Showing posts with label Venezuela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venezuela. Show all posts

June 14, 2019

Anti-imperialist youth of the world says, “imperialists, hands off Venezuela!”

Special to RY

To mark the anniversary of Cuban-Argentinian revolutionary Ernesto Che Guevara, the anti-imperialist youth of the world launches a solidarity campaign with the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. Is there any better way to celebrate Che than by showing that young people are determined to fulfill their objective of seeing a free and sovereign Latin America?

The decision to initiate this campaign on June 14 was made by the General Council of the World Federation of Democratic Youth, which met last April in Caracas during a solidarity mission with Bolivarian Venezuela. Around thirty organizations from all over the world have unanimously endorsed this call for mobilization, a timely one considering the growing aggressiveness of Western imperialism against Venezuela and Latin America.

May 7, 2019

The people of Venezuela reiterated, "Guaido is not our President"

Brief note by Adrien Welsh 

Let's salute the courage, determination and reactivity of the Venezuelan people, its youth, its institutions and organizations that represent them for their mobilisation in the face of the new destabilizing action of criminal, usurper and fascist Juan Guaidó and convicted Leopoldo López.

Thanks to people’s mobilization, Venezuelans have prevented this manoeuvre from ending in a coup perpetrated by the proxies of imperialism in Venezuela who have eyes only for the oil and natural resources of this country and wish for larger profits for western shareholders.

December 4, 2015

The Fate and Legacy of Bolivarianism in Venezuela’s Dec 6th Election

Kurt Biray


Will the Dec. 6 Parliamentary Election in Venezuela determine the fate of Chavismo “21st century socialism”?

President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela faces probably the biggest challenge of his incumbency so far. Venezuelans will head to the polls on December 6 for the parliamentary election in which the Venezuelan opposition, the Democratic Unity Roundtable (Mesa de la Unidad Democrática, MUD), could possibly gain control of the National Assembly. Since former President Hugo Chavez' death in 2013, the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela, PSUV) under the leadership of Nicolás Maduro has struggled to maintain the political support and popularity that his predecessor enjoyed for 15 years.

April 10, 2015

Venezuelan Ambassador visits Six Nations

Edward Lovo

I witnessed an historic exchange between the peoples of Six Nations and the Venezuelan ambassador to Canada Wilmer Barrientos. We were warmly welcomed into the longhouse, which few outsiders have set foot in. There was some controversy about this as someone had earlier made the quip who will we invite next—the Israeli ambassador? Thankfully, we had enough of their trust. To keep their trust it was enough to exclude media, the RCMP, OPP, and CSIS, and we had the vote of confidence of a trusted community member

As one of the Six Nations spokespersons explained a profound pain of oppression breeds mistrust of outsiders. The speaker then acknowledged that the ambassador paid a visit to the Six Nations before approaching Ottawa, an unprecedented first in recognition of their land. The speaker shared some history of Six Nations with the ambassador, explaining to him the Two Row Wampum which few Canadians are familiar with.


March 24, 2015

Young Communists of Venezuela condemn US aggression

Against the imperialist aggression - Unity, solidarity and struggle

Statement of the Communist Youth of Venezuela (JCV) – National Executive Committee of the Central Council

The Communist Youth of Venezuela (JCV) expresses its strongest condemnation to the executive order signed by the president Barack Obama, last March 9th, when he declared a “National Emergency” after describing Venezuela as an “unusual and extraordinary threat to the National Security and Foreign Policy of the United States”.

The interventionist policy of the US and European imperialist poles against Venezuela has intensified during the last months: unilateral sanctions against the state of Venezuela and recurrent statements by senior US officials and European Parliament have highlighted the development of an international conspiracy against the Bolivarian Process.

