#News | The VII Summit of Heads of State Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) concluded Tuesday with an affirmation of support for the dialogue between the Venezuelan government and the political opposition.
Citing security concerns, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro opted not to participate personally in the summit in Buenos Aires.
“Latin America and the Caribbean must be heard, in a single voice, and tell the United States of America: no more interventionism, no more coup plots, enough of sanctions against the free and sovereign countries of the continent,” said Maduro in a video message delivered during the gathering of the region’s heads of state.
The fate of the dialogue process in Venezuela is uncertain after the head of the Venezuelan government delegation accused the US-backed opposition of failing in its commitment to secure the release of US $3 billion in Venezuelan funds seized by Washington. A member of the opposition negotiating team claimed the release of the funds was “not easy”, while the White House has not commented on the delay.
In its statement, the region’s leaders explicitly called on the “international community” to support the implementation of the deal.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15691
Citing security concerns, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro opted not to participate personally in the summit in Buenos Aires.
“Latin America and the Caribbean must be heard, in a single voice, and tell the United States of America: no more interventionism, no more coup plots, enough of sanctions against the free and sovereign countries of the continent,” said Maduro in a video message delivered during the gathering of the region’s heads of state.
The fate of the dialogue process in Venezuela is uncertain after the head of the Venezuelan government delegation accused the US-backed opposition of failing in its commitment to secure the release of US $3 billion in Venezuelan funds seized by Washington. A member of the opposition negotiating team claimed the release of the funds was “not easy”, while the White House has not commented on the delay.
In its statement, the region’s leaders explicitly called on the “international community” to support the implementation of the deal.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15691
Venezuelanalysis.com
CELAC Summit Backs Venezuelan Dialogue, Maduro Calls for an End to US
Regional leaders also called for an end to the decades-long US blockade of Cuba.
❤2
#News | US Democratic representative and chair of the House Rules Committee, Jim McGovern, sent a letter to President Joe Biden requesting the removal of sanctions against Venezuela for violating human rights.
“The [Biden] administration should assess the humanitarian and human rights impact of all sanctions imposed on Venezuela and seek to lift any whose principal effect, intended or not, is to undermine the livelihoods and well-being of the millions of people who have stayed in the country,” read the letter addressed to the White House.
In his letter, McGovern also encouraged the Biden government to “reconsider reopening consular activities and eventually the US embassy in Venezuela while permitting the Maduro government to do the same in the United States.”
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15692
“The [Biden] administration should assess the humanitarian and human rights impact of all sanctions imposed on Venezuela and seek to lift any whose principal effect, intended or not, is to undermine the livelihoods and well-being of the millions of people who have stayed in the country,” read the letter addressed to the White House.
In his letter, McGovern also encouraged the Biden government to “reconsider reopening consular activities and eventually the US embassy in Venezuela while permitting the Maduro government to do the same in the United States.”
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15692
Venezuelanalysis.com
US Congressman Urges Biden to Lift Venezuela Sanctions, Restore
Jim McGovern (D-MA) demanded Washington expedite the unfreezing of a $3 billion social fund agreed to in the government-opposition talks.
🔥4
The US blockade has had devastating consequences for working-class Venezuelans. In this interview, we learn about its impact on the Alí Primera Commune and their strategies of resistance.
"We are an imperialist target because we are a rich country: we have a lot of oil and other resources that they [the US and allies] need. However, we have been struggling against oppression since the Spanish got here.
Later, in the independence struggle in the early 19th century, we fought for national and social emancipation. Even then, Simón Bolívar was aware of the imperialist threat and said: "the United States appears to be destined by providence to plague Latin America with misery in the name of liberty.” Then, Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution constituted an affront to imperialism, yet we reaffirmed our intention to be a sovereign nation. That is why the US is dead set on bringing this project down."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/15693
"We are an imperialist target because we are a rich country: we have a lot of oil and other resources that they [the US and allies] need. However, we have been struggling against oppression since the Spanish got here.
