SOCIALIST UNITY

3 September, 2010

SOUTH OF THE BORDER

Filed under: Venezuela — Andy Newman @ 9:43 am

BUY TICKETS ONLINE HERE TODAY !

VSC National Screening of South of the Border & Reception, September 9, Bolivar Hall

With Music, Venezuelan Rum Cocktails and Refreshments!

Plus Special Guests including Ambassador Samuel Moncada, Fidel Narvaez from Ecuador & Nicaraguan Chargee D’Affaires Guisell Morales-Echaverry, with more to be announced!

Doors Open 6.30pm. Screening at 7.15pm. Tickets are £18/£15 (concessions) including food & drink. You can now buy tickets online today here or make cheques payable to ‘Venezuela Solidarity Campaign’ & send as soon as possible to VSC c/o Unite, 35 King Street, London, WC2E 8JG. Contact info@venezuelasolidarity.co.uk or 0207 420 8963 for more information.

This event will raise vital funds for VSC and the ‘Venezuela Under Threat’ initiative. This event is being kindly supported by UNISON Greater London Region, with thanks to Dogwoof, Thompson’s Solicitors and the Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

12 August, 2010

CHAVEZ AND SANTOS SUMMIT MEETING: PEACE BREAKS OUT

Filed under: Colombia, Venezuela — admin @ 11:00 am

By Francisco Dominguez
Secretary Venezuela Solidarity Campaign

The already bad relations between Venezuela and Colombia took a turn for the worse after the accusations made by the outgoing Uribe government’s OAS representative, Luis Hoyos, who charged the Venezuelan government with harbouring Colombian guerrillas (1,500) and allowing guerrilla camps (85) inside its territory. The “evidence” - which has been pretty discredited - for this batch of accusations -as with previous ones- also came from the eight ‘magical laptops’ seized by Colombian military forces in an illegal military attack in March 1, 2009.

Chavez reacted by breaking off relations with Colombia, leading to a further worsening of the relations between the two nations, but sent his foreign minister to attend Santos’ inauguration anyway. Uribe’s response was to announce that his government was lodging a formal accusation against Venezuela in the Inter-American Committee of Human Rights and another formal charge against President Chavez personally to the International Criminal Court, one day before Juan Manuel Santos inauguration. Furthermore, Uribe, reportedly, announced he would be prepared to testify to the ICC against Hugo Chavez.

However, after intense diplomatic activity undertaken by UNASUR, Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela’s Foreign Relations Minister, Nestor Kirchner, UNASUR’s President, and Brazils’ President, Lula, the latter two very publicly meeting with both Hugo Chavez and Juan Manuel Santos at various separate meetings, managed, in a matter of few days, to turn what looked like an inexorable slide to disaster, into one of the most extraordinary political turnarounds from the brink in recent Latin American history. (more…)

26 July, 2010

CHAVEZ: IF ATTACKED WE WILL CUT OIL SUPPLIES TO THE USA

Filed under: Venezuela — admin @ 2:21 pm

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez threatened on Sunday to cut off oil supplies to the United States if his country was attacked by U.S.-backed Colombia in a dispute over allegations that Venezuela provides a haven for Colombian guerrillas.”If there is any armed aggression against Venezuela from Colombian territory or anywhere else supported by the Yankee empire, we would suspend shipments of oil to the United States, even if we have to eat stones here,” Chavez told thousands of supporters in an outdoor speech.

“We wouldn’t send another drop of oil to its refineries, not a single drop more,” he added.

If actually carried out, such a threat would be a big blow for the Venezuelan economy. More than 90 percent of its export earnings are from oil. The United States is the top buyer of oil from Venezuela, which is one of the U.S. main oil suppliers.

Venezuela ruptured its diplomatic ties with Colombia on Thursday after Bogota accused Venezuela of harboring Colombian guerilla chiefs.

Chavez has accused Washington of trying to unseat him since he survived a 2002 coup and called a stronger Colombia-U.S. military relationship a threat to his country.