October 31, 2014

Attacks on young communists in France, Serbia and Venezuela are the latest violent examples of growing fascist threat

Communist Youth of Venezuela respond to attack
targeting their office and activists
By Drew Garvie
General Secretary, YCL-LJC of Canada

In late October, the World Federation of Democratic Youth, a global anti-imperialist federation of youth organizations founded after the fascist defeat in Europe in 1945, issued two statements condemning fascist violence in both Venezuela and Yugoslavia. These attacks had occurred in the preceding weeks.

In the early morning hours of October 21st in Caracas, members of the Communist Youth of Venezuela (JCV) were finishing their work at their central offices. Several firebombs were launched at the building and a fire was started in their meeting room. Fortunately no comrades were injured in the attack and the fire was extinguished.

The JCV Executive Committee released a statement contextualizing the attack against them: "This deed occurs within the framework of violence imposed by fascism since February of this year carried out by mercenaries and paramilitaries serving the extreme, pro-imperialist right." This references an upsurge in right-wing protests that took place from February through June, which led to the deaths of 43 people. Most recently, Robert Serra, the youngest parliamentarian elected in Venezuelan history, and a member of Venezuela’s Socialist Party (PSUV), was murdered with Colombian paramilitaries being implicated.

April 7, 2014

We can not have another World War.

Contribution to the Lisbon meeting of the World Federation of Democratic Youth's Commission of Europe and North America by the Young Communist League of Canada.

Dear comrades,

We would like to thank the World Federation of Democratic Youth and our hosts, the Juventude Comunista Portuguesa, for organizing this important meeting. We meet on the eve of the JCP's 10th Congress to which we send warm fraternal greetings. We are confident our work today will strengthen the efforts of the WFDY in the European and North American region.

This year, 2014, marks the 100th anniversary of the beginning of a social nightmare -- the First World War.

The Canadian government is launching a campaign to re-write history. To use this anniversary to celebrate militarism.

This is a horrible lie. The First World War saw close to 40 million civilian and military casualties.

Those who survived said: No! Never again!

The Great October Socialist Revolution in Russia helped end that war. The Soviet Union began to build a socialist society, based on peaceful cooperation.

Such history may seem dusty and old to some in our generation. But 100 years later it still frames our struggle, as the progressive youth grow more determined in our fight for the future, and we in WFDY advance the slogan of revolutionary social transformation.

April 1, 2014

A letter to the editor of the Ottawa Citizen

By Nicolas Lopez,
Hugo Chavez People's Defence Fund

A Venezuelan citizen living in Canada corrects lies in Ottawa Citizen published on March 25, 2014: Venezuela and the Canadian Left

As a Venezuelan who recently returned from visiting family and friends in Venezuela, I’m taken aback by the extent to which this article doesn’t reflect the reality in Venezuela. In most of the country, people are going about their business with absolute normalcy. In almost all of Caracas you don’t see protests. This is with the exception of the affluent neighbourhoods in the east of the City where violent protestors only make things difficult for people living in those areas.

Hence, I was bewildered as to why I couldn’t take Air Canada to come back home from Caracas, but I could if I were travelling back from Cairo or Kiev.

Ex-CIA agent reveals how Venezuelan “students” get putschist training

First published in Spanish on Aporrea.org, translated into English by Sabina C. Becker

Raúl Capote is a Cuban. But not just any Cuban. In his youth, he was caught up by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). They offered him an infinite amount of money to conspire in Cuba. But then something unexpected for the US happened. Capote, in reality, was working for Cuban national security. From then on, he served as a double agent. Learn his story, by way of an exclusive interview with Chávez Vive, which he gave in Havana:

Q. What was the process by which you were caught up?

It started with a process of many years, several years of preparation and capture. I was leader of a Cuban student movement which, at that time, gave rise to an organization, the Saiz Brothers Cultural Association, a group of young creators, painters, writers, artists. I worked in a city in southern-central Cuba, Cienfuegos, which had characteristics of great interest to the enemy, because it was a city in which an important industrial pole was being built at the time. They were building an electrical centre, the only one in Cuba, and there were a lot of young people working on it. For that reason, it was also a city that had a lot of young engineers graduated in the Soviet Union. We’re talking of the last years of the 1980s, when there was that process called Perestroika. And many Cuban engineers, who arrived in Cuba at that time, graduated from there, were considered people who had arrived with that idea of Perestroika. For that reason, it was an interesting territory, where there were a lot of young people. And the fact that I was a youth leader of a cultural organization, which dealt with an important sector of the engineers who were interested in the arts, became of interest to the North Americans, and they began to frequent the meetings we attended. They never identified themselves as enemies, or as officials of the CIA.