Later, in the independence struggle in the early 19th century, we fought for national and social emancipation. Even then, Simón Bolívar was aware of the imperialist threat and said: "the United States appears to be destined by providence to plague Latin America with misery in the name of liberty.” Then, Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution constituted an affront to imperialism, yet we reaffirmed our intention to be a sovereign nation. That is why the US is dead set on bringing this project down."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/15693
Venezuelanalysis.com
Sanctioned but Fighting Back: The Alí Primera Commune (Part II)
Besieged by imperialism, a remote commune projects a better future based on solidarity and the commons.
❤6👍2🔥1
#News | The Venezuelan National Assembly (AN) has introduced a bill to supervise non-governmental organizations (NGO) operating in the country.
The parliamentary majority of the ruling United Socialist Party (PSUV) approved the project to legislate the “supervision, regularization, operation and financing” of NGOs during the January 24 AN session.
The draft was passed in its first discussion. It will now move to a “consultation phase” for possible amendments, with some deputies scheduled to hold street assemblies in their constituencies.
AN member and PSUV Vice President Diosdado Cabello, who presented the bill, said the goal is to hold NGOs accountable to Venezuelan authorities.
“This will help us bring order to a sector where there is definitely none,” he said. Cabello claimed that more than 60 NGOs had been identified as having “political and not social objectives.” He named a handful, including Súmate and Futuro Presente, with reported ties to anti-government parties.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15694
The parliamentary majority of the ruling United Socialist Party (PSUV) approved the project to legislate the “supervision, regularization, operation and financing” of NGOs during the January 24 AN session.
The draft was passed in its first discussion. It will now move to a “consultation phase” for possible amendments, with some deputies scheduled to hold street assemblies in their constituencies.
AN member and PSUV Vice President Diosdado Cabello, who presented the bill, said the goal is to hold NGOs accountable to Venezuelan authorities.
“This will help us bring order to a sector where there is definitely none,” he said. Cabello claimed that more than 60 NGOs had been identified as having “political and not social objectives.” He named a handful, including Súmate and Futuro Presente, with reported ties to anti-government parties.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15694
Venezuelanalysis.com
Venezuela: National Assembly Moves to Regulate NGO Activities
Chavista deputies cited a need for transparency and accountability from organizations with foreign funding sources.
🔥7👏3
🧵🧵🧵Lying for a living. Once Reuters finds a compact package for mistruths it will repeat it over and over. The most remarkable absurdities will be written if that means endorsing Washington's disgraceful and murderous foreign policy.
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1619401009226481665
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1619401009226481665
❤6
🧵🗞 Western media reporting on Venezuela is biased almost by definition. We know that going in. But every so often there’s a piece that ticks all the dishonesty boxes. The bad journalism equivalent of a perfect game. You might have guessed, this comes from the Guardian
Read the thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1620237596038422528
Read the thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1620237596038422528
🔥2
#News | United Nations (UN) High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk called on member states to suspend measures such as sanctions that undermine human rights and aggravate the economic crisis in Venezuela.
“It is clear that the sectorial sanctions imposed since August 2017 have exacerbated the economic crisis and hindered human rights,” Türk told reporters upon the conclusion of his visit to the Caribbean country.
As part of his three-day visit, Türk held a face-to-face meeting with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, as well as Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez, among other high-ranking officials.
The UN human rights head likewise emphasized the need for reforms to the country’s justice and security sector and made an explicit call for people “arbitrarily detained” to be released.
“We ratify our commitment to the defense of human rights and the will to advance in the improvement of the justice system,” wrote Maduro on Twitter following his meeting with Türk.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15695
“It is clear that the sectorial sanctions imposed since August 2017 have exacerbated the economic crisis and hindered human rights,” Türk told reporters upon the conclusion of his visit to the Caribbean country.
As part of his three-day visit, Türk held a face-to-face meeting with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, as well as Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez, among other high-ranking officials.
The UN human rights head likewise emphasized the need for reforms to the country’s justice and security sector and made an explicit call for people “arbitrarily detained” to be released.
“We ratify our commitment to the defense of human rights and the will to advance in the improvement of the justice system,” wrote Maduro on Twitter following his meeting with Türk.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15695
Venezuelanalysis
UN Human Rights Chief Calls for Suspension of Sanctions on Venezuela - Venezuelanalysis
Mexico City, Mexico, January 31, 2023 (venezuelanalysis.com) – United Nations (UN) High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk called on member states to suspend measures such as sanctions that undermine human rights and aggravate the economic crisis in…
👍2❤1
#Opinion | A recent trip to the Venezuela-Colombia border had some good and bad surprises for VA columnist Jessica Dos Santos.