Chavez also suspended on Sunday his trip to Cuba in fear of an imminent Colombian military raid to his country aided by the U.S. forces. He had been invited by the Cuban leader Raul Castro to attend Monday’s celebration of the 57th Anniversary of Moncada Quarter Assault.

from Xinhua

23 July, 2010

OLIVER STONE DISCUSSES CHAVEZ

Filed under: Hugo Chavez, Venezuela — admin @ 9:00 pm

VENEZUELA BREAKS OFF DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH COLOMBIA

Filed under: Colombia, Venezuela — admin @ 5:13 pm

From Xinhua

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced Thursday that his country breaks off the diplomatic relations with Colombia.

“For dignity we do not have other option but to sever diplomatic ties with Colombia,” Chavez said after Colombia presented to the Organization of American States (OAS) the accusations about the alleged presence of Colombian guerrilla chiefs in Venezuelan territory.

At the moment of the announcement, Chavez had a meeting with Argentine soccer coach and former player Diego Maradona, at the Miraflores Palace, headquarters of the Venezuelan government.

With this measure, it was fulfilled the announcement made by Chavez on July 16 about severing ties with Colombia. Chavez regretted the measure due to the historical ties between the two countries, as they share a border line of 2,120 kilometers.

“We will be on alert, I have ordered maximum alert in our border,” Chavez said. He added that Colombia is obeying the United States and warned about the risk that Colombian President Alvaro Uribe goes for launching a military raid at the border.

Chavez added that Uribe is able to do anything to promote a conflict against Venezuela.

“Uribe is a threat for peace. He is even able to establish a faked camp in our territory and raid it to start a war,” Chavez said. (more…)

11 April, 2010

Pablo Navarrete ‘Venezuela deserves a fair hearing’

Filed under: Venezuela — Derek Wall @ 10:55 am

It is a little over 11 years since Hugo Chávez first assumed the presidency in Venezuela, following a landslide election victory that swept the country’s discredited traditional parties out of power. Since then, Chávez has presided over a radical and controversial process of reforms that has been increasingly vilified by the mainstream media – and the English-language media has been no exception.

Rightwing outlets, such as Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News channel, regularly refer to Chávez as a dictator, even though there have been 12 national elections during his time as president – most of which received unprecedented levels of scrutiny by international observers and were systematically deemed as free and fair.

More surprising for many has been the position taken towards the Chávez government by media outlets generally viewed as “liberal”. For example,
the BBC has had its coverage of Venezuela questioned recently. In December 2009, researchers at the University of the West of England published the preliminary findings of a 10-year study.

Of 304 BBC reports concerning Venezuela published between 1998 and 2008, the researchers found that only three mentioned any of the Chavez government’s positive reforms – such as poverty reduction programmes that have more than halved the poverty rate from 46.5% in 1998 to 23% in 2009. Instead the BBC’s reporting has been characterised by insinuations that Chávez lacks electoral support, and even compared Chávez to Hitler in one instance. The research also suggested the BBC has fallen short of its commitment to impartiality, truth and accuracy.

More here

23 March, 2010

VENEZUELA UNDER THREAT

Filed under: Venezuela — admin @ 11:00 am

CHOMSKY ON THE IMPORTANCE OF THE NEW US MILITARIZATION OF LATIN AMERICA

In a recent English Edition of the Venezuelan Paper, Correo del Orinoco, Noam Chomsky looks at the new US militarization of Latin America and the threat this poses to social progress, raising a number of issues that will be discussed by leading experts at Venezuela Under Threat (latest details below) this Saturday.

Putting developments in the context of US intervention historically, he argues that “Throughout [recent history], Latin America retained its primacy in [US]global planning. As Washington was considering the overthrow of the Allende government in Chile in 1971, Nixon’s National Security Council observed that if the US cannot control Latin America, it cannot expect ‘to achieve a successful order elsewhere in the world.’” Today, he argues, “that policy problem has become more severe with recent South American moves towards integration, a prerequisite for independence, and establishment of more varied international ties.”