March 20, 2014

Violent protests and police restraint characterizes street battles in Venezuela writes first-hand observer

By Antoine SteMarie, from Caracas
Special to Rebel Youth


This is the second article we have run from Antoine SteMarie, who is currently on the ground in Venezuela. Antoine wanted to also share this article by Venezuela Analysis about the violence of the anti-government protesters. Antoine believes the corporate media is spreading considerable mis-information about Venezuela today, especially when it says the anti-government protests peaceful and being violently repressed by the state. Last month the Harper Conservatives, Liberals, Bloc and Green Members of Parliament all supported a motion of support to the "peaceful protesters" in Venezuela, condemning the government. You can read Antoine's first article here, where he talks about the situation in Venezuela outside of the capital region.  

Venezuela -- the only country in the world where the rich are barricading their own communities and obstructing traffic!

Venezuelanalysis.com has said that protests are occurring in no more than just 18 municipalities of the country, out of well over three hundred municipalities. From my experience in Caracas and Valencia it is also true that they are almost only happening in rich and middle-class neighborhoods -- but certainly not in the poorer areas.

February 26, 2014

A first-hand account from Venezuela

A pro-government counter-demo. Venezuela has been
hit by many anti-Chavez actions recently
By Antoine St. Marie
Special to Rebel Youth

I am currently in a remote area of Venezuela and have been for the last week and a half. It is somewhat difficult to imagine all these events going on outside of the towns of San Simon and Pregonero, where I am based. Here people say these are the biggest protests since the 2002 CIA-backed coup against the government of then leader Hugo Chavez.

Originally the centers of the protests were San Cristobal (Tachira state) and Merida (Merida state). I was in San Cristobal when they started and I rather unexpectedly happened to stumble (almost literally) across what may have been the very first of these protests.  A group of opposition members were throwing rocks at the house of the state Governor, who is with the PSUV (or Socialist Party founded by Chavez). There was a small security force inside the walls of the house which was not responding to the attack; so unprovoked violence played a part right from the beginning.

February 24, 2014

Venezuela: Who’s the bully?

By Zach Morgenstern
Originally published by UofT's "the newspaper" Feb 23rd, 2014

From solidarity rally in Toronto - Feb 22nd 2014
Photo from Hugo Chavez Peoples' Defense Front
Imagine you went to school with a bully, someone who intimidates and physically assaults other students to get their way. Imagine one of the bully’s targets is an honors student with no blotches on his/her permanent record. Finally, imagine you are approached by the bully. The bully tells you the honors student has been beating up other kids, and that you should do whatever it takes to stop the violence.

Now chances are if you are most people, you would not buy the bully’s attempt to the play the angel and slander his/her very likeable, and trustworthy enemy.

Unfortunately, it seems we do not have this common sense when it comes to our perception of international politics. In 2002, Venezuela’s opposition launched a coup against then President Hugo Chávez. Their short-lived government named businessman Pedro Carmona president, and then proceeded to shut-down the national assembly and supreme court. The coup regime abolished the country’s constitution, which had been approved by popular referendum in 1999.

February 16, 2014

World Federation of Democratic Youth rejects violence of fascist in Venezuela

February 16th saw a mass rally for peace in Caracas
Statement of the World Federation of Democratic Youth in solidarity with Venezuela.  
February 14, 2014


In recent hours, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has come under attack from the fascist right-wing, as a the plan of imperialism against the revolutionary process; supported by the most reactionary sectors -inside and outside- of Venezuela, with a format similar to the coup d’état driven in 2002 against the President Hugo Chavez.

