Mobhare Matinyi, Washington DC. The Citizen, Tanzania.
Thursday, 07 March 2013 22:17
As American diplomats,
politicians, and some corporate executives express their utmost happiness over
the death of President Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías of Venezuela, one of their
worst enemies, the people of South America are grieving bitterly over the loss
of their beloved leader.
President Chávez passed away on
Tuesday aged 58 in the capital Caracas after suffering from cancer for
sometime. He led Venezuela from 1999 until his death having been the founder of
the Fifth Republic Movement, a political party formed in 1997 to fight for the
right of the majority dark-skinned Venezuelans, who were marginalized by the
minority whites called the “Spanish.”
That people’s movement united
with some political and social groups in 2008 and formed the largest left-wing
party in the Western Hemisphere called the United Socialist Party of Venezuela.
A strong believer of the
Bolivarian Revolution, Chávez’s ascendance to power in 1999 rejuvenated the
socialist movement of South America so much that he became a hero to millions
of deprived people across the continent. Today, the leaders of Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Ecuador, Uruguay and the Caribbean island of
Dominica, have declared periods of official mourning to show respect for
Chávez.
It is not an exaggeration to
state that the whole continent of South America is grieving for the man
American capitalist elites and leaders hated so much. Far away to the east in
the Persian Gulf, Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has also proclaimed a
day of mourning calling Chávez a “martyr”.
But why was he both loved by many
and hated by the powerful? It all starts with the political philosophy he
believed in, the line of Simon Bolivar, a Venezuelan military and political
leader who fought for the independence of South America from the Spanish Empire
the same way George Washington did for the United States against the British.
Bolivar, born in 1783 and died in
1830, is a giant figure in the Americas who led the liberation of Venezuela,
Colombia, Panama, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. Chávez always wanted to emulate
Bolivar in the same way Barack Obama does Abraham Lincoln.
After coming to power, Chavez, a
former paratrooper decided to fight poverty by hooks and crooks, and although
the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) may disapprove of his
economic performance, they do agree that he very much succeeded in poverty
reduction. Isn’t that the essence of economic planning any way?
The outspoken, charismatic and
pragmatic leader turned slams into brick houses, provided medical care to
millions, took to school millions who had no hope of education, and provided
land to the landless that had been condemned by brutal capitalist policies of
past pro-Western governments.
To succeed in his ambitious
programmes, he had to squeeze exploiters, mostly Western oil companies, and a
couple more American firms like the Heinz Corporation and Koch Brothers. He
focused more on the oil business since Venezuela, according to the former chief
of oil intelligence for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Guy Caruso, has
a reserve of 1.36 trillion barrels of recoverable oil, more than Saudi Arabia.
Here is an example of how the
Venezuelan strongman did according to the New York Times: “Just after Bush’s
inauguration in 2001, Venezuela’s congress voted in a new “Law of
Hydrocarbons.” Henceforth, Exxon, British Petroleum, Shell Oil and Chevron
would get to keep 70 percent of sales revenues from the crude they pumped out
of Venezuela.”
That decision was painful because
the previous deal allowed them to pocket 84 percent. He didn’t stop there, he
raised oil royalties from a mere one percent to 16.6 percent. Literally, his
parliament became a powerful house for passing various laws to liberate the 80
percent of the population who had become poor because one per cent wanted it
that way.
Make no mistakes, Chávez was a
tough dictator and he bruised many, justly and unjustly, but this guy knew what
he wanted for his people; he never allowed his country to be looted by powerful
Western corporations and their governments, and thus, he could not have become
a friend of anybody in the Western capitals. Otherwise, what wrong did he
commit?
Hence, it was not a surprise that
on April 11, 2002, a democratically-elected Chávez was kidnapped at gunpoint
and flown to an island in the Caribbean Sea. Interestingly, Pedro Carnoma, the
president of the Venezuelan Chamber of Commerce and a business partner of the
American oil firms, declared himself president amidst cheers from the US
Ambassador Charles Shapiro.
His
people, angry and armed, marched to the Presidential Palace ready to kill the
coup plotters forcing Carnoma to return him back to office in 48 hours. To be
brief, Chávez was loved because he stood for his country and his people, and
that is the sacred duty of any leader, be it in the Americas or Africa!
2 comments:
Rest in peace commandate.... I wish Tanzania had the same kind of leader as Hugo Chavez was, look how our natural resources are being looted by few greedy ruling elite while majority of wanainchi are swimming in a pool of abject poverty.. Am missing Nyerere big time.
Ingawa mimi si mvenezuela lakini huyu jamaa amenitoa chozi, he was a man of people i mean the poor.
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