"A couple of weeks ago I went to Táchira state, on the border with Colombia. It had been six years since I had last flown by airplane. This flight reminded me how much I enjoy traveling, how wonderful it was to fly when ticket prices were reasonable compared to wages or the times I got to do it on journalistic assignments.
A flight to Táchira these days costs US $100. Going by bus is at least $50 but it takes a whole day. To take one’s own car is nearly impossible because a full gas tank is not enough for the whole trip and filling up along the way can be a rollercoaster. Carrying jerrycans or securing black market suppliers would drive my anxiety up way too much.
Still, I retained hope that upon arriving at San Cristóbal (Táchira capital), one of my friends would offer to drive me around. After all, people from the Andean region are renowned for their generosity. But this did not happen. Reality was no match for whatever goodwill there might have been."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/tales-resistance/15696
"A couple of weeks ago I went to Táchira state, on the border with Colombia. It had been six years since I had last flown by airplane. This flight reminded me how much I enjoy traveling, how wonderful it was to fly when ticket prices were reasonable compared to wages or the times I got to do it on journalistic assignments.
A flight to Táchira these days costs US $100. Going by bus is at least $50 but it takes a whole day. To take one’s own car is nearly impossible because a full gas tank is not enough for the whole trip and filling up along the way can be a rollercoaster. Carrying jerrycans or securing black market suppliers would drive my anxiety up way too much.
Still, I retained hope that upon arriving at San Cristóbal (Táchira capital), one of my friends would offer to drive me around. After all, people from the Andean region are renowned for their generosity. But this did not happen. Reality was no match for whatever goodwill there might have been."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/tales-resistance/15696
Venezuelanalysis.com
Tales of Resistance: The Strange World at the Venezuelan Border
A recent trip to the Venezuela-Colombia border had some good and bad surprises for VA columnist Jessica Dos Santos.
👍3❤1
#Opinion | "Venezuelan women are being murdered at a frightening pace, and yet the country still lacks a clear path of action to understand, report, prevent and eradicate this extreme form of gender-related violence.
Last year alone, the country registered 236 femicides, which means a woman was killed every 37 hours, according to the Utopix Femicide Monitor, a platform that gathers femicide data by scanning digital outlets since 2019. These numbers are even more alarming considering this is an unofficial count; the true scale of femicide is likely much higher.
If we look at recent years, femicides in Venezuela are growing exponentially. The Femicide Monitor tracked 167 cases in 2019 and 256 the next year, a 53 percent increase, as victims of machista violence were forced into lockdown with their aggressors during the Covid-19 pandemic. Then in 2021, 239 women were killed, almost on par with 2022.
Everything indicates that this worrisome trend will continue, but aside from feminist organizations, nobody seems to be sounding the alarms and there is no sign of a comprehensive government plan to assist women at risk."
VA writer Andreína Chávez takes stock of Venezuela's alarming reality of gender violence. 👇
https://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/15698
Last year alone, the country registered 236 femicides, which means a woman was killed every 37 hours, according to the Utopix Femicide Monitor, a platform that gathers femicide data by scanning digital outlets since 2019. These numbers are even more alarming considering this is an unofficial count; the true scale of femicide is likely much higher.
If we look at recent years, femicides in Venezuela are growing exponentially. The Femicide Monitor tracked 167 cases in 2019 and 256 the next year, a 53 percent increase, as victims of machista violence were forced into lockdown with their aggressors during the Covid-19 pandemic. Then in 2021, 239 women were killed, almost on par with 2022.
Everything indicates that this worrisome trend will continue, but aside from feminist organizations, nobody seems to be sounding the alarms and there is no sign of a comprehensive government plan to assist women at risk."
VA writer Andreína Chávez takes stock of Venezuela's alarming reality of gender violence. 👇
https://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/15698
Venezuelanalysis.com
Venezuela Urgently Needs a Feminist Emergency Plan
VA writer Andreína Chávez takes stock of Venezuela's alarming reality of gender violence and the lack of a comprehensive response from the state.