February 14, 2014

Cuba condemns coup attempts in Venezuela

The Government of the Republic of Cuba strongly condemns the ongoing attempts to perpetrate a coup d’etat against the constitutional government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela as well as the violent incidents that caused several deaths and tens of wounded; attacks on public institutions; the burning of vehicles and destruction which were organized by fascists groups, as was denounced to the world by President Nicolás Maduro Moros.

The Cuban Government expresses its full support to the Bolivarian and Chavista Revolution  and calls for the broadest international solidarity, convinced that the Venezuelan people will defend its irreversible achievements, the legacy of Hugo Chávez Frías and the government that it freely and sovereignly elected, headed by President Maduro.

It is worthwhile remembering that the incidents occurred yesterday, while the Venezuelan youth and the entire nation were celebrating the bicentennial of the heroic battle of “La Victoria”, were similar to those occurred on April 11, 2002, which were then magnified by some accomplice governments, oligarchic circles and transnationals as part of the coup that was later on defeated by the people’s mobilization around the triumphant return of Chávez.

Likewise, Cuba reiterates its unconditional support to the indefatigable and evident efforts made by President Maduro and the political and military leadership of the Bolivarian Revolution to preserve peace, incorporate all sectors of the country and promote the economic and social development of that fraternal nation.

Havana, February 13, 2014.

November 19, 2013

Tour by Activist from Venezuela discusses Socialist Communes


(Courtesy Venezuela Analysis) 

By Peter Miller,
Rebel Youth Magazine

Venezuela is a country that represents a different vision for our future. Its Bolivarian revolutionary process is the opposite of capitalist austerity and neoliberalism that many working class people around the world are facing today.

In November, Katrina Kozarek came to Ontario and Quebec for a speaking tour about Venezuela today.

Kozarek is active in the Ataroa Socialist Commune and a long-term activist in the Nacional Association of Community, Free and Alternative Media (ANMCLA). She grew up in Apollo, Pennsylvania, but moved to Venezuela in 2003.

October 1, 2013

Venezuelan communist youth forge new, post-Chavez strategy

Tamara Pearson,
Venezuela Analysis.com


Merida, 1st October 2013 – The recent national congress of the Communist Youth of Venezuela (JCV) declared the need for more “revolutionary measures” to combat the “economic sabotage” that Venezuela is facing.

The congress, held last week from 19 to 22 September in Caracas coincided with the 66th anniversary of the JCV. Its slogan was “With rebelliousness and organisation we deepen the revolution” and 200 delegates attended. Each delegate represented one youth collective.

April 16, 2013

On the ground account account of destabilization in Venezuela


Padraic O'Brien is a student activist at the University of Guelph, currently in Venezuela.

Spread widely! Apparently the message in mainstream media isn't quite the same as what I'm finding on the ground here...

The recent chain of events in Venezuela since the electoral results came out last Sunday contain very troubling aspects which need to be brought to the light. I am presently in Guacas de Rivera, in the state of Apure, where elections took place normally and no act of violence was committed. But people here are worried about the way things are going.

The scenario we are seeing develop was foreseen by many people who had been anticipating a destabilization attempt against the government by the opposition in order to pave the way for a coup. This prediction was reinforced by the fact that opposition candidate Henrique Capriles Radonski never said he would accept the vote -- although his organization officially recognizes the impartiality and competence of the national electoral council, whose work has been deemed impeccable in the past by international observers.

Here is what happened so far.

First, despite the polarization of the debate and accusations both parties have been throwing at one another, the elections went smoothly across the country.  Chavista supporters in the area waited anxiously the results until around midnight, results which made Maduro winner with the slimmest margin ever registered by the revolutionary movement, less than 2%.