Chomsky then looks specifically at the recent agreement between the US and Colombia, writing that, “The official purpose is to counter narcotrafficking and terrorism, ‘but senior Colombian military and civilian officials familiar with negotiations told The Associated Press that the idea is to make Colombia a regional hub for Pentagon operations.” He concludes by arguing that “Establishing US military bases in Colombia is only one part of a much broader effort to restore Washington’s capacity for military intervention.” Additionally, “the US Fourth Fleet, disbanded in 1950, was reactivated in 2008, shortly after Colombia’s invasion of Ecuador, with responsibility for the Caribbean, Central and South America, and the surrounding waters,” and “there has been a sharp increase in US military aid and training of Latin American officers.”

Against this, we must support peace, social justice and self-determination. You can read the full piece here and reserve your place at the Venezuela Under Threat event here !

VENEZUELA UNDER THREAT

EVENT: Defend Social Progress Against the New US Militarization of the Region

Saturday March 27, 11.30am- 4.30pm (Registration from 11.00) at Bolivar Hall, 54 Grafton Way, London, W1T 5DL (Nearest tube: Warren Street.)

Register Online Today here!

  • Ambassador Samuel Moncada and other Venezuelan speakers
  • Colin Burgon MP, Chair, Labour Friends of Venezuela
  • Jeremy Corbyn MP
    Vice-Chair, APPG on Latin America
  • George Galloway MP
  • Rod Stoneman, Executive Producer, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
  • Iain Bruce, Telesur Advisor & Journalist, Author, The Real Venezuela & former BBC Caracas Correspondent
  • Kate Hudson, CND Chair & active in the anti-war and anti-foreign bases campaigns internationally
  • Diana Raby, Author, Democracy and Revolution
  • Dr Francisco Dominguez, Head of Latin America Studies, Middlesex Uni
  • Hugh O’Shaughnessy
  • Bruce Kent
  • Jennie Bremner, Unite the Union Assistant General Secretary & VSC Chair
  • Moz Greenshields, UNISON NEC
  • Karen Mitchell, Thompsons Solicitors
  • Cat Goss, Student Friends of Venezuela
  • Helen Yuill, Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign
  • Marie Taylor, CYWU/Unite Vice-President
  • Plus videos & messages from progressives from across Latin America

The Venezuelan Government has transformed the lives of millions through progressive policies in the last decade. Today, this progress is under threat from a US militarization of the region that is encircling the country, including an agreement between the US & Colombia concerning new military bases & the revival of the 4th fleet.
April marks the 8th anniversary of the temporarily successful coup against Chávez. The recent coup in Honduras, followed by the exposure of coup plots in Ecuador & Paraguay, has confirmed that right-wing forces are again seeking to roll back progress across Latin America; threatening peace, democracy & sovereignty.
International support is essential - this event is a great opportunity to learn more about developments & how we can build solidarity. You can register online here!

 

Registration is only £5/£4 (concessions) for the day. You can register online today by clicking here or send cheques payable to Venezuela Solidarity Campaign c/o Unite the Union, 35 King Street, London, WC2E 8JG to reserve a place.

Registration also entitles you to a discounted ticket to the fundraising dinner for the Venezuela Under Threat campaign in the evening at La Piragua in Islington with speeches from special guests including Ambassador Samuel Moncada, local Labour MP Emily Thornberry and Unite Assistant General Secretary Tony Burke– contact the office on 0207 420 8963 or info@venezuelasolidarity.co.uk for tickets and information.

Organised by the Venezuela Solidarity Campaign and supported by the Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

22 September, 2009

GUARDIAN RETRACTS SMEAR AGAINST CHAVEZ

Filed under: Venezuela — Andy Newman @ 11:00 am

The Guardian retracts false claims that Hugo Chavez is a “pariah”

The Guardian newspaper has had to retract false claims made by Ian Black, the Middle East Editor, which labelled Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez a “contender for the ‘pariah’ status Gaddafi held for so long.”

Ian Black made the false claim - which is without any basis - in an article titled ‘Shadow of Megrahi hangs over Libya’s mass celebration of Gaddafi’s 40 years’ on 31 August 2009.

Following calls by Samuel Moncada, the Venezuelan Ambassador in London, for a retraction, Siobhain Butterworth the Guardian Reader’s Editor, has explained that the newspaper has “removed the sentence from the web article and added a footnote documenting the change.”

