The Venezuelan revolution
An appeal from women to women all over the world

"We women reject the organizers of hate and chaos. We women are
on the front line for our right to live in peace and to defend
the Bolivarian Constitution of Venezuela, which gives us, for
the first time in history, the right to full legal equality, to
social security, to a pension for housewives. We are on the
streets backing our President and our Bolivarian Revolution.
Long live the Constitution! No to the fraudulent referendum! No
to the pro-coup fascist stoppage! Don’t stop for the stoppage!"


In response to women in Venezuela, we urgently appeal to you to speak out
in defense of the revolution of which women are a leading part. Since
President Hugo Rafael Chavez Frias was elected by a landslide in 1998 to
carry out sweeping economic and social reforms to rid the country of
poverty and corruption, their revolution has been under constant threat.

As you may know, in April 2002 the elite, acting with the US government,
imposed a military coup. Women from the poorest neighborhoods of Caracas
were the first to descend from the hills, risking their lives to demand the
return of their elected president. Filling the streets, the population,
supported by the army rank-and-file, reinstated their government. Women’s
courage and initiative in defeating the coup is widely acknowledged in
Venezuela, and first of all by President Chavez.

We learnt this, and much else, when three of us from the Global Women’s
Strike in Guyana, Peru and the US, attended the international women’s
solidarity conference at the invitation of INAMUJER (the Women’s Institute)
last July.

For four decades the ruling elite has been bleeding the country’s wealth,
above all its oil revenue (Venezuela is the 5th largest exporter mainly to
the US), leaving 80% of the population – overwhelmingly people of mixed
African and Indigenous descent – impoverished. The white elite is furious
that from 1998 a man who is the color of their servants is in power
representing those they have defrauded. Despite retaining preferential
treatment for its oil imports, the US, which has had a hand in the corrupt
handling of Venezuelan oil revenue, also fears the policies of the Chavez
government: no privatization, lower oil rates for Cuba, Guyana and other
small Caribbean countries, and bringing together Latin America and the
Caribbean for the benefit of all its peoples.

By 1999 the population created and passed with a 72% vote a revolutionary
new Constitution. Women, Indigenous communities who, as in the rest of the
Americas, have been under threat of genocide for centuries, other women and
men of color, and other social groups who suffer discrimination, won rights
fought for over years:

* A just distribution of wealth.
* Full legal and pay equality between women and men in employment.
* The recognition of housework as an economic activity that creates surplus
value and produces social wealth and well-being.
* Social security and a pension for housewives.
* A minimum wage, an 8-hour day, no compulsory overtime and the right to
paid holidays. Women, the lowest paid everywhere, who do a double day of
unwaged caring work on top of low-waged work, would benefit most.
* Protection from discrimination based on sex, race, politics, age, religion
and disability. Positive steps to favor those who may be discriminated
against, marginalized or vulnerable, and punishment of those guilty of
abuse or mistreatment.
* Recognition of Venezuelan sign language, and the use of subtitles in TV
programs.
* Recognition and protection of Indigenous communities, their social,
political and economic organizations, cultures, religious and health
practices, the collective ownership of ancestral land and knowledge.
Bilingual education in Indigenous areas. Women stress that it is their
work that has kept cultures and languages alive.
* Outlawing the patenting of genes, technologies and inventions arising
from ancestral knowledge or resources.
* No privatization of water; food security through sustainable agriculture;
protection of the environment.
* No oil privatization – the State will keep 100% of oil shares.

Always the poorest everywhere, women have the most to gain from all these
reforms. Despite the elite’s power to frustrate change, there have been
remarkable achievements that we have not yet won in most countries in spite
of our own years of struggle.

* A strong commitment to tackling domestic violence and the machismo of the
justice system.
* A Women’s Bank that puts money for income generation directly into
women’s hands.
* Better child nutrition and greater school attendance through free
breakfast programs and a clampdown on schools illegally charging fees. A
dramatic drop in the infant mortality rate.
* The distribution of title deeds to land built on by squatters, mostly
woman-headed households in the shanty towns on the Caracas hills.
* A law distributing unused state and private land to rural people. Women,
including Indigenous women, are often the main agriculturalists.
* Subsidies of $1000-$2000 to small farmers – a lot for people earning $15
a month.

Women’s determination to resist provocation and to protect "el proceso" – the 
peaceful and democratic process to which many middle class people are also 
committed – has been hidden by the corporate-owned media. National and 
international audiences are bombarded with lies promoting the coup leaders and 
glorifying or hiding their ongoing violence.