Immediately after Maduro's speech, his opponent Capriles stated the results were false and demanded a recount, while saying there were no doubts he had won the elections. Maduro later replied that a recount and audit were reasonable, as allowed for under electoral procedures, but saw in Capriles' actions nothing but maneuvers aimed at engendering a climate of instability in the country. The events from last night reinforce this accusation.

During the day, Capriles maintained his accusations against the revolutionary side, calling his supporters to take the streets with pots and pans to put pressure on the government. Meanwhile, the director of the national electoral council announced the final results and certified their validity, officially awarding victory to Maduro.

Later in the day, many governments congratulated him for his victory, such as those of Argentina, Chile,Bolivia, Colombia and Mexico, while other such as the United States and Spain took position in favour of a recount and did not recognize Maduro's victory. The Inter-American Organization meanwhile gave its approval to the electoral process and declared its results valid.

During the evening, Capriles supporters took the streets in many cities across the country. In Guacas de Rivera, Chavista supporters celebrated victory with loud music and dancing, and decided not to parade in the streets to avoid fighting. There was a pots and pans march in the neighbouring town of El Cantón but without any violence. There is the suspicion, however, that a 2 hour power outage was caused by sabotage.

Around 9pm, news starting coming out from the rest of the country about violence. Here is what we know so far.

In the largest cities of the country, such as Caracas, San Cristóbal, Mérida, Maracaibo, Barquisimeto, Maracay, Baruta, Barcelona, Maturín, Barinas and San Fernando de Apure, Capriles supporters rioted and attacked state institutions associated to Chávez, Socialist Party offices and even residencies of party officials and of the electoral council's director.

At least seven people, including four members of the PSUV, were murdered. In Maturín, in the state of Monagas, the rioters took over the electoral council's office, but were then taken out by the JCV -- the Communist Youth of Venezuela.

The most troubling aspects however were the attacks against public hospitals, in the cities of Maracaibo and Valencia. In Maracaibo, they were triggered after opposition figure Nelson Bocaranga -- notorious for spreading false rumours in the past about Chávez's health status -- tweeted that voting booths were being stored in those public hospitals under the care of Cuban doctors.

Capriles' supporters went out to damage 11 hospitals, but of course found no evidence of this pure lie. Other regime opponents also spread photos from 2008 and 2010 elections to base their claims about electoral mischief. And public kindergartens and subsidized food stores were also attacked. Yes, you read that right...

Violent acts were also committed in smaller towns, which is cause for worry. For example, in the small, remote Andean town of Pregonero, in the state of Táchira, and in the town of Achaguas, in the state of Apure, rioters tried to burn down community radio stations. These towns are located in traditionally strong Chavista territory, and close to the Colombian border, a strategic area. In fact, the border state of Táchira, an opposition stronghold,seems to have been particularly hit hard by violence, not only in its capital San Cristóbal, but also in many smaller towns. Táchira happens to be the doorway to Colombia...

It seems like some violence was still going on during the day. I was told that in Barinas, opponents are still electrified in the streets, and police are using tear gas. Closer to here, in the district capital Guasdualito, both groups faced off in the streets. The smaller opposition group was only able to stay for an hour, and Chavista groups will remain vigilant tonight to protect important buildings. National Guards were present to avoid fighting, but the people were generally disciplined.

Word goes around to not respond to any sort of provocation. Many rumours are flying around, like one that says that Capriles, Bocaranga and other opposition figures have sent their families outside the country. In his first public appearance since the violence, Capriles blamed responsibility over violence to Maduro, and called for other marches tonight. But he withdrew his call to march to the central electoral office in Caracas tomorrow.

The situation in the country remains critical. It is important to spread around this information. The scenario is eerily similar to that of the 2002 coup attempt, and not entirely dissimilar from what happened more recently in Libya and Syria. Let's all remain vigilant, and demonstrate our support of Venezuelan sovereignty and democracy at the nearest Venezuelan embassies and consulates!