This is the second time that a British publication retracts from previous accounts in relation to Venezuela. Last month The Economist retracted from an inaccurate statement about alleged participation of Venezuelan troops in military activities in Bolivia.

Samuel Moncada said: “I am pleased that The Guardian has retraced its false claim that President Chavez is a pariah. Unfortunately there is too much inaccuracy and distortion in the British media about developments in Venezuela. There will be ongoing efforts to counter these misrepresentations. Whatever views are held on the changes underway in Venezuela today, these should be reported accurately and honestly to allow the readers to make up their own mind”

The correction can be seen at http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2009/sep/17/corrections-and-clarifications  and the correction by The Economist can be found at http://www.economist.com/world/americas/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14142418

22 June, 2009

With friends like these…

Filed under: Venezuela, Iran — Martin Wicks @ 12:47 pm

From http://martinwicks.wordpress.com

Iran is a country in which the USA and Britain have a history of interference. It’s history was shaped by the overthrow of the Mossadeq government which had the audacity to nationalise Iranian oil. He was removed in a coup in 1953 supported and funded by the US and British governments. The price of this coup was paid by the Iranian people with the brutal regime of the Shah. One of the consequences of this dictatorial regime, with a complete absence of any freedom to organise, was the use of the mosque as a focus and a cover for opposition in the absence of any democratic framework for the struggle for democratic rights. In that sense Britain and the US share responsibility for the fact that Khomeini and the clerical regime emerged from the revolution of 1979 as a ruling elite.

This background of interference and the “anti-imperialist” language of the Iranian leaders has led some people on the left to see the current regime as an ally in the struggle against US imperialism. For instance, the Ministry of “Popular Power for Foreign Affairs” of Venezuela has issued a communique in relation to the crisis in Iran. It “expresses its firm opposition to the vicious and unfounded campaign to discredit the institutions of the Islamic Republic of Iran” which apparently has been “unleashed from outside”, designed “to roil the political climate of our brother country”. The statement denounces “these acts of interference” in the internal affairs of the “Islamic Republic of Iran”, while demanding an immediate halt to the manoeuvres to threaten and destabilise the “Islamic Revolution”. The people and government of Venezuela are “certain that the Iranian people will find how to solve its internal affairs “and will continue the path of the Islamic Revolution”.

Speaking to supporters Hugo Chavez called Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ”a courageous fighter for the Islamic Revolution, the defence of the Third World, and in the struggle against imperialism”. The Venezuelan government, “in the name of the people,” hailed the “extraordinary democratic development” that resulted in Ahmadinejad’s victory according to a foreign ministry statement.

These staggering statements by the Venezuelan government appear to be based on the delusion that Ahmadinejad is some sort of anti-imperialist because of his denunciations of US imperialism. My enemy’s enemy is my friend, seems to be the guiding light of Chavez and the Venezuelan state. It would be perfectly correct to demand that the US government keep its nose out of the Iranian political crisis, but offering political support for the Iranian regime is choosing the wrong friend and can only compromise the Venezuelan government in the eyes of an Iranian democratic and workers’ movement, and other workers around the world.

Continuing the path of the “Islamic Revolution” means in practice the imposition of repression of independent workers’ organisations, of women and of youth, whose freedom is drastically curtailed by all sorts of moral police and religious thugs on a daily basis. Iran is a clerical dictatorship in which working class and socialist forces have no freedom to operate, never mind participate in the elections.

Following the election, Chavez was quick to telephone Ahmadinejad to congratulate him, saying the victory “represents the feeling and commitment of the Iranian people to building a new world.” What sort of world is that? One in which gays are hung, that women are denied the freedom to dress and carry out their lives as they are pleased, that raped women are seen as sinners, that workers leaders’ are imprisoned for striking? Even a cursory examination of the reality of life in the “Islamic Republic” contrasts absolutely to the world that Chavez says he wants to build.

Rigged election?