👏6
🧵🗞We have to hand it to them. No one can churn this steady output of pure-grade bullsh*t about Venezuela like Reuters. Let's take a look at the latest propaganda hits:
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1621368213161263104
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1621368213161263104
🔥3
Founded in 2013, the Hugo Chávez Commune is located in an urban-rural territory and is home to more than 22 thousand people.
"This commune was founded the year that Chávez passed away [2013], and it takes his name because Chávez left his imprint on us. The struggle for the land here goes way back, from the Indigenous people who resisted the colonizers to General Ezequiel Zamora [1817-60], who swept the people of Urachiche up in an all-out war against the land-grabbing oligarchy, but it was Chávez’s Land Law [2001] that opened the path toward re-collectivizating of the land.
That is why, while this is an urban and rural commune, the communal spirit is more powerful in the collectivized campesino farmsteads. Within the commune’s territory, there are five “Fundos Zamoranos” [Zamorano Farmsteads] where production is not dictated by the landowning oligarchy but by the campesinos themselves who work the land, and they are vital to the commune. These farmsteads are organized under the legal framework of cooperatives, but they are part of our communal system and represented in our communal parliament."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/15697
"This commune was founded the year that Chávez passed away [2013], and it takes his name because Chávez left his imprint on us. The struggle for the land here goes way back, from the Indigenous people who resisted the colonizers to General Ezequiel Zamora [1817-60], who swept the people of Urachiche up in an all-out war against the land-grabbing oligarchy, but it was Chávez’s Land Law [2001] that opened the path toward re-collectivizating of the land.
That is why, while this is an urban and rural commune, the communal spirit is more powerful in the collectivized campesino farmsteads. Within the commune’s territory, there are five “Fundos Zamoranos” [Zamorano Farmsteads] where production is not dictated by the landowning oligarchy but by the campesinos themselves who work the land, and they are vital to the commune. These farmsteads are organized under the legal framework of cooperatives, but they are part of our communal system and represented in our communal parliament."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/15697
Venezuelanalysis.com
And the Campesinos Won! The Hugo Chávez Commune
The struggle for the land and the impact of the US blockade.
❤5👍1
Venezuela celebrates the Day of National Dignity!
On February 4, 1992, revolutionary leader Hugo Chávez led a civilian-military uprising in an attempt to take down a 40-year-old US-backed neoliberal rule, characterized by runaway corruption and an economic policy at the service of elites and multinational corporations, including IMF austerity plans.
It was not a coup. This was a rebellion born out of decades of struggle against oppression. "Accompanying us were the students massacred in the 70s and 80s, the peasants of Yumare and Cantaura [army masscres], the rebels from all roads,” explained Chávez in 2007.
The young military officials were unable to seize power from the country’s oligarchs and had to face prison time, but the rebellion sparked hope and revitalized the struggle for sovereignty, dignity and socialism. It became the genesis of the Bolivarian Revolution and Chávez’s birth as a revolutionary leader.
Then Lieutenant Colonel Hugo Chávez took responsibility for the failed rebellion and conquered the hearts of millions in a brief television appearance: "Listen to Comandante Chávez... New situations will come, there will be new challenges and the country will definitively have to move towards a better destiny.”
Six years later, Chávez won the 1998 presidential elections with overwhelming popular support and began the process of liberating Venezuela, starting by paying a decades-long social debt to the people in the form of poverty eradication, access to education, healthcare, housing and more.
Today, the Venezuelan people celebrate the 31st anniversary of the rebellion as the day an entire country reclaimed its dignity and rose up against Washington’s neo-colonialism.
Want to learn more about this historical rebellion? Read the chronicle written by VA writer Andreína Chávez for @utopix.cc 👇
https://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/15445
On February 4, 1992, revolutionary leader Hugo Chávez led a civilian-military uprising in an attempt to take down a 40-year-old US-backed neoliberal rule, characterized by runaway corruption and an economic policy at the service of elites and multinational corporations, including IMF austerity plans.