This has so incensed women that they have declared a "permanent mobilization". 
Every day thousands surround the main TV channels to demand an end to media 
lies about them. They are also infuriated that the leadership of the CTV, the 
corrupt trade union federation involved in the coup, has been given a platform 
to claim that workers are backing the employers’ efforts to destabilize the 
economy. These lies are given credibility by the financial and other support 
for CTV from the US union federation AFL-CIO (without union members’ 
knowledge), and by the silence of the UN’s International Labor Office.

Most recently, a "general strike" that has been in fact a corporate lockout, 
has tried to stop oil exports, to give the US an excuse to intervene and 
restore the rich and racist elite to power. The situation is heightening now 
because basic changes, such as land reform and regaining control over the 
national oil industry in order to tackle poverty, are to be implemented in 
January 2003.

The impact of the popular mobilization in support of the elected government,
and fears that the US will attack not only Venezuela and Iraq but any
country it wishes, spurred the Organization of American States to support
the Chavez government against calls for early elections. Apparently, this
is the first time the OAS has stood against a major US policy, which shows
we can win.

We urge women, women’s organizations and all who support women’s rights and
anti-racism to endorse the following, and to send protest emails and faxes
to the State Department, the AFL-CIO, the ILO and major media outlets.
Please also send your letters to Venezuela’s Women’s Institute, President
Hugo Chavez and the Global Women's Strike (numbers on page below).

Issued by the Global Women’s Strike

* The Global Women's Strike takes action in over 60 countries every March 8
since the year 2000. We demand that the world "invest in caring not
killing." We sent a women’s truth-finding mission to Venezuela in July
2002. Findings can be found on our website:
http://womenstrike8m.server101.com

------------------------

To the US State Department, the AFL-CIO, the ILO and major media outlets

Women in Venezuela, overwhelmingly women of color, who have suffered
discrimination and poverty, were central to reversing the April 11 military
coup against elected President Hugo Chavez Frias. They have called a
"permanent mobilization" to defend their "peaceful and democratic
 revolution" and their elected government. The coup, supported by the US,
the only country to recognize its installed dictatorship, tried to return
power to the rich and racist elite, its corrupt running of the oil industry,
the corporate media and the corrupt leadership of the CTV trade union that
acts for the employers and the US against the workers.

We the undersigned, responding to the appeal of grassroots women in
Venezuela, condemn any attempt to threaten and undermine what women and
therefore every community have won through their revolution and its
anti-sexist anti-racist pro-worker Constitution.

We condemn US intervention – subtle, covert or overt – aimed at overthrowing
the government of President Chavez that was elected to carry out economic
and social reforms to rid the country of poverty and corruption.

We demand that:
* The Bush administration stop its attempts to bring down the elected
government of Venezuela, financing and sheltering those trying to
destabilise the economy.
* The AFL-CIO stop hosting, funding and defending the pro-coup trade union
federation CTV.
* The ILO end its silence on the corruption of the CTV.
* The media stop spreading lies and panic in order to create an excuse for
US intervention.

Name ____________________________________________________________________

Organization
_______________________________________________________________

Email
_____________________________________________________________________

Phone/Fax
_________________________________________________________________

Address
___________________________________________________________________

Return to:

Global Women's Strike [EMAIL PROTECTED] or
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Or fax to 215-848-1130.
For more info: 215-848-1120. http://womenstrike8m.server101.com

Send protest emails and/or faxes to US Government:

J. Curtis Struble, Acting Assistant Secretary of State Bureau of Western
Hemisphere Affairs Tel 202-647-5780; Fax 202 –647-0791

Brian Naranjo, Venezuela Desk Officer, US Dept of State Tel (202) 647-4216
or (202) 647-3338

AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney, Tel 202-637-5231; Fax 202-508-6946
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Barbara Shailor, Director, AFL-CIO Int’l Affairs Dept, Tel 202-637-5050
ILO Regional Office for the Americas email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Fax
+51.1.442.25.31

ILO Geneva email: [EMAIL PROTECTED], Fax +41 22 798 8685

Send copies of your protest letters to:

The Honorable Hugo Chavez, President, Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
http://venezuela.gov.ve; email [EMAIL PROTECTED];
Fax: +58-212-806 3145;

Maria Leon, INAMUJER (Venezuelan Women’s Institute)
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED], Fax: +58-212-860 8215

Global Women's Strike [EMAIL PROTECTED] or
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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