According to the Guardian report on the election results there were at least some curious results when you compare them with the 2005 election. For instance in Lorestan, in 2005 Ahmadinajad received 9% of the vote, compared with 55% for Karroubi (also a candidate in 2009). Miraculously after 4 years in power Ahmadinajad increased his vote eightfold. Obviously a popular man. Karroubi’s vote dropped to 5% this time, despite the fact that his campaigned appeared to be going well. In Khuzestan the President increased his vote from 16% in 2005 to nearly 65% this time. In East Azerbaijan his vote increased slightly from 10% last time to nearly 57% in 2009. In Ardabil, a province of which he had been governor, and was not exactly popular, he won 7% last time and 51% today.

Elections in Iran, of course, are not free because no opponents of the “Islamic Revolution” are allowed to stand (unlike in Venezuela, of course, where opponents of Chavez could even collect signatures for a referendum to have him removed from office). Real power rests with the Council of Guardians which is a 12 man body made up of six high ranking Islamic clerics and six Islamic lawyers, selected by the Leader (currently Khamenei). It stands above the ‘parliament’ and can dismiss laws passed by it on the basis that they are unIslamic or against the Constitution of the Islamic Republic. Of the 400 people who put their names forward only four were accepted. Needless to say the 42 women candidates were rejected.

These results appear highly questionable, but even if the 64% vote were accurate, it would do nothing to alter the fact that the elections are not democratic in any acceptable sense of the term. It has been clear for a number of years now that young people in particular have been chafing at the petty restrictions imposed upon them by a state which imposes its religion and mores on them.

For the Venezuelan authorities to describe Ahmadinejad’s declared victory as “an extraordinary democratic development”, in an election in which any individual or organisation that had, for instance, the politics of Chavez would be barred from standing, is itself extraordinary for its lack of contact with reality.

In his Friday speech after the elections Khamenei said:

“These elections showed our religious democracy to the entire world. All those people who are ill-wishers towards the system witnessed what religious democracy really is.

This is a third way different from dictatorships and tyrannical systems on the one hand and democracies removed from spirituality and religion on the other. This is religious democracy. This is what attracts the hearts of people and brings them to the centre of the arena, and it just passed its test.”

So a “religious democracy” is one in which anybody who does not agree with the system has no right to stand in elections, no freedom of expression. According to Khamenei, every last one of the 40 million people who voted in the election voted for “the path of the revolution”. And the mass of demonstrators, what are they?

“They are the ill-wishers, mercenaries and agents of the Western intelligence services and the Zionists.”

Alas the size of the demonstrations does somewhat contradicted his assertion that “the people live in an atmosphere of trust, hope, and enthusiasm in this country”. How could it be otherwise when “the Islamic Republic system is one of the healthiest political and social systems in the world today.”

“21st Century Socialism”?

The mass movement in Latin America against the impact of neo-liberalism, which was first tested out on the continent, has created a series of radical government which have, to one degree or another broken with neo-liberalism. Venezuela, which has resisted attempts to derail it, for instance by the US supported coup in 2002, has been an inspiration to many people around the world for whom socialism has been put back on the agenda.

Hugo Chavez has spoken of building a “21st Century Socialism”. Venezuela has been seen as a beacon of hope for millions of people around the world. Yet support for the Iranian regime, can only undermine its standing amongst workers around the world and discredit the name of socialism. How can Venezuela support a regime which oppresses attempts of Iranian workers to form independent trades unions, and demands of all its citizens that they accept a state based on religious fundamentalism and in which 12 men can even overrule decisions of the Parliament (such as it is)?

If Hugo Chavez wants allies to “build a new world” then he should support the Iranian workers struggling for their independent trades unions and not a state apparatus which oppresses them and denies them their right to freely organisation.

In writing this piece, I have searched the web in vain for comment of Venezuela’s support for Ahmadinejad. Whether it is an embarrassed silence amongst supporters of Venezuela’s struggle I can only guess. However, it is surely the responsibility of the labour movement, and especially those who campaign for solidarity with Venezuela, to challenge this profound mistake of the Venezuelan government. They should call for an end to this support for Ahmadinejad, and an “Islamic Revolution” which denies democratic and trade union rights of its citizens.