It was not a coup. This was a rebellion born out of decades of struggle against oppression. "Accompanying us were the students massacred in the 70s and 80s, the peasants of Yumare and Cantaura [army masscres], the rebels from all roads,” explained Chávez in 2007.
The young military officials were unable to seize power from the country’s oligarchs and had to face prison time, but the rebellion sparked hope and revitalized the struggle for sovereignty, dignity and socialism. It became the genesis of the Bolivarian Revolution and Chávez’s birth as a revolutionary leader.
Then Lieutenant Colonel Hugo Chávez took responsibility for the failed rebellion and conquered the hearts of millions in a brief television appearance: "Listen to Comandante Chávez... New situations will come, there will be new challenges and the country will definitively have to move towards a better destiny.”
Six years later, Chávez won the 1998 presidential elections with overwhelming popular support and began the process of liberating Venezuela, starting by paying a decades-long social debt to the people in the form of poverty eradication, access to education, healthcare, housing and more.
Today, the Venezuelan people celebrate the 31st anniversary of the rebellion as the day an entire country reclaimed its dignity and rose up against Washington’s neo-colonialism.
Want to learn more about this historical rebellion? Read the chronicle written by VA writer Andreína Chávez for @utopix.cc 👇
https://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/15445
Venezuelanalysis
February 4’s Revolutionary Seeds in Venezuela - Venezuelanalysis
No one knew for sure at the time, but in the early hours of February 4, 1992, Venezuelan history would be broken in two. A civilian-military uprising, led by then Lieutenant Colonel Hugo Chávez would become the trigger for the Bolivarian Revolution. “Venezuela…
❤8
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Under US sanctions, Venezuela's public sector workers have been the most affected by the country's years-long economic crisis. Recently, they have staged several rallies to demand better wages amidst an unequal economic recovery.
#workersrights
#workersrights
👍2🙏1
#News | Venezuela and Iran will rehabilitate the South American nation's largest refining complex, opening a pathway to ending dependency on US technology.
News of the plan to revamp the Paraguaná Refining Complex comes on the heels of a visit by Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian where he met directly with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez and Oil Minister Tareck El Aissami.
Maduro welcomed Amir-Abdollahian inside the Miraflores Presidential Palace on Friday, calling the visit “productive”.
“I am confident that our relations will continue to strengthen for technological, industrial, scientific and cultural exchange that benefits both peoples,” wrote Maduro on his Twitter account following the meeting.
Venezuela and Iran enjoy close political, economic, and diplomatic relations, which have been further strengthened as a result of increased interference by Washington and the imposition of punishing sanctions regimes on both countries.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15700
News of the plan to revamp the Paraguaná Refining Complex comes on the heels of a visit by Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian where he met directly with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez and Oil Minister Tareck El Aissami.
Maduro welcomed Amir-Abdollahian inside the Miraflores Presidential Palace on Friday, calling the visit “productive”.
“I am confident that our relations will continue to strengthen for technological, industrial, scientific and cultural exchange that benefits both peoples,” wrote Maduro on his Twitter account following the meeting.
Venezuela and Iran enjoy close political, economic, and diplomatic relations, which have been further strengthened as a result of increased interference by Washington and the imposition of punishing sanctions regimes on both countries.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15700
Venezuelanalysis
Venezuela and Iran to Revamp Massive Oil Complex After Visit by FM - Venezuelanalysis
Mexico City, Mexico, February 7, 2023 (venezuelanalysis.com) – Venezuela and Iran will rehabilitate the South American nation’s largest refining complex, opening a pathway to ending dependency on US technology. News of the plan to revamp the Paraguaná Refining…
👍2
#Opinion | VA columnist Reinaldo Iturriza sets the record straight on some mischaracterizations of the Chávez years in Venezuela.
"It is true that, in general terms, Chávez's time in power coincided with a new, albeit brief, phase of the material expansion of the cycle of capital accumulation in Venezuela, but it was not a simple and fortunate coincidence, in spite of those who try to explain that period using the hackneyed cliché of the abundance of “petrodollars”.