March 27, 2013

Comandante President Hugo Chavez


Chevy Philips, 
Special to Rebel Youth

Now that most of the post-mortem hatchet-jobs have been expelled from the bowels of the western corporate media, I thought would present a brief tribute to one of the great heroes of the century so far, Comandante President Hugo Chavez.

Actually I just had to write something, or I'd burst. The past few days have seen the most outrageous torrent of abuse directed at Chavez and his legacy, courtesy of the degenerate ultra-right criminals that own and operate the press in the imperialist countries...

Hated from the start by the largely fascist-orientated Venezuelan bourgeoisie, Chavez was in their eyes, a dirty mixed-race mongrel, and not just a socialist (which is clearly bad enough all on its own).

That some jumped up, "part-Black" army officer should have the temerity to challenge their plutocratic rule must have come as a gut-wrenching shock; as much as it came as a great inspiration to those of us looking to a progressive future for a continent plagued for so long by CIA-led coups and death squads carrying US-bought guns, murdering and torturing their way through any man, woman or child suspected of being left of centre.

Those days are gone for good now, and Comandante Chavez leaves behind him a continent more united in a progressive and anti-imperialist direction than ever before. There are still those who cling to the blood-soaked past, of course, most notably the various governments of Columbia over the decades, against whom many brave men and women have fought and died in the mud and hardship of the jungles for almost fifty years - their attempts to take the peaceful path and form an electoral party in the 1980s met by a hail of bullets from those governments and their paramilitaries in black masks.

But the inevitable tide of history cannot be halted or turned back, and the masses of Venezuela, behind the PSUV with Chavez at their head, have proven this. The Communist Party of Venezuela recognized early on the genuinely popular and progressive nature of the movement led by Chavez, and so proudly stood with him against the interminable domestic and foreign imperialist attempts to sabotage, slander and even overthrow his Presidency. The short-lived, US-backed coup of 2002 demonstrates how utterly bankrupt, spineless, and without support these cowards and mercenaries were then and continue to be now.

The record of Comandante President Chavez, the PSUV and its allies speaks for itself (info taken from Ted Snider's article, rabble.ca):

- Chavez has cut unemployment amongst Venezuelans by more than half. In 1999, the year Chavez took office, unemployment was 18 per cent. By 2011 it had dropped to 8.2 per cent and by last year to about 6 per cent.

- Poverty has dropped from 42.8 per cent when Chavez took office to 26.7 per cent. -- a vast improvement of 37 per cent. However, according to economist Mark Weisbrot, Chavez did not really have control of the oil industry or the economy until 2003.

- When measured from that date, when Chavez's policies began to have an effect on the economy, the improvement in poverty increases to 49.7 per cent. When extreme poverty is considered, the results are even more impressive. In 1999, 16.6 per cent of Venezuelans lived in extreme poverty; by 2011 that number had dropped to 7 per cent: an improvement of 57.8 per cent. And again, if you only look at the period that Chavez could realistically affect, the improvement was an incredible 70 per cent.

- Venezuela's economy continued to grow by 5.5 per cent. Though in the 20 years prior to Chavez's presidency, Venezuela had the worst performing economy in South America. Since 2003, when Chavez's policies began to have an effect, Venezuela's economy has grown by more than 94 per cent.

- Chavez won four consecutive elections and submitted many important decisions to national referendums. In every case, Chavez honoured the will of the people: even the one time that he lost, by the slimmest of margins, in the December 2007 referendum.

- Chavez has consistently won a majority of the vote. In 2006, he was re-elected by 63 per cent of the people. Thirteen years into his presidency, he still attracted over 54 per cent of the vote. Jimmy Carter said in 2012 that "of the ninety-two elections that we've monitored, I would say that the election process in Venezuela is the best in the world."


This is the kind of mandate that governments in the West can only dream of, yet they regularly accused Chavez of being undemocratic! To provide one of many possible examples, the ultra-right corporate gangster that currently claims the title of Prime Minister of Canada was elected with the support of just 24% of the overall electorate (thanks, in large part, to the extraordinarily anti-democratic nature of the first-past-the-post constituency system inherited from Britain); and yet he regularly lectures other countries and their leaders about democracy!

