Mercedes 
Sosa<https://www.youtube.com/artist/mercedes-sosa?feature=watch_video_title>
-
Solo le Pido a Dios

https://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&feature=fvwp&v=SIrot1Flczg

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

*#FascistasSecuestranAWinstonYRoque<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23FascistasSecuestranAWinstonYRoque&src=hash>TT
in
#Venezuela <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Venezuela&src=hash> after>
Capriles´supporters kidnapped Chavista artists&their families
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------*
*
*
*[image: Hands Off Venezuela]Hands Off Venezuela
@HOVcampaign*<https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign>
*2m* <https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign/status/332521879741018112>

*#HOVConference2013<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23HOVConference2013&src=hash>VIDEO
Yenny Cortez from Gotcha occupied factory on workers' control and
struggle for socialism http://youtu.be/YEIRNsLZfpQ  <http://t.co/qlL5oKWvcr>
*

*
*
*
*


http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/05/the-ironies-of-the-venezuelan-opposition-part-24.html

The ironies of the Venezuelan opposition, part 24May 9, 2013 — Sabina Becker

[image: maricori-colombia]

*María Corina Machado, May 2. Say, isn’t that the day she was supposed to
be in hospital, getting her broken nose fixed? As you can see by the
profile, it’s remarkably intact for someone with four alleged nasal
fractures. No swelling, no bumps, no nothing. And her eyes aren’t black and
swollen, as one would expect a post-op nose-job patient’s eyes to be. And
she’s not in too much pain to go out glad-handing, either…*

Oh dear. Poor, martyred MariCori. At this rate, she’s going to come home
with the two black eyes she didn’t
have<http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/05/the-ironies-of-the-venezuelan-opposition-part-22.html>
when
she left for Colombia just a few short days ago. Just look at the
pummeling<http://www.aporrea.org/internacionales/n228511.html> she
and her whiny escualido pals took at the hands of the Colombian government!

*Members of a commission of right-wing oppositionists, led by parliamentary
deputy María Corina Machado, came with the hope of entering the Casa de
Nariño [Colombia's house of government] to speak out against the unity and
strength of Colombian-Venezuelan relations.*
*

The escualido delegation was not received, and had to take their speeches
against the Bolivarian government of Nicolás Maduro to the Congress, where
their Uribista and conservative friends opened the floor for them.

It is clear that the right wing, financed and trained by the United States,
is trying to convert Colombia into a beachhead for the destabilization of
the Venezuelan government. They also insist on attacking the good relations
between the two peoples, who prefer to continue consolidating their
economic, social and peace relations.
*

*Another failure in Colombia to add to the permanent defeat of the
recalcitrant Venezuelan right…*

Translation mine.

Meanwhile, speaking of El Narco Uribe and ironies…what’s this about him
hauling Maduro before the Human Rights
Commission?<http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/9128> Shouldn’t
it be the other way around? Especially since there are all those “false
positive” deaths he has yet to account
for?<http://nsarchive.wordpress.com/2011/03/07/wikileaks-on-colombia-%E2%80%93-uribe%E2%80%99s-informants-network-employed-ex-paramilitaries-more-trouble-for-former-army-commanders/>
El
Narco is a human rights violator, and on a grand scale.

It really does speak volumes as to what sort of “democratic” person
MariCori is, to be hanging out with a genocidal, dictatorial, murderous,
drug-trafficking fascist like El Narco…don’t you think?

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

HOV Conference 2013
resolutions<http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/hov_conference_2013_resolutions.htm>
08 May 2013

Hands Off Venezuela

   -
   <http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/hov_conference_2013_resolutions/print.htm>
   -
   
<http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/component/com_mailto/link,d19a1d77da562487e5ecd07b98ecbc7e368d1713/template,rt_camber/tmpl,component/>

These are the resolutions passed at the 2013 Hands Off Venezuela Conference

*On the April 14 presidential election*

*Defend the Bolivarian revolution – respect the democratic will of the
people*

On April 14, the Bolivarian candidate Nicolás Maduro won the presidential
elections with 7,586,251 votes (50.61%) against the opposition candidate
Henrique Capriles who received 7,361,512 votes (49.12%), with a turnout of
79.69%.

The opposition refused to recognise the results of the election and has
launched a campaign of violence. On the night of April 15 several CDI
health clinics were attacked across the country, as well as alternative and
state media outlet buildings and journalists, offices of the United
Socialist Party of Venezuela, etc. As a result of this politically
motivated violence 9 people were killed, all of them in the Bolivarian camp.

The noisy campaign of the opposition was combined with a national and
international media campaign, international interference and pressure (from
the United States, Spain and OAS), etc. In effect, the aim was to create a
situation of chaos, challenge all of the democratic institutions and
prepare the way for a coup, just as in April 2002.

Faced with this campaign, described by president Maduro as a “developing
coup d’Etat” we note the following:

   - the Venezuelan presidential election was conducted on the basis of the
   same electoral register, voting system and machines as the October 7
   presidential election, the results of which the opposition did recognise
   - the voting machines and systems were audited prior to the elections,
   on election day and the day after, with the presence of opposition
   technicians and no complaint was registered
   - on election night 54% of polling booths, chosen randomly, were
   publicly audited with the presence of opposition and Bolivarian observers.
   The voting results recorded by the voting machines were checked against the
   paper receipts in the boxes. No complaints were registered.
   - the elections were observed by over 170 international observers from
   many countries including India, Brazil, Great Britain, Argentina, South
   Korea, Spain and France. Among the observers were two former presidents (of
   Guatemala and the Dominican Republic), judges, lawyers and high-ranking
   officials of national electoral councils. All of them stated that the
   elections had been free and fair and the system transparent, reliable,
   well-run and thoroughly audited.
   - all governments around the world have now recognised the
   democratically elected president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, with the
   exception of the United States.
   - instead of following the legal procedures for challenging the result
   or lodging specific complaints, the opposition incited violence. No
   complaints were lodged with the National Electoral Council until four days
   later, when 9 people had already been killed.
   - at the demand of the opposition, the National Electoral Council
   decided to audit the remaining 46% polling booths. The opposition then said
   it would not participate in this audit and would not recognise its results
   and will challenge the election results in front of the Supreme Court of
   Justice.

Hands Off Venezuela conference therefore resolves to:

   - recognise the democratically elected government of Nicolas Maduro
   - explain the real issues involved and counter the lies, manipulation
   and half-truths of the mass media regarding the Bolivarian revolution and
   particularly the election process
   - campaign to defend the democratically expressed will of the Venezuelan
   people and the election of President Maduro against any attempts to remove
   him by means of a coup reject the hypocrisy of the so-called “democratic”
   opposition which is the same one which organised the coup in 2002 and has
   constantly attempted to remove the democratically elected government of
   Venezuela and destroy its Bolivarian revolution
   - demand that those responsible for the violence and the killings of the
   days after the elections should be brought to justice and punished, both
   those who committed those acts as well as those who are responsible for
   incitement - enough impunity
   - redouble our efforts to defend the Bolivarian revolution and organise
   solidarity with it in the British trade union and labour movement and
   amongst the population in general

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

*Solidarity with the women workers of GOTCHA - for nationalisation under
workers control*

This Hands Off Venezuela conference notes the courageous struggle of the
women workers of Gotcha, the textile factory in Aragua.

We note that:

   - the workers of Gotcha attempted to form a union in order to address
   the problems of health and safety, working conditions, legal rights and
   others there were facing in the period of 2006-08.
   - the owner of the factory responded by making all of them redundant and
   abandoning production
   - the workers of Gotcha decided to take over the installations, occupy
   them and start to produce under workers control from 2008.
   - since the beginning of the occupation the workers have had to face
   many attempts by the former owner and also bureaucrats in state
   institutions (like electricity company Corpoelec) to sabotage their
   production.
   - the workers at Gotcha also face problems derived from their lack of
   any legal status.
   - the workers of Gotcha have been struggling for the expropriation of
   the factory under workers control, as has been done previously by the
   Bolivarian government in the cases of Venepal, CNV, INAF and others.
   - the workers of Gotcha have played an active role in the national
   movement for workers control
   - the women workers of Gotcha are an inspiring example of how workers
   can produce without bosses, but bosses cannot produce without workers.

We therefore resolve to:

   - organise solidarity with the struggling women workers of Gotcha within
   the British trade union movement.
   - to request from the Bolivarian government of Nicolas Maduro the
   expropriation of the factory, so that the company can be nationalised under
   the democratic control of the workers themselves.

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

*On the struggle against cuts in Britain and the struggle of Latin American
workers in London*

The Hands off Venezuela conference is outraged by the vicious cuts being
implemented by the ConDem government. This is the worst attack on the
working class in living memory, decimating jobs and services. We note that
this is in complete contrast with the Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela,
where increased investment in health, education, housing, and much more has
transformed the lives of the country’s poor.

We pledge to fight against these cuts and continue working within the Latin
American community and its organisation. We note that whilst in Venezuela
the most vulnerable in society have been empowered by the Bolivarian
revolution, in Britain these cuts will hit the poorest and most vulnerable
hardest - women, the disabled, children, the elderly and immigrants. The
effect on immigrants is likely to be compounded as they become victims of
scape goating. We believe that we must avoid all attempts to divide us and
that the British and immigrant working class must unite and fight these
cuts.

We note that the cuts and privatisations being forced upon us in Britain
are part of a “neoliberal” agenda that was first tested on Latin America to
disastrous consequences, creating extreme poverty and oppression for
millions. We have seen in Latin America the affects of austerity,
capitalism, privatisation, exploitation and enforced poverty, but we have
also seen how popular uprising can bring down governments, defeat
corporations and restore power to the people. Those who refuse to forget
are compelled to support the new revolutionary governments in Latin America
and to fight the destructive policies of the current British government

This is only the beginning. We will continue to mobilise against the cuts,
alongside the other organisations of the Latin American community, by
building a movement that not only challenges the cuts but defeats them.

Hands off Venezuela also agrees to work with the groups of Latin American
workers in London to defend and enhance the wages, standards of living and
conditions of these workers, starting with the fight for a living wage.



We must organize, resist, unite, and fight. We have to throw everything we
have at this government of the rich, including a general strike. We will
fight hasta la victoria siempre!

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

*Hands Off Venezuela Steering Committee*

Katerina Annis, Amancay Colque, Darrall Cozens, Jorge Martin, Rodrigo
Trompiz, Rob Sewell, Julian Sharpe, Matt Stevenson, Ronnie Turus, Rob Walsh
– honorary president: John McDonnell


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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

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