Yet another move forward has been made in the trade union movement in support of the
Bolivarian revolution.
A motion calling on trade unionists to support and promote the reforms
in Venezuela, was agreed at the Trades Union Councils’ Conference
Liverpool (UK) 10-12 June 2005.
In addition to the unanimous support by the Trades Union Councils
across the country, numerous copies of the DVD The Revolution Will Not
Be Televised were distributed. This has proven to be one of the most
effective tools at proving the lies and corruption of the opposition.
Yvonne Washbourne moved the motion on behalf of the West Midlands CATUC
and informed the delegates of the significant reforms made in Venezuela
and the illegal pressure of the US.
Nick Kelleher W-Ton TUC spoke in support of the motion and urged all
people to raise the issue within their international committees and
co-ordinate work through the VSUK. A full copy of the motion is
available on Venezuelasolidarity.org.uk and the action points included
1) Express its solidarity to the trade unionists of the UNT.
2) Support the Venezuelan people in their effort to extend social and economic freedom.
3) Support and promote Solidarity campaigns within Britain that support the popular reforms.
4) Encourage solidarity activities to be co-ordinated via the newly
established Venezuela Solidarity Campaign at venezuelasolidarity.org.uk.
Andy Goodall of VSUK stated: “At this moment when there is a real
threat of assassination by the fascist and US supported big business of
president Chavez. It is critical that workers in Venezuela are
supported worldwide and we put pressure on our national governments to
resist illegal US interference. Anybody interested in finding out more
about the campaign then visit Venezuelasolidarity.org.uk.
"We are going to hit a Cuban airplane," said Luis Posada in Caracas,
Venezuela, according to a recently declassified CIA document. On
October 6 1976, just days later, Cubana Airline flight 455 exploded
off the coast of Barbados, killing all 73 passengers.
Posada, who is 77 and has dual Venezuelan and Cuban citizenship, was
arrested in Miami on May 17 for illegal entry into the US. He is
claiming asylum and, so far, the Bush administration has refused to
extradite him to Venezuela, where he is wanted for the terrorist
bombing.
Until 1974, the ex-CIA agent, who specialised in explosives at
Fort Benning, Georgia (later home to the infamous School of the
Americas), was head of the Venezuelan political police — DISIP — from
where he, reportedly, oversaw the assassination of prominent leftists.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has threatened to sever diplomatic
links if Posada is not turned over, which the US is obliged to do
under bilateral treaties. He has accused the US of harbouring a known
international terrorist, making a mockery of its “war on terror.”
“We demand that the US government stop its hypocrisy and its two-faced
attitude and send this terrorist, this bandit, to Venezuela,” Chavez
insisted last month. “The world is watching.”
This case has become a major headache for George Bush, who is loth to
give up such a loyal veteran of the right-wing cause.
Posada is hailed as a hero among Miami’s rich, Castro-hating Cuban
exiles, who form a key component of his base of support, as well as
that of Bush’s brother Jeb, the governor of Florida.
A policeman in the Batista dictatorship, Posada also participated in
the Bay of Pigs invasion as part of “Operation 40.” Their mission was
simply to assassinate Castro.
He also freelanced for the Las Vegas mafia, at one point, supplying
mob boss Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal with detonators and fuses for
car-bombs, according to the FBI.
Two Argentinian founders of the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo, a movement
which supports parents of missing or tortured people in south America,
are also demanding Posada’s extradition. They accuse him of
involvement in Operation Condor, the US military plan which
co-ordinated the bloodthirsty dictatorships of the 1970s in the region.
After bribing his way out of Venezuelan jail in 1985, he worked for
Oliver North, directing terror against the people of Nicaragua,
supplying the US-backed Contras with weapons in an illegal war against
the Sandinista government.
The main focus throughout his life, however, seems to be an obsession
with overthrowing Fidel Castro.
Posada masterminded a string of bombings in Havana during an
international youth and student festival in 1997, resulting in the
death of an Italian tourist at the Copacabana hotel.
“We didn’t want to hurt anybody,” he claimed in an interview with the
New York Times the following year. “We just wanted to make a big
scandal so that the tourists don’t come any more.”
“I sleep like a baby,” he famously boasted, showing little remorse for
the misery he caused. “That Italian was sitting in the wrong place at
the wrong time.”
In 2000, he was caught red-handed in Panama, preparing to assassinate
Castro by blowing up a packed auditorium of over 3,000 students with
33 pounds of C-4 explosives. Although found guilty, he was pardoned in
2004 by outgoing President Mireya Moscoso, who promptly moved to Miami.
Reports that he was back in the US began surfacing earlier this year,
but the government denied any knowledge of his whereabouts. However,
after Posada held a press conference in Miami, this illusion was
impossible to sustain and it was forced to act.
Appearing in an El Paso, Texas, courtroom last Monday, dressed in a
red prison suit and bullet-proof vest, Posada renewed his request for
asylum. His lawyer argued that his green card is still valid and
requested that the case be moved to Miami.
