Upcoming Events

International | Anti-Capitalism

no events match your query!

New Events

International

no events posted in last week

Blog Feeds

Anti-Empire

Anti-Empire

offsite link Rheinmetall Plans to Make 700,000 Artill... Thu Apr 25, 2024 04:03 | Anti-Empire

offsite link America’s Shell Production Is Leaping,... Wed Apr 24, 2024 05:29 | Anti-Empire

offsite link Ukraine Keeps Snapping Up Chinese Drones Tue Apr 23, 2024 03:14 | Anti-Empire

offsite link Moscow Is Prosecuting the War on a Pathe... Mon Apr 22, 2024 12:26 | Anti-Empire

offsite link US Military Aid to Kiev Passes After Tru... Sun Apr 21, 2024 05:57 | Anti-Empire

Anti-Empire >>

Human Rights in Ireland
A Blog About Human Rights

offsite link UN human rights chief calls for priority action ahead of climate summit Sat Oct 30, 2021 17:18 | Human Rights

offsite link 5 Year Anniversary Of Kem Ley?s Death Sun Jul 11, 2021 12:34 | Human Rights

offsite link Poor Living Conditions for Migrants in Southern Italy Mon Jan 18, 2021 10:14 | Human Rights

offsite link Right to Water Mon Aug 03, 2020 19:13 | Human Rights

offsite link Human Rights Fri Mar 20, 2020 16:33 | Human Rights

Human Rights in Ireland >>

Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link Reports of the Demise of the Scottish Enlightenment May Have Been Premature Fri Apr 26, 2024 13:00 | C.J. Strachan
A month after the arrival of Scotland's Hate Crime Act and it appears reports of the demise of the Scottish Enlightenment may have been premature, no thanks to the SNP but due to the doughty spirit of the Scots.
The post Reports of the Demise of the Scottish Enlightenment May Have Been Premature appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Push for Global Censorship in Australia Fri Apr 26, 2024 11:17 | Rebekah Barnett
Should governments be able to censor online content for the entire world? That's what Australia is claiming the right to do. But do they really think China and Russia should be able to choose what the world sees?
The post The Push for Global Censorship in Australia appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Green Agenda Will Lead to Civil War Fri Apr 26, 2024 09:00 | Ben Pile
Outgoing Chief Executive of the Climate Change Committee Chris Stark has accused Net Zero sceptics of waging a "culture war". Not really, says Ben Pile, but the way politicians are pushing it we could end up in civil war.
The post The Green Agenda Will Lead to Civil War appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Climate Scientists Hail Boost to Global Plant Growth From Higher CO2 Fri Apr 26, 2024 07:00 | Chris Morrison
Climate scientists have hailed the huge boost to global plant growth and food production from the higher levels of carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere. "There is a social benefit from more CO2 in the air."
The post Climate Scientists Hail Boost to Global Plant Growth From Higher CO2 appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link News Round-Up Fri Apr 26, 2024 00:42 | Richard Eldred
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

Lockdown Skeptics >>

Voltaire Network
Voltaire, international edition

offsite link Israel's complex relations with Iran, by Thierry Meyssan Wed Apr 24, 2024 05:25 | en

offsite link Iran's hypersonic missiles generate deterrence through terror, says Scott Ritter... Mon Apr 22, 2024 10:37 | en

offsite link When the West confuses Law and Politics Sat Apr 20, 2024 09:09 | en

offsite link The cost of war, by Manlio Dinucci Wed Apr 17, 2024 04:12 | en

offsite link Angela Merkel and François Hollande's crime against peace, by Thierry Meyssan Tue Apr 16, 2024 06:58 | en

Voltaire Network >>

Search words: unwaged

Report Back from Venezuela – A 21st Century Revolution

category international | anti-capitalism | feature author Monday October 09, 2006 15:09author by Nina López and Maggie Ronayne, Global Women’s Strikeauthor email Ireland at allwomencount dot netauthor phone 087 7838688 Report this post to the editors

An edited version of this article will shortly be published in the Winter edition of Island magazine.

featured image

In January of this year we were part of an eight-country Global Women’s Strike delegation to Venezuela from co-ordinating groups in England, Guyana, India, Ireland, Peru, Spain, Uganda, and US – over 70 women and men. Working with the Bolivarian revolution since 2002, our global network took advantage of Caracas hosting the World Social Forum to work together in the heart of the revolution. We wanted as many of us as possible to witness how grassroots communities, beginning with women, are spearheading a revolution and winning back their oil wealth, through an extraordinary relationship with their elected President Hugo Chávez Frías.

