12 March, 2013

A TRIBUTE TO HUGO CHAVEZ (1954-2013)


Hugo Chavez, former Venezuela President who died last week after more than a year battle with cancer is no ordinary leader. His country of about 27 million people is not even reckoned as a heavyweight in the region, where Brazil and Argentina are considered regional power houses.
However, Hugo Chavez took his country from relative obscurity to international stardom. The former military paratrooper, whose parents were teachers, was agitated at the misery of the majority of Venezuelans even when the country is hugely endowed with oil wealth. While in the army, Colonel Chavez was studious, reading materials on Argentine-born Marxist revolutionary, Ernesto Che Guevara and the 19th century South American liberator, the Venezuelan-born Simon Bolivar.
Within the army, Chavez founded the revolutionary Bolivarian movement and following the nation-wide protests at a severe austerity measures imposed by president Carlos Andre Perez, he launched a coup in February 1992, which failed after 18 lives have been lost with about 60 persons injured before the coup was put down.
Colonel Chavez was sentenced to two years in jail and when he came out he founded the movement for the fifth republic. Earlier while he was in the military academy, senior officers in the army hierarchy has been alarmed at how he has embellished his course content which he teaches with revolutionary exhortation and then sent him off to one of the most interior areas in the country, Apure state. There, Chavez activism did not cease, as he sought out the indigenous tribes and began linking them in organizational chain with other marginalized groups.
Having been freed from military duty after completion of his jail term, Chavez launched headlong into politics. In 1998, he was elected the president of the Venezuelan Republic. After taking office in 1999, he launched massive social and political reforms and efforts by his government to take over the country’s national oil company (PDVSA), which was held by the former ruling establishment   and their international partners drew their ire, resulting in 2002 military coup, which saw president Chavez briefly kidnapped. The massive denunciation of the coup and popular protest for his restoration to power led to his been returned to office two days after he was abducted from the presidential palace and taken to an island. The U.S then, under the extremist neo-conservative clique led by the trio of George W. Bush, his vice president, Mr Dick Cheney and defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld openly backed the coup against Chavez.
Many conspiracy theorists believed that while Chavez was held by the enemy for that period, he was infected by the deadly cancer virus, when it was considered inauspicious and too dangerous to liquidate him then. However, from the 2002, president Chavez took drastic measures to deepen his social reform, which he dubbed the Bolivarian revolution named after the South American 19th century independent hero Simon Bolivar. The government took total control of the national oil company using its huge revenue to finance the social missions which includes new hospital, schools, affordable housing for the poor and marginalized groups, including the minority African-Venezuelans.
The core of his social and political reform at home was the integration of the marginalized groups into the mainstream of society through vast spending on education, health, housing and infrastructure linking formerly inaccessible interiors to the central cities. According to a BBC obituary, under Chavez, “Venezuela has the fairest income distribution in Latin America.” Basic essentials were heavily subsidized as a litre of petrol is sold cheaper than a bottle of coca cola. The Venezuelan ambassador to Nigeria nearly caused a diplomatic foure, when he visited the ministry of information in 2009 and reportedly wondered aloud why the price of petroleum product is so high and why the exploration and production of Nigeria’s oil is still in foreign hands. President Chavez brought the full benefit of the Venezuelan natural resources to its people.
However, if Chavez has limited his Bolivarian revolution to the deep and profound domestic reforms, perhaps he would be known as mere honest leader to his people. President Chavez took on, the Mr Bush White House; denouncing him at a time he launched the U.S infamous war against terror, wondering aloud “how terror could be used to fight terror”. From his denunciation of the U.S Empire to a clarion call for the unity of south Americans, president Chavez shot to global spotlight.
He was unsparing in attacking U.S bully tactics against countries of strong independent position, like Iran. Chavez would chastised the U.S openly for leading the campaign against Iran’s nuclear programme, while condoning the only well-known but undeclared nuclear armed state in the region, Israel. At Chavez’s funeral in Caracas last week, president Ahmadinejad, the only non-South American leader to attend the funeral made a dramatic move of kissing the coffin of Chavez, which was massively applauded. Chavez did not just rally South American unity, but bankrolled most of its institutional building blocks.
And from the example of Hugo Chavez, most countries in the region plucked in for reformist and revolutionary leaders breaking the stranglehold of Washington in the region. Immediately after Chavez’s victory in 1998, Bolivia elected its first ethnic Indian leader, the socialist Evo Morales and former shoe shine boy and previously perpetual presidential candidate, Mr. Inacio De Lula and his formerly fringe workers party (PT) was elected in a landslide in Brazil, the region’s most populated country. Taking cue, Argentina, another regional heavyweight elected the late Nestor Kirchner who was succeeded by his wife, Christine, Ecuador elected the formidable former economics professor Rafael Correa, Nicaragua returned the revolutionary Sandinistas to power, Paraguay, Uruguay, Honduras, Peru also returned moderate reformist and revolutionary parties to office. Cuba which has previously stood alone in the revolutionary defiance of Washington found itself among regional dependable, chief among them, was Chavez’s Venezuela. The acting president of Venezuela, Mr. Nicholas Maduro, who Chavez has appointed the vice president while on sick bed and had exhorted Venezuelans to rally behind in case he did not survive as has happened now, was a Cuban trained trade unionist. MrMaduro, former foreign minister, who is 50 years old, was also former bus driver, and well-honed in the socialist paradigm.
Mr Hugo Chavez electrified the region and beyond with fiery revolutionary exhortations of unity of all developing nations. He placed Venezuela in the vanguard of developing nations seeking a more equitable fairer and just international economic order. He sought to establish a Bank of the south as an alternative to the stringent conditions imposed by the western controlled Bretton Woods institutions of World Bank and international Monetary Fund (IMF). He actively promoted Venezuelan engagement in Africa, opening new embassies and strengthening the existing ones. As part of active co-operation with Africa, Venezuela under Chavez provided scholarships and other training and capacity building measures for African countries. When the first Africa South America summit was held in Abuja in 2008, constrained by a general election, he was candidate at that time to attend; he sent a high powered delegation led by the foreign minister, Nicholas Maduro. His most dependable regional ally, the Bolivian leader Evo Morales attended the Abuja meeting.
Earlier in 2007, he hosted the elaborate Venezuela Africa cultural fiesta which brought several cultural groups, Intellectuals and artists from across Africa including Nigeria. Under President Hugo Chavez, Venezuela became a global force not in the realm of rhetoric as the west claims, but a critical builder of third world solidarity, effectively seeking alternative institutional platform to foster mutual co-operations other than ones created and dominated by the west. With the death of Hugo Chavez, a key chain in the resistance to imperialist hegemony has broken. At the collapse of the Soviet Union, the world was nearly ensnared to the seemingly humble and victorious west determined to establish a global détente equality, freedom and fairness.
It took the Hugo Chavez to alert to the new insidious imperialist machination at world domination which was no less pernicious to the era of super power rivalry. From his election to the presidency in 1998, Hugo Chavez was an indomitable social reformer at home as a formidable whistle blower on the world stage, regarding the Washington machinations and exposing the several levers and strands of western manipulation and domination for which he was heavily paid by demonization and ridicule in the western press.
In the death of President Chavez, the world’s marginalized people have lost a bold spokesman and for the Venezuelans, an irreplaceable social crusader and ardent visionary have exited.
By Charles Onunaiju

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