The “anti-imperialism” of the Iranian regime rests upon the historical hostility of the Iranian masses for the US and British powers who were responsible for the downfall of Mossadeq, and the imposition of the bloody regime of the Shah. But it is a fake, designed to bind the Iranian population to the “Islamic Republic”. It is a Republic which has no place for socialism or socialists, be it of the 21st Century variety or any other. Hoe can it be an ally of such a struggle?

And what of Mousavi?

Does any of this mean that Mousavi deserves our support. Of course not. He has been very much part of the Islamic regime for many years. No doubt many Iranians place their hopes in him, essentially because they hope that their lives will be a little freer, if he had won. He appeals to this sentiment. For instance, interviewed by Al Jazeera he responded to a question of the policing of women’s dress in the streets, that there should be no interference by the police into people’s personal lives.

Writing on behalf of Mousavi in the Guardian an Iranian writer explained the aims of the struggle. It was not very radical. If he was elected President then this would be a counterweight to the ‘Supreme Leader”.

Khamenei, in his speech pointed to the fact that the ‘dispute’ was between four candidates who were part of the system. That is true, but any mass movement struggling for freedom takes advantage of openings created by people who do not necessarily share their aims. Such was the vote and movement behind Mousavi.

Iranian workers

Socialists or consistent democrats cannot accept a state based on religion, of any sort. Of course, the Iranian people should determine their own future, but it is our responsibility to support those struggling for democratic and workers rights. To paint up this reactionary clerical regime as an ally of Venezuelan or any other workers is a grave error.

The Tehran bus workers have been at the forefront of the struggle for freedom of trade union organisation. Their leaders have been jailed, many activists sacked. They have been supported by an international trade union campaign. It is therefore interesting to hear what they say about the elections.

“During these past years the workers have been told to make sacrifices and to accept their hardship and their lack of rights. While the workers can neither go to work with security or hope, nor to their homes for rest, thousands of plain-clothes and security force [officers] - forces that perform no productive work and are used everywhere and for any deed that is necessary, with any level of violence and use of force - are kept to deprive and detain workers from a free life. Yet [the candidates] refuse to give up one day to talking about the workers’ demands and needs.”

I leave the last word to them.

“In recent days, we continue witnessing the magnificent demonstration of millions of people from all ages, genders, and national and religious minorities in Iran. They request that their basic human rights, particularly the right to freedom and to choose independently and without deception be recognized. These rights are not only constitutional in most of the countries, but also have been protected against all odds.

Amid such turmoil, one witnesses threats, arrests, murders and brutal suppression that one fears only to escalate on all its aspects, resulting in more innocent bloodshed, more protests, and certainly no retreats. Iranian society is facing a deep political-economical crisis. Million-strong silent protests, ironically loud with unspoken words, have turned into iconic stature and are expanding from all sides. These protests demand reaction from each and every responsible individual and institution.

As previously expressed in a statement published on-line in May of this year, since the Vahed Syndicate does not view any of the candidates support the activities of the workers’ organizations in Iran, it would not endorse any presidential candidate in the election. Vahed members nevertheless have the right to participate or not to participate in the elections and vote for their individually selected candidate.

Moreover, the fact remains that demands of almost an absolute majority of the Iranians go far beyond the demands of a particular group. In the past, we have emphasized that until the freedom of choice and right to organize are not recognized, talk of any social or particular right would be more of a mockery than a reality.

The Syndicate of Workers of Tehran and Suburbs Vahed Bus Company fully supports this movement of Iranian people to build a free and independent civil society and condemns any violence and oppression.

In line with the recognition of the labour rights, the Syndicate requests that June 26 which has been called by the International Trade Unions Organization ‘Day of action’ for justice for Iranian workers to include the human rights of all Iranians who have been deprived of their rights.

With hope for freedom and equality.”

These are the people Hugo Chavez should be supporting, not their oppressors.

26 May, 2009

Hugo Chávez: the most popular leader in the Middle East

Filed under: Middle East, Venezuela — admin @ 11:00 pm

by Hilary Keenan

The results of the new survey of ‘Arab opinion’ conducted by Zogby International show that Barack Obama has a much more favourable rating than did his predecessor as US president. But when asked to name the world leaders whom they most admire, the participants put the President of Venezuela at the top of the poll.