There was fortune, but also virtue, as the Brazilian André Singer has written concerning Lula da Silva, in his extraordinary analysis of Lulismo. Virtue and fortune. Among the virtues of Hugo Chávez in the Presidency, two of them should be highlighted: on the one hand, the democratization of the distribution of [oil] rent to begin paying off the enormous social debt, which fundamentally implies a [deliberate] decision to substantially modify redistributive policies and not because of an abundant availability of resources, a fact contrary to what is frequently claimed; and on the other hand, the decision to introduce structural changes in the economy, gradually creating the conditions to move from a rent-seeking economy to a productive type."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/politics-commons/15701
"It is true that, in general terms, Chávez's time in power coincided with a new, albeit brief, phase of the material expansion of the cycle of capital accumulation in Venezuela, but it was not a simple and fortunate coincidence, in spite of those who try to explain that period using the hackneyed cliché of the abundance of “petrodollars”.
There was fortune, but also virtue, as the Brazilian André Singer has written concerning Lula da Silva, in his extraordinary analysis of Lulismo. Virtue and fortune. Among the virtues of Hugo Chávez in the Presidency, two of them should be highlighted: on the one hand, the democratization of the distribution of [oil] rent to begin paying off the enormous social debt, which fundamentally implies a [deliberate] decision to substantially modify redistributive policies and not because of an abundant availability of resources, a fact contrary to what is frequently claimed; and on the other hand, the decision to introduce structural changes in the economy, gradually creating the conditions to move from a rent-seeking economy to a productive type."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/politics-commons/15701
Venezuelanalysis.com
Politics of the Commons: Finding the Way Out of the Labyrinth
In his latest VA column, Iturriza argues that the Bolivarian Process needs to recover a historic thread that is currently broken.
❤4👍1
🧵Whenever we read a corporate media piece about Venezuela, the 1st instinct is to go crazy at all the disingenuous reporting and biased narratives. Not great for your health. But after we’ve gathered ourselves, it’s useful to break down the propaganda. Bear w/ us here!
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1623558586046488577
Twitter thread: https://twitter.com/venanalysis/status/1623558586046488577
🔥3
#News | President Nicolás Maduro blasted Washington’s “global dictatorship” imposed through sanctions waivers that condition how countries and companies do business with Venezuela.
"They [the US] tell a country it has permission to negotiate with Venezuela, but it cannot pay in dollars or any form of cash. It must pay with food or products. That is colonialism," President Maduro said in a broadcast on February 2.
Maduro specifically criticized the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) for issuing licenses that allow foreign companies to resume production and trade with Venezuelan state oil company (PDVSA) under very restrictive conditions, such as limited timeframes and no cash payments to Caracas.
The Venezuelan leader likewise accused the US of establishing a “global dictatorship” and stressed that the OFAC licenses are “an insult to sovereignty.” Maduro called for Latin American and Caribbean countries and governments to “denounce this colonial model.”
President Maduro’s strong rebuke against the OFAC licenses came after the US Treasury issued a two-year sanctions waiver for Trinidad and Tobago to import natural gas from Venezuela’s large offshore Dragon reserves but barring “any cash payments from this project,” according to an anonymous senior US official cited by Reuters.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15702
"They [the US] tell a country it has permission to negotiate with Venezuela, but it cannot pay in dollars or any form of cash. It must pay with food or products. That is colonialism," President Maduro said in a broadcast on February 2.
Maduro specifically criticized the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) for issuing licenses that allow foreign companies to resume production and trade with Venezuelan state oil company (PDVSA) under very restrictive conditions, such as limited timeframes and no cash payments to Caracas.
The Venezuelan leader likewise accused the US of establishing a “global dictatorship” and stressed that the OFAC licenses are “an insult to sovereignty.” Maduro called for Latin American and Caribbean countries and governments to “denounce this colonial model.”
President Maduro’s strong rebuke against the OFAC licenses came after the US Treasury issued a two-year sanctions waiver for Trinidad and Tobago to import natural gas from Venezuela’s large offshore Dragon reserves but barring “any cash payments from this project,” according to an anonymous senior US official cited by Reuters.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15702
Venezuelanalysis.com
Venezuela Denounces US ‘Colonial Model’ via OFAC Licenses
Venezuela and Trinidad have engaged in talks to reactivate the gas-exporting Dragon field for mutual benefit despite the US cash payment ban.