For decades successive ‘democratic’ governments helped the US-backed mainly white elite collaborate with multi-national corporations to steal that wealth, while the Indigenous, Black and mixed race majority lived in poverty.

President Chávez has said ‘to end poverty we must give power to the poor.’ Social programmes (called missions), based on grassroots self-activity which bypasses corrupt state institutions, are funded by Venezuela’s oil revenue. This revenue is being made available to those with least throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. Even in the US, CITGO, Venezuela’s oil company there is providing heating oil to low-income communities, such as the victims of Katrina, at a 40% discount. On his visit to Europe in May, President Chávez offered the same to those of us who are poor here.


Our visit began with participation in the World Social Forum – an opportunity to meet grassroots organisers from around the world. We organised a number of workshops in English and Spanish, which gave visibility to the Strike’s campaigns and struggles: from Dalit and Tribal women in India defeating bonded labour and bringing rapist landlords to justice, to Peruvian domestic workers winning protective legislation, rural Ugandan women demanding water, and Afro-, Indo- and Indigenous Guyanese and US survivors of Katrina, both fighting for compensation in the toxic aftermath of flooding.

Our most popular workshop, ‘Grassroots self-activity in the Bolivarian Revolution’, featured our Venezuelan network as well as two speakers from Haiti who described the resistance to the US-UN occupation. As Bolivar Ramilus, Commissioner of Peasant Affairs under President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, has said: ‘The revolution in Haiti is like Venezuela, but without its leader.’

At a key Indigenous workshop where people from different nations proposed coming together across national borders, we met a Mexican woman who, though we didn’t know, has been co-ordinating Strike actions for years. We were thrilled! She spent the rest of the time with us.

We expected a more vibrant Forum, full of the movement that is sweeping Latin America and the Caribbean. In fact this movement was everywhere else in Venezuela. It filled the streets with two million people in red t-shirts on 4 February, anniversary of President Chávez’s first attempt to overturn Venezuela’s corrupt ‘democracy’. We also met activists from disability organisations and the Venezuela Gay Revolutionary Movement. Their t-shirts read: ‘Revolution and homosexuality, no contradiction’ with a Chavez quote in support of gay rights.

And we launched our latest book, Creating a Caring Economy: Nora Castañeda and the Women’s Development Bank of Venezuela, as a way of spreading the word about how women are organising and what they are achieving. The launch was deeply moving as crowds gathered at the Central University in Caracas to honour Nora, for 30 years a much loved and respected professor.

It was after the Forum that we learnt most. The Grassroots Network of Los Altos Mirandinos and the Users’ Network of the Women’s Development Bank (Banmujer) took us to meet their people in Los Teques, Tarmas and Estado Bolivar, mainly women who as society’s main carers are most concerned with the community’s health and welfare. They run the missions. That is, they run water, health, housing and education committees and soup kitchens, to get water supplies, food security, housing, free health care and education for people of all ages, and free school meals. They run the land committees organising for millions of rural and urban people who built homes on squatted land, to get land rights, including the re-distribution of idle land. They monitor local authorities to stop corruption. Many have formed co-operatives, with Banmujer’s help getting subsidised credit for income-generating projects that benefit the whole community.

We visited several neighbourhoods in Los Teques. The co-ordinator and the midwife who works with her told us how they run their food programme. They feed children and their adult carers, and co-ordinate with the other missions so that people’s health, educational and other needs are addressed together.

