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Dance with democracy Renewed
US attempts to remove President Hugo Chavez from office Chavez
— who was elected with overwhelming majorities in 1 998 and 200() —
steered through constitutional reforms in 1 999. The rewritten
Cot1stitution opposes oil and water privatization. It also prioritizes
food autonomy: an important development in a country where 65 per cent
of basic foods are imported. This effectively reverses World Bank and
IMF policies that have forced Third World populations to depend on food
imports. The
new Constitution opposes discrimination, recognizes the rights of
indigenous people. strengthens workers rights and, uniquely. recognizes
women’s unwaged caring work as productive, entitling housewives to
social Chavez
a former army officer has trained the army to build homes and distribute
food. Following the implementation of laws like the Land Act, which
hands over idle land to small rural co-operatives, Chavez faced a coup
by the elite backed by the US Administration. In April 2002 lie was
kidnapped, and the Constitution and National Assembly were abolished.
Millions, led by women from the poorest areas, took to the streets and
called on loyal troops to act. The soldiers Chavez had trained responded
and returned him to power. In
late 2002 the CIA, oil executives and corrupt trade union leaders tried
to bring Chavez down by staging an oil coup aimed at paralyzing the
industry and starving the country. Working round the clock for months,
oil workers restored production. With the community and the military,
they then formed Guide Committees to discuss boss workers can manage the
oil industry for the population and prevent oil production from fuelling
war and environmental devastation. Twice
defeated by the grassroots, the Opposition had to take the
Constitutional route, collecting the 2.4 million signatures needed to
trigger a referendum about whether the President should he recalled. The
process — orchestrated by the corporate media, the Organization of
American States and the Carter Centre — was riddled with fraud. Women
have once again taken the lead in pushing for a Chavez victory in this
month’s referendum. Street by street, neighbourhood by neighbourhood.
in towns and villages, groups of 5 to 10 people (mostly women) register
voters and check identity cards to prevent fraud. As
Nora Castañeda, President of the Women’s Development Bank, explains:
The referendum is only a tactic: it’s US military intervention they
want... The US wants our resources — not only oil and gas. but [also]
the water from our large rivers and our Amazon. What is at stake here is
a just and peace-loving society versus unbridled capitalism and death.
What is at stake is humanity. Nina
Lopez email: womenstrike8m@server101.com web: www.globalwomenstrike.net |