The judge set an August 29 trial date and will decide next Friday
whether to grant the self-confessed terrorist bail. The immigration
trial is seen by Venezuela as a stalling tactic to obstruct the far
more serious issue of extradition.
“The US government should not believe that, because it is delaying the
process, the people are going to give in,” said Nicolas Maduro,
president of the Venezuelan parliament. This week, Maduro announced
that a parliamentary delegation had been sent to Washington to demand
Posada’s extradition.
That message was echoed by protesters around the world, with millions
taking to the streets in Cuba and Venezuela. Outside the El Paso
courtroom on Monday and in 13 other cities across the US,
demonstrations were held by anti-war coalition ANSWER.
On the same day, solidarity activists from Cuba, Venezuela, Colombia
and Bolivia campaigns picketed the US embassy in London. Protests have
also been held in Mexico, Spain, Portugal and the Philippines.
The problem for Bush is that, if he backs down, it will be seen as a
major propaganda victory for Chavez and Castro, whom he views as
deadly enemies. Both are left-wing charismatic leaders who give their
people hope instead of fear and invest their nations’ resources in
health care and education rather than weapons and the stock-market.
The US backed a failed coup against Chavez in 2002 and it has
consistently labeled him a “negative force.” As well as providing an
energy lifeline to Cuba by bartering oil for doctors, he has
successfully torpedoed the neoliberal FTAA agreement, promoting his
own “Bolivarian” alternative based on co-operation not competition
between countries. The US imports 15 per cent of its oil from
Venezuela.
Luis Posada is an old man who has dedicated his life to terrorising
progressive movements in Latin America on behalf of the US. But one of
the most dramatic allegations against him centres around some
terrorism a little closer to home. Compelling evidence exists
suggesting that Posada was part of the team that assassinated John F
Kennedy, on whom he blamed the Bay of Pigs fiasco.
“Who, in 1963, had the resources to assassinate Kennedy? Who had the
means and who had the motives to kill the US president?” asks Fabian
Escalante, former head of Cuban counter-intelligence. “CIA agents from
Operation 40 who were rabidly anti-Kennedy.”
Maria Lorenz was briefly Castro’s lover before being recruited by the
CIA. In 1985, she testified under oath that, the week before the JFK
assassination, she travelled from Miami to Dallas with members of
Operation 40 in two cars carrying weapons in the boots.
In a videotaped interview made shortly before he died, Chauncy Holt, a
self-confessed CIA asset and mobster, identified Posada as one of the
Cuban exiles who were in Dealey Plaza at the time of the assassination.
Whether he was involved or not, it is clear that Luis Posada is a
dangerous, vicious psychopath who should not be able to freely wander
the streets no matter who he works for. As Chavez puts it, “The US has
no choice, either send him to Venezuela or be seen by the world as
protecting terrorism.”
The US corporate elite, who are no fans of Chavez themselves, seem to
agree that Posada must be sent to Venezuela or US credibility in the
“war on terror” will be completely lost. All major newspapers support
the extradition, even the right-wing Miami Herald — aka the
“Coup-plotters’ Journal.”
Bush himself put it best when he said bluntly, shortly after September
11, “If you harbour terrorists, you are terrorists.” But will the CIA
ever let someone as knowledgeable as Posada spill the beans on all
their dirty tricks over these last four decades in Latin America?
For the last four weeks, Bolivian workers and peasants have been
mobilising demanding the nationalisation of the country's oil and gas
reserves. This movement represents the will of the majority of
Bolivians to win control over their natural resources. The oil and gas
multinationals have been benefiting from the country’s natural
resources through illegal contracts for years, while the majority of
Bolivians live under the poverty line.
Far from being a “radical minority” as president Mesa said, those who
demand nationalisation of gas are the majority, as was shown by the
open mass meeting that took place on June 6th in La Paz, with half a
million people present, and the continued strength of the general
strike, road blockades, mass marches and demonstrations.
We wholeheartedly support the legitimate demands of Bolivian workers
and peasants and give support to their movement and organisations and
the decisions they take about how to conduct their struggle.
We reject any attempt of the government or sections of parliament to
impose a military solution or the use of repression to put an end to
the protests. We also reject the attempts of the so-called “Civic
Committees” in Santa Cruz and other regions to use paramilitary gangs
against the peasant mobilisation.
We reject any foreign intervention. The solution to the problems facing
the Bolivian people must be in the hands of the people themselves,
without any interference from the Organisation of American States, the
United States, etc.
We appeal to the labour and trade union movement worldwide and to all
progressive people to show solidarity with the Bolivian workers and
peasants in these crucial moments, send solidarity resolutions, pass
motions, organise pickets of the embassies and oil multinationals, and
in general support our Bolivian brothers and sisters.
Further details from
Bolivia Solidarity Campaign
53 Fladgate Road
London
E11 1LX
Ft. Lauderdale, FL, June 5, 2005—The representative of the host state, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, spoke at the 35th General Assembly of the OAS this Sunday night.
