisted of pro-oligarchy apologetics. Rarely have reporters
in the field responded so uncritically to the needs of their The Bolivarians wanted power so that real reforms could be implemented. All the oligarchs have to offer is more of the past and the removal of Chavez. It is ridiculous to suggest that Venezuela is on the brink of a totalitarian tragedy. It is the opposition that has attempted to take the country in that direction. The Bolivarians have been incredibly restrained. When I asked Chavez to explain his own philosophy, he replied: 'I don't believe in the dogmatic postulates of Marxist revolution. I
don't accept that we are living in a period of proletarian revolutions.All
that must be revised. Reality is telling us that every day. Are we aiming
in Venezuela today for the abolition of private property or a classless
society? I don't think so. But if I'm told that because of that reality
you can't do anything to help the poor, the people who have made this
country rich through their labour and never forget that some of it was
slave labour, then I say 'We part company'. I will never accept that there
can be no redistribution of wealth in society. Our And that's why he won. |
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