The survey, which was conducted in April and May 2009, sampled the views of 4,087 people in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Lebanon, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates. According to the respected Zogby polling organisation, the poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 1.6%. One of the questions put to the participants was “which two world leaders (outside your own country) do you admire most?” The most frequently named leader is Hugo Chavez, at 36%. Following Chavez in order of admiration are Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad and former President of France Jacques Chirac (both at 18%), Osama bin Laden (16%), Mohammed bin Zayed, the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi (15%) and the current French president Nicolas Sarkozy (14%).

Admiration in the Arab countries for Hugo Chavez has hugely increased since 2008. In the equivalent poll conducted last year, Venezuela’s socialist president was named by only 8% of respondents as being one of the two most admired leaders.

Commenting on this result, the Africa / Americas editor of the US magazine Christian Science Monitor, Matthew Clark exclaimed:

The colorful Latin leftist has some serious crossover appeal.

…It may seem surprising, but a quick look back at Mr. Chávez’s statements and visits over the past few years reveal why he’s now a hero for the “Arab Street,” earning nicknames like “Chávez of Arabia.”

In January, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah – last year’s top leader of the same poll – lauded Chávez for kicking out the Israeli ambassador to Venezuela to protest Israel’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip.

“He did this because of his humanity, his sense of revolution and, in this way, he dealt a severe blow to those who are now hosting the ambassadors of Israel in their capitals and do not have enough courage to even think about telling them to leave. “

The same move prompted a Kuwaiti Islamist MP to say that Chávez “has proved that he was more Arab than some Arabs,” he said. “I call for moving the Arab League from Cairo to Caracas.”

USA and Israel are my enemies

Covering a range of political, economic and social issues, the Zogby survey gives an indication of the understanding by the public in Arab countries of the complexities of international affairs as they affect the Middle East. Asked to “name two countries that you think pose the biggest threat to you”, 88% named Israel and 77% named the United States of America. Iran and China came a distant third and fourth in the list of enemies, at 13% and 9% respectively.

The participants were also requested to comment on the motivation for Israeli policies and the USA’s support for those policies. Although 39% agreed with the phrase “Israel decides on its own interests and influences the US”, the majority (57%) agreed with one of two alternative formulations: “US and Israel have mutual interests” (32%) and “Israel is a tool of American foreign policy (25%).

On the solution to the ‘Arab-Israeli conflict’, most of those surveyed (73%) said that they were “prepared for peace if Israel is willing to return all 1967 territories including East Jerusalem”; but the majority of those who supported peace on that basis were also of the view that “Israel will never give up those territories easily”.

That view is contributory to the very deep pessimism about the prospects for peace which the survey revealed. Only 6% expressed a belief that a lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinians will be achieved in the next five years; 40% believe that such a solution is inevitable but will take more time, while 50% think that a lasting peace settlement will never be achieved.

Shaking the planet

Zogby’s ‘Arab opinion’ survey also reflected a growing concern with falling living standards due to the economic crisis. A mere 14% of participants said that they are economically better off now than a year ago, compared with 54% who stated that they are worse off; and only 33% are hopeful that their position will improve next year. A big majority (63%) agreed with the statement that the ‘weakened US economy’ has a global effect which “has a negative impact on me and my family”.

This disillusionment with the economic results of the capitalist system, which is indelibly associated with the global domination of the USA, is without doubt another factor in the increased popularity of Hugo Chavez in the Arab countries. As Matthew Clark of the Christian Science Monitor wrote in his article on the Zogby poll:

In March, Chávez went before Arab leaders in Doha, Qatar, to propose an oil-backed currency to challenge the US dollar. There, he gleefully announced the demise of “the Empire” - or “the Great Satan” as his friend Mr. Ahmadinejad would call the US. (The two have visited each other several times.)

“A new world is being born,” Chávez said then. “Empires fall. There is a world crisis of capitalism, it’s shaking the planet.”

This stuff is gold dust in the Middle East.

Mr Clark’s sneering tone can be disregarded. It is gold dust because it is true. And, in Latin America, the Middle East and elsewhere in our world, more and more people are beginning realise it.

From 21st Century Socialism

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