In reply to all those who slander Chavez and what he continues to represent, we say...

Long Live Comandante President Chavez, the PSUV, and the Communist Party of Venezuela!

March 7, 2013

Harper mocks Chavez


Ted Snider, from Rabble.ca

Upon hearing the news of the death of Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez, Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper had this to say:

Canada looks forward to working with his successor and other leaders in the region to build a hemisphere that is more prosperous, secure and democratic ... At this key juncture, I hope the people of Venezuela can now build for themselves a better, brighter future based on the principles of freedom, democracy, the rule of law and respect for human rights.

Prosperous? Democratic? Harper should take a better look not only at Chavez, but at himself, before he insensitively responds to the death of a man whom a majority of Venezuelans had just re-elected and lectures them on economics and democracy.

Prime Minister Harper prides himself on his economic prowess. But under his government, unemployment has increased from 6.8 per cent when he took office to the 7 per cent level it is at today. Harper has had seven years to improve unemployment, but his policies have done nothing. Chavez has cut unemployment amongst Venezuelans by more than half. In 1999, the year Chavez took office, unemployment was 18 per cent. By 2011 it had dropped to 8.2 per cent and by last year to about 6 per cent.

When it comes to cutting poverty, Harper has done somewhat better. But not as good as Chavez. When Harper took office in 2006, poverty levels stood at 15.9 per cent of Canadians. In 2012, it had improved to 9.4 per cent: an improvement of 40 per cent. However, in the last five years, since 2008, when the number had already improved to 10.8 per cent, Harper's policies have done little to improve poverty in Canada.

In Venezuela, poverty has dropped from 42.8 per cent when Chavez took office to 26.7 per cent -- a vast improvement of 37 per cent. However, according to economist Mark Weisbrot, Chavez did not really have control of the oil industry or the economy until 2003.

When measured from that date, when Chavez's policies began to have an effect on the economy, the improvement in poverty increases to 49.7 per cent. When extreme poverty is considered, the results are even more impressive. In 1999, 16.6 per cent of Venezuelans lived in extreme poverty; by 2011 that number had dropped to 7 per cent: an improvement of 57.8 per cent. And again, if you only look at the period that Chavez could realistically affect, the improvement was an incredible 70 per cent.

In terms of inequity in the economy, the score card for Harper is no better. The gap between the rich and the poor is widening in Canada. Under Harper, Canada's rich-poor gap is one of the fastest growing in the world, according to the Conference Board of Canada. The Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development says the gap between the top 10 per cent and the bottom 10 per cent is currently 10:1. In the early 1990s, it was only 8:1. The Gini index measures how much distribution of income deviates from being equal. Zero means everyone has the same income; one means one person has it all. So the lower the number, the better. Under Harper's administration, Canada's Gini index has been virtually unchanged. In Venezuela, under the Chavez administration, the Gini index has improved by about 17 per cent.

While Canada's economic growth stalled in 2012, Venezuela's continued to grow by 5.5 per cent. Though in the 20 years prior to Chavez's presidency, Venezuela had the worst performing economy in South America, since 2003, when Chavez's policies began to have an effect, Venezuela's economy has grown by more than 94 per cent.

As Harper has no right to criticize Chavez on economics, so he has no right to lecture Venezuelans on democracy. Aside from the insensitivity of expressing joy that Venezuelans can "build for themselves a better, brighter future" now that the man they four times overwhelmingly elected to majority governments has died, Harper's categorization of Chavez's government as not based on the principles of democracy requires as much unwillingness to look at reality as his economic criticism of Chavez.