Referring to Secretary General Insulza, Rice said she and US President George W. Bush looked forward to working with Insulza towards making the OAS a “very effective organization for the promotion of democracy and prosperity in our hemisphere.”
Rice cast the US conflict with Venezuela as a divide between “nations that promote democracy, good governance and free trade, and those that do not. Washington is eager to have good relations with all nations…provided that they agree on those core concepts.” Her paring of democracy with free-markets provides a particular contrast to Venezuela, given that perhaps the most fundamental conflict between the US and Venezuela is over the neoliberal model.
"The last time the OAS met in the US in 1974," noted Rice, "10 of 23 members were dictators." "For seven days leaders of non-democratic countries waxed hypocritically on the ideals of 'democracy,'" she said, criticizing the 'old OAS' for being “long on talk and short on action.”
At the time, many of the military dictators Rice referred to were the US government’s closest allies in the region. The meeting in 1976, when the OAS held its 5th General Assembly in Santiago, Chile, was home of the US-supported Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.
Rice also reiterated a now common statement, generally understood as a reference to Venezuela, saying, “Governments that are elected democratically, must govern democratically. And as Secretary-General Insulza has rightly declared: governments that fail to reach this crucial standard must be accountable to the OAS.” When Insulza made this statement, it was, according to an aide to Secretary Rice, insisted upon word-for-word by Secretary Rice as the condition for US support for Insulza’s leadership bid at the OAS.
"We at the OAS must be impatient, we must replace excessive talk with action,” said Rice. “We must never accept that democracy is merely an ideal to be admired instead of a purpose to be realized.”
OAS Interventionism
In a press briefing given on the plane to Florida this morning, Secretary Rice did not mince words on what she sees as the necessary teeth the OAS must develop. Rice responded to a question regarding the adverse reaction of a number of Latin American ambassadors to US proposals to create a mechanism for OAS intervention, saying “let me say again the OAS has intervened in the past…this is not a matter of intervening to punish; it is a matter of intervening to try and sustain the development of democratic institutions across the region.”
For his part, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez said “if any member-government of the OAS should be monitored, it’s the government of the United States.” “A government that supports terrorists, invades countries, that tramples its own people, that is trying to impose a global dictatorship,” said the Venezuelan President, “is the government that should be monitored for human rights violations.”
"America has a message for the nations of the world: If you harbor terrorists, you are terrorists. If you train or arm a terrorist, you are a terrorist. If you feed a terrorist or fund a terrorist, you're a terrorist, and you will be held accountable." George W. Bush, 21st November 2001
Cuban-Venezuelan Luis Posada is wanted for blowing up an airliner in
1976, killing 73 people. He was arrested last month in the US, which
is refusing to hand him over to Venezuela, where he escaped from jail.
His partner in crime, Orlando Bosch, was given a presidential pardon
by Bush the Elder and now lives in Miami, where they have named a
street after him.
In Colombia this year a total of seven US soldiers (including a
colonel) have been arrested for, between them, selling ammunition to
right-wing paramilitaries and attempting to smuggle cocaine into the
US. Before the Colombian judiciary could blink, they were whisked out
of the country to prevent further embarrassment and have not yet been
charged with any crime.
Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada used to be President of Bolivia, before he
ordered the massacre of peaceful protesters in 2003 and fled to Miami
to escape the furious backlash. Bolivians want him tried for crimes
against humanity, but that doesn't seem likely while he's protected by
the US government, who immediately granted him political asylum.
Notice a pattern?
The problem for Bush is that these cases all reveal the ugly underside
of US foreign policy in Latin America. Declassified FBI documents
prove Posada was a CIA agent (specialising in explosives) while also
freelancing for the Las Vegas mafia. After escaping Venezuelan jail in
1985 he worked for Oliver North supplying arms to the US-backed
Contras in their war against the left-wing Sandinista government in
Nicaragua. His terrorist career continues in Cuba (where he had been a
policeman under the Batista dictatorship) with a string of hotel
bombings during an international youth festival in 1997, resulting in
several injuries and the death of an Italian tourist. In an interview
with the New York Times the following year Posada practically boasted
about this terrorism. He was part of the infamous Operation Condor,
which co-ordinated right-wing military dicatorships in the region for
the US government, and has tried to assassinate Castro at least twice:
once in Caracas in 1971 (while head of DISIP, the Venezuelan political
police) and again in 2000 in Panama, where he served four years in
jail before being pardoned by the outgoing president (who now lives in
Florida).
On Monday 13th June, there will be an immigration hearing in El Paso,
Texas, to decide Posada's fate. The case has become a major headache
for George Bush, as Posada is hailed as a hero amongst the rich
right-wing Castro-hating Miami Cubans who form a key component of his
(and especially his brother's) base of support. However, refusal to
extradite Posada will clearly make a mockery of the whole "War on
Terror". Posada is a 77-year-old man who has lead a lifetime of
terrorism directed against progressive movements in Latin America. The
embarrassing fact that this