At El Nacional and San Pedro health clinics we met the doctors and the unpaid nurses and housewives who run the health committee to whom the doctors are accountable. These volunteers pay home visits, assess needs and inform the neighbourhood of their rights. Patients organise themselves in groups according to symptoms – diabetics, heart patients, asthmatics…– so they can share their experience of treatment, and work on prevention. Alternative treatment is integral to healthcare – herbal, homeopathy and most importantly “laughter therapy” which boosts the immune system’s ability to fight.

In La Pradera, thanks to the land committee, people whose housing is unsafe are being rehoused while others are forming co-operatives for tourism to enhance the area’s viability.

Everyone was welcoming, eager to share their achievements and to know what we thought about their Bolivarian process. They were confident and enthusiastic in their support for President Chávez, whose approval rating has risen to 77%.

Chávez has repeatedly said that women are the poorest and work hardest. On 3rd February we were there for his announcement that the poorest housewives, mostly single mothers, are to receive a monthly payment equivalent to 80% of the minimum wage, about $180 per month. Up to 500,000 women will eventually get this wage. This measure is inspired by Article 88 of the Venezuelan Constitution, which recognises the economic and social contribution of women’s work in the home. While this Article remains to be implemented, President Chávez put the recognition Article 88 gives to unwaged work, together with an anti-poverty law that was going through parliament, to get some money to women. This recognition of caring work is a great victory for women everywhere.

While we were there, our hostesses in Los Altos Mirandinos wrote an extraordinary letter to Chávez celebrating this new wage and stating that ‘revolutionary community work must also be recognised as productive work that should be remunerated. It is not right that we the women who, as our President has said, are the foundation of the revolution, have to depend on the charity of our partners and relatives in order to carry out our revolutionary labour.’ * They suggested how to involve the grassroots in the distribution of this mothers’ money in order to avoid corruption. Chávez, who has been outspoken against corruption, was happy to incorporate them in the Neighbourhood Mothers Mission formed for this distribution.

We also met with some of the oil workers who in 2003 together with the community defeated the US-backed sabotage of their industry. They are aware of the enormous job ahead of them: to root out the corruption and pollution which are the stock in trade of oil multinationals in particular.

Venezuelan state TV is eager to publicise what movements everywhere are doing. It broadcast Refusing to Kill, the powerful documentary made by Payday men’s network (who organise men’s participation in the Strike) about the growing movement of conscientious objectors who refuse to serve in the US, Israeli, Turkish and other armies.

The Strike in Ireland has been working with our colleagues in London to ‘globalise Article 88’. In 2005, we were asked by the parliamentary committee on the Irish Constitution to submit information on Article 88. Using it as a model, we proposed a rewording of Article 41.2 of our Constitution. Instead of removing the recognition it gives to women’s work in the home (as some feminist groups suggested), we proposed to change its sexist language so that our unwaged caring work at home and on the land, and men’s when they do it, would be valued and paid for. And we proposed pay equity as a right for those of us who do the double day so women are no longer forced into the lowest paid jobs.

While the committee adopted ‘gender neutral’ language (thus hiding women’s enormous contribution), the reference to caring and the recognition it stands for remains in their revised Article 41.2. Undoubtedly the Venezuelan example helped achieve this.

The Bolivarian revolution helps us to look again at our history, at the need to keep to our principles and to keep our leaders accountable. As we have been so painfully and movingly reminded by Ken Loach’s film The Wind That Shakes the Barley, in Ireland (like in many other countries) we went through an enormous upheaval to make a revolution which was defeated. The internationalism of the Bolivarian revolution, its socialism for the 21st century which appeals to people everywhere who are fighting to ‘create a caring economy, an economy at the service of human beings’, and its clarity in the face of US genocidal fundamentalism are a beacon of hope for all of us.

The word revolution scares many people. They feel it must inevitably mean guns and bloodshed, partly because sections of the Left have sometimes glorified armed struggle. Many on the Left were sceptical when we began working with Venezuela. How could it be a revolution, they said – it was being fought through elections, was spearheaded not by industrial workers but by the unwaged, especially women and bypassing the political parties. While much of the Left has now ‘adopted’ Venezuela, some promote a ‘Chavismo without Chávez’, jealous of Chávez’s extraordinary popularity. It takes a mass movement over decades to make a leader like Chávez, and most Venezuelans are determined to hold on to him. ‘Ten million for Chávez’ is the slogan we heard over and over from people referring to votes in the upcoming presidential election in December. They are determined to win, especially the women who have gained so much through this revolution.

*********

Juanita Romero and Gaston Murat, points of reference for the Grassroots Network of Los Altos Mirandinos, will be in England, Scotland and Ireland at the beginning of October to launch the Strike’s latest film, Journey with the Revolution.

For more information on Galway and Dublin tour events happening next week on 10th and 11th October see the indymedia events calendar.

* To read the full statement by the grassroots network of Los Altos Mirandinos to President Chavez, see http://www.globalwomenstrike.net

Related Link: http://www.globalwomenstrike.net

to pass away the time of day in Venezuela...
to pass away the time of day in Venezuela...

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 13:52author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Angélica Alvarez, coordinator of the Women’s Development Bank of Venezuela (Banmujer) in the state of Bolívar, leads the Strike contingent on a march.

pic1indy.jpg

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 13:54author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Two million people from all over the country marched in Caracas on 4 Feb, to commemorate Chávez’s first attempt in 1992 to take power on behalf of Venezuela’s poor majority. He was imprisoned for two years. In his two-minute TV address calling on his men to lay down their arms,
he said the words ‘Por ahora’, for now, which became a much quoted organising tool. Six years later he was elected president by a landslide.

The Los Teques Urban Land Committee, co-ordinators of the Strike in Venezuela (point of reference Juanita Romero pictured centre), made a banner in support of Haiti: ‘Out boot of the North, victory to the people of Haiti.’

pic2indy.jpg

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 14:03author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Heisler Vaamonde (right), founder of the Gay Revolutionary Movement of Venezuela, with a friend. T-shirts say: 'Between homosexuality and revolution there is no contradiction' with a quote from President Chávez in support of gay rights.

pic3indya.jpg

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 14:05author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Nora Castañeda, president of the Women’s Development Bank of Venezuela, at the launch of her book ‘Creating a Caring Economy’ – speeches and interviews during the speaking tour of the US organised by the Strike. With Selma James (introduction), Nina López (editor), Cristel Amiss and Anna T (graphic design). Universidad Central de Venezuela, Caracas, 28 January 2006

pic4indy.jpg

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 14:10author address author phone Report this post to the editors

San Pedro Health Committee explains how they keep doctors accountable to the community.

pic5indya.jpg

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 14:13author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Venezuelan oil workers Luis Félix and Jesús Montilla meet Sam Weinstein of the Utility Workers Union of America and Payday.

pic6indya.jpg

author by Global Women’s Strikepublication date Mon Oct 09, 2006 14:16author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Trade unionist Gastón Murat of the Bolivarian Workers' Power.

pic7indy.jpg

author by Buckbowskipublication date Tue Oct 10, 2006 11:08author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This is a great to report. Nice to see the true Chavez and not the version that the american propaganda presents.

author by Paddy Savage - Consistent Life Ethic(inc animals)publication date Wed Oct 11, 2006 20:04author email achorusline19 at hotmail dot comauthor address Valium Lane,Benzo Central, apartment 5mgauthor phone Report this post to the editors

I am so happy,and i bet the evil republicans are really pissed off,which makes me happy also,he is a remarkable man,and only found out recently about his stance on homosexuality and queerness,thats a great quote on the gay guys wearing the t-shirt!!long live Chavez,hurry up and die Bush and Thatcher!!

Love and light,# HOMO PADDY!!XX

Number of comments per page
  
 
© 2001-2024 Independent Media Centre Ireland. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Independent Media Centre Ireland. Disclaimer | Privacy