While Harper was busy twice proroguing government, Chavez was holding fourteen national elections and referendums, taking his policies to the people for approval an average of once a year. Harper, however, literally suspended parliament in order to avoid a nonconfidence vote and hold on to power. And he lectures Chavez on democracy. What's worse is that Harper locked the doors on parliament to avoid discussion of diplomat Richard Colvin's strong evidence that Harper's government was handing Afghan detainees over to Afghan prisons known to torture. Good thing Harper also threw the bit about "rule of law" and "respect for human rights" into his eulogy for Chavez.

Harper's remarks mirror much of the western media, who have tarred Chavez's democratic credentials by consistently attaching the adjective dictator to his name with no evidence. But Chavez was no undemocratic dictator. Chavez won four consecutive elections and submitted many important decisions to national referendums. In every case, Chavez honoured the will of the people: even the one time that he lost, by the slimmest of margins, in the December 2007 referendum.

Though Harper says that Chavez's death ushers in the hope that Venezuela can now build a future based on the principles of democracy, Jimmy Carter said in 2012 that "of the ninety-two elections that we've monitored, I would say that the election process in Venezuela is the best in the world."

Venezuela has very high ratings of satisfaction with its democracy and of support for its government. Chavez's government has been marked by its distribution of power to local organizations. It is participatory and grassroots: entirely different from the U.S. backed dictatorships initiated in Venezuela by Woodrow Wilson and finally ended by Hugo Chavez.

Chavez has consistently won a majority of the vote. In 2006, he was re-elected by 63 per cent of the people. Thirteen years into his presidency, he still attracted over 54 per cent of the vote: a popular majority never attained by Harper.

The people elected him and reelected him because of his participatory style of democracy and because of the economic improvements and his care for the poor. He increased Venezuelans' access to education -- college enrollment doubled since 2004, with many students qualifying for free tuition -- and he increased access to health care for millions. These too are part of the better, brighter future that Chavez was delivering and Harper is dismissing.

So before Harper insensitively and arrogantly dyslogizes Chavez, he should take a closer look at Chavez, and at himself.

Ted Snider has his masters in philosophy and teaches high school English and politics in Toronto

WFDY: "We will live and overcome!"


President Hugo Chavez speaks at the anti-imperialist court, 16th WFYS 
CONDOLENCE MESSAGE OF THE WORLD FEDERATION OF DEMOCRATIC YOUTH TO THE FAMILY, YOUTH AND PEOPLE OF VENEZUELA FOR THE DEATH OF THE COMMANDANT AND PRESIDENT HUGO CHÁVEZ FRÍAS.

Relatives of the President Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías. Venezuelan youth. People of Venezuela.With a deep sorrow we have received the new of the death of our comrade Mr. President Hugo Chávez Frías, one of the most loved leaders of America who consecrated his life in benefit of his nation and his people.

We remember the leader in the deepest sad moment with the youth of the world in the XVI World Festival of Youth and Students celebrated in the Bolivarian land in 2005, in the anti-imperialist court, heading the fight and the claim of the people against the imperialist and capitalist system attacks.

We remember him in his eternal fight for the independence and sovereignty of his people, for the unity of all Latin America and Caribbean. In this last years, even in the middle of the unexpected illness he continued in the building of his Revolution for destitute and forgotten as a sacred duty continuing the ideas of Bolivar, Hidalgo, José Martí, Che Guevara and all those heroes who had magnified the history of this large and great Latin-American homeland.

With his invaluable example, being a simple soldier who made his duty without asking privileges. Faced all the onslaught of betrayal, the enemies’ danger that also respected him, and received the love of all, especially youth. He was firm in every fight, always in defence of the neediest. His vibrant word, his infinite love to Venezuela, his sings and happiness, his passion for the people and his impassioned verses; will be the eloquent and exciting legacy of the poet when said: “The ones who die for life, shouldn't be called dead.”

In the name of all the member and friend organizations of the World Federation of Democratic Youth, we express the most honest condolences to all his relatives, to the Venezuelan youth and to all the brave people, who since knew the death offer him the most deserved tribute.Ever onward to victory!

We will live and overcome!

CC/HQ
Budapest, Hungary
March 5th, 2013

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