VENEZUELA: `A struggle for
our America's future'
The following speech was
presented by LEONEL VIVAS, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela's ambassador to
Australia, to the August 2 "Latin America: New Movements of
Resistance and Transformation" conference in Sydney, organized by the
Committees in Solidarity with Latin America and the Caribbean.
On behalf of the people and the government of Venezuela, I would like to express
my deepest recognition to the organizers of this conference. I appreciate very
much the friendship and solidarity shown by all of you, in respect to the
revolutionary process that my government and, specially President Hugo Chavez,
is today pushing ahead in Venezuela. Please accept my warmest greetings.
From 1958 until 1998, Venezuela was ruled alternatively by two main traditional
political parties: one was social democratic and the other, social Christian. At
the beginning of 1999, Hugo Chavez Frias was elected as president, supported by
an emergent political party he founded two years earlier. Eighteen months later,
Chavez won another national election, again beating the traditional political
parties by an even greater majority.
It is very important to point out that Chavez was elected president of Venezuela
twice, by means of democratic, popular and universal elections.
If Chavez is the legitimate president, if President Chavez is ruling his country
in a democratic way, if he is not a dictator and respects the values of Western
civilization, then how do you explain the failed coup d'etat of April 11,
2002? Why has there been a brutal, and even terrorist, political
campaign of opposition to Chavez throughout the time he has been in power?
Revolutionary struggle
This is very simple to explain. The fact is that today in Venezuela there is a
struggle of the past against the future, and against hope. A struggle waged by
those who have traditionally been privileged against those who have always been
socially excluded. It is a struggle of ignominy against dignity, a battle for
the rights of the peoples of our America. President Chavez and his revolutionary
movement are the result of this struggle.
Venezuela's petroleum oligarchy, big entrepreneurs, owners of its private TV
networks and other media, the bureaucrats of the corrupt and pro-management
trade unions, the traitorous military chiefs and the representatives of
Venezuela's political past < allied in a perfidious pro-coup coalition <
intend to take power by any means possible.
This coalition intends to overthrow the legally elected government of President
Hugo Chavez, and frustrate the dreams of social justice of the overwhelming
majority of the Venezuelan people, who have witnessed the way in which those
classes have squandered the resources of the country for more than 40 years.
Those who attempted to paralyze Venezuela and bring Chavez to his knees during
the December "general lockout" are the same people who perpetrated the
fascist and bloody coup in April last year. They are the same people who, in the
very few hours they held power, dissolved the National Assembly and all state
institutions, broke into private houses and humiliated several political and
social figures involved in the Bolivarian process, unleashed unprecedented media
terrorism and tried to wipe out in one fell swoop all the just laws adopted by
the Bolivarian government. They are people of fascist ideology. They are
saboteurs.
In despair, these coup plotters have tried new ways to attain their goals. In an
attempt to stir up violence, they have organized demonstrations in which most of
the participants come from the upper and middle classes. They have attempted to
convene an illegal consultative referendum to force the president to resign.
They have appealed to people not to pay their taxes, or their water, electricity
and gas bills. They are trying to sabotage the beginning of the school year, a
battle in which they are also doomed to lose. The opposition is doing everything
in order to oust President Chavez and overthrow his government.
Media `terrorism'
Private television networks and other media have been at the center of the coup
plot. Their owners, Gustavo Cisneros, Marcel Granier and Alberto Federico Ravel,
who used to be the puppeteers of Venezuela's governments of yesterday, attack
the Chavez government 24 hours a day. The private media call for disobedience,
disseminate gross lies about the relations between Venezuela and Cuba, and
broadcast appeals and instructions from the coup ring-leaders. This is media
terrorism, something unprecedented in history.
What the coup plotters want is to take power away from the people. They want to
reinstate the past, with its social exclusion and violation of people's rights.
They are trying to overturn the social works carried out by the Bolivarian
revolutionary process: 150,000 houses built during the last two years; 3000
schools opened, in which 1 million children receive quality education and
adequate food; the university budget tripled; salary increases for teachers and
professors; free treatment for all patients suffering from AIDS; more than 3000
Venezuelans given medical treatment in Cuba, free of charge; water supply
systems built to provide fresh water to 2 million Venezuelans for the first time
in their lives; benefits given to thousands of farmers; and the decision not to
privatize the power, aluminium, water and oil industries, something that was
attempted by the neoliberals in the past and is the aim of the coup
plotters today.
Dreams and hopes
That is why the Venezuelan people have taken to the streets to defend their
dreams and hopes. President Chavez is at the forefront of that battle of honor,
courage and patriotic duty. He is determined not to give the power entrusted to
him by the people to the fascist coup followers. His combative and philosophical
words urge the Bolivarian forces into battle and are also a resounding
denunciation of what the forces of internal reaction and their foreign allies
want to do in Venezuela.
Today, we have in Venezuela many social and economic problems and difficulties,
and also a very intense political confrontation. This has always been the case
throughout history and throughout the world when one reality is dying and
another one is in the process of being born. Political confrontations like the
one happening in Venezuela today is the result of the struggle between the
supporters of revolution, change and transformation
and its opponents.
We in Venezuela face many political, social and economic difficulties.
Nevertheless, I'm sure we will overcome them, inspired by the example and ideas
of Simon Bolivar, our national hero, and under the leadership of President Hugo
Chavez. Sooner rather than later, we will succeed.
Thank you to all of you.