👏4👍2❤1
#Interview | Venezuelan economist and National Assembly member Tony Boza contrasts the nature of the Venezuelan economy when Chávez came into power and the changes he promoted by channeling oil profits toward working-class needs.
"It is important to say, however, that Chávez didn’t come to power with a socialist economic plan. In fact, he ran for president on a discourse inspired by Anthony Giddens’s “Third Way.” However, class struggle, as it expressed itself in the first years of his presidency, led him to question the viability of combining capitalism with social justice.
Around that time, Chávez also discovered that the key issue in Venezuela’s unequal distribution was the oil rent. That is when he began the process of re-nationalizing the oil industry, which had been partly privatized and decentralized in the 1990s. Neoliberal technocrats had promoted privatization on the grounds that [state oil company] “PDVSA wasn’t viable.” Mind you, we are talking about one of the largest oil companies in the world and the one that sits on top of the largest oil reserves on the planet!
That is what Chávez faced in 1998: an enterprise that was managed piecemeal and by private interests. Little by little, Chávez was able to regain control over the oil industry. He did so through the Oil Law [2001]; the expulsion of the so-called “PDVSA meritocracy,” which was serving the interests of capital; and the recomposition of OPEC. In brief, Chávez retook control of a formerly bankrupt enterprise and put it at the nation’s service."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/15699
"It is important to say, however, that Chávez didn’t come to power with a socialist economic plan. In fact, he ran for president on a discourse inspired by Anthony Giddens’s “Third Way.” However, class struggle, as it expressed itself in the first years of his presidency, led him to question the viability of combining capitalism with social justice.
Around that time, Chávez also discovered that the key issue in Venezuela’s unequal distribution was the oil rent. That is when he began the process of re-nationalizing the oil industry, which had been partly privatized and decentralized in the 1990s. Neoliberal technocrats had promoted privatization on the grounds that [state oil company] “PDVSA wasn’t viable.” Mind you, we are talking about one of the largest oil companies in the world and the one that sits on top of the largest oil reserves on the planet!
That is what Chávez faced in 1998: an enterprise that was managed piecemeal and by private interests. Little by little, Chávez was able to regain control over the oil industry. He did so through the Oil Law [2001]; the expulsion of the so-called “PDVSA meritocracy,” which was serving the interests of capital; and the recomposition of OPEC. In brief, Chávez retook control of a formerly bankrupt enterprise and put it at the nation’s service."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/15699
Venezuelanalysis.com
Chávez Built a New Economy: A Conversation with Tony Boza (Part I)
An economist and National Assembly member reflects on the economic transformations that Chávez promoted.
👏3
The Venezuelanalysis Podcast Episode 13: Solidarity vs. Sanctions
Sanctions, also known as unilateral coercive measures, should primarily be understood as a tool of neocolonialism. After failing with outright coup attempts, Washington has turned to economic sanctions as the weapon of choice to try and trigger regime change in Venezuela.
In this podcast episode, host José Luis Granados Ceja is joined by fellow VA staffer Ricardo Vaz to discuss how there have been little to no changes to these deadly policies, and how the Venezuelan economy, despite a recent recovery, remains in a "straight-jacket."
Also featured is Michelle Ellner, a Latin America campaign coordinator at Code Pink, who discussed ongoing efforts from US-based solidarity collectives to challenge US foreign policy and hold representatives accountable.
Subscribe now to listen 👇
https://www.patreon.com/posts/venezuelanalysis-78600610
Sanctions, also known as unilateral coercive measures, should primarily be understood as a tool of neocolonialism. After failing with outright coup attempts, Washington has turned to economic sanctions as the weapon of choice to try and trigger regime change in Venezuela.
In this podcast episode, host José Luis Granados Ceja is joined by fellow VA staffer Ricardo Vaz to discuss how there have been little to no changes to these deadly policies, and how the Venezuelan economy, despite a recent recovery, remains in a "straight-jacket."
Also featured is Michelle Ellner, a Latin America campaign coordinator at Code Pink, who discussed ongoing efforts from US-based solidarity collectives to challenge US foreign policy and hold representatives accountable.
Subscribe now to listen 👇
https://www.patreon.com/posts/venezuelanalysis-78600610
Patreon
The Venezuelanalysis Podcast Episode 13: Solidarity vs. Sanctions | Venezuelanalysis on Patreon
Official Post from Venezuelanalysis
❤4
#Opinion | Recent US foreign policy precedents should show Venezuela what (not) to expect in the ongoing dialogue with the opposition, Sergio Rodríguez argues.
"Washington is using the most retrograde, violent, and anti-democratic sector of the Venezuelan opposition in Mexico while it deploys all the resources and instruments it has in its arsenal, including the "interim government," which is both anti-constitutional and non-existent in real terms. While the “interim government” has transitioned into an ”interim parliament,” the aggression continues. Interestingly, the decision did not ruffle too many feathers in the majority of the terrorist opposition sector because Guaidó did not carry out an efficient and equitable distribution of the resources obtained from theft.
Nevertheless, Washington continues to demand that its surrogates remain in the Mexico dialogue. However, without an embassy in Caracas, the US finds itself blind, deaf, and mute, so it clings to the only thing that it has to "maintain" its political influence in Venezuela.
Opening up the perspective, the Mexico dialogues are happening as the coercive measures adopted against Russia trigger economic disaster for the US and its allies, but it is still hard to explain to public opinion why OFAC gave the green light so that a US oil company [Chevron] reactivates its operations in Venezuela."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/around-world-60-days/15703
"Washington is using the most retrograde, violent, and anti-democratic sector of the Venezuelan opposition in Mexico while it deploys all the resources and instruments it has in its arsenal, including the "interim government," which is both anti-constitutional and non-existent in real terms. While the “interim government” has transitioned into an ”interim parliament,” the aggression continues. Interestingly, the decision did not ruffle too many feathers in the majority of the terrorist opposition sector because Guaidó did not carry out an efficient and equitable distribution of the resources obtained from theft.
Nevertheless, Washington continues to demand that its surrogates remain in the Mexico dialogue. However, without an embassy in Caracas, the US finds itself blind, deaf, and mute, so it clings to the only thing that it has to "maintain" its political influence in Venezuela.
Opening up the perspective, the Mexico dialogues are happening as the coercive measures adopted against Russia trigger economic disaster for the US and its allies, but it is still hard to explain to public opinion why OFAC gave the green light so that a US oil company [Chevron] reactivates its operations in Venezuela."
https://venezuelanalysis.com/around-world-60-days/15703
Venezuelanalysis.com
Around the World in 60 Days: The Mexico Charade by a Desperate
Recent US foreign policy precedents should show Venezuela what (not) to expect in the ongoing dialogue with the opposition, Sergio Rodríguez argues.
👍2
#News | Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro expressed his condolences to President Bashar al-Assad in a phone call Monday with his Syrian counterpart after more than 36,000 people were killed and thousands injured when a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck Syria and Turkey last week.
Venezuela quickly dispatched humanitarian aid and a team of rescue workers to the earthquake-stricken region. The Simon Bolivar Humanitarian Task Force has focused its efforts in Latakia, in northwestern Syria, which had received little assistance.
Analysts have attributed the lack of sufficient aid to affected areas in Syria to the sanctions imposed on the al-Assad government following years of war between the state and Western-backed rebel forces.
According to a communique from the Venezuelan government, Maduro expressed his faith that the Syrian people would be able to overcome the consequences of the earthquake as they have with the “terrorist war driven by imperialism”.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15704
Venezuela quickly dispatched humanitarian aid and a team of rescue workers to the earthquake-stricken region. The Simon Bolivar Humanitarian Task Force has focused its efforts in Latakia, in northwestern Syria, which had received little assistance.
Analysts have attributed the lack of sufficient aid to affected areas in Syria to the sanctions imposed on the al-Assad government following years of war between the state and Western-backed rebel forces.
According to a communique from the Venezuelan government, Maduro expressed his faith that the Syrian people would be able to overcome the consequences of the earthquake as they have with the “terrorist war driven by imperialism”.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/15704
Venezuelanalysis.com
Venezuela Voices Solidarity with Syria & Turkey as Earthquake Rescue
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad expressed his gratitude for the aid from the Venezuelan people despite also suffering from US sanctions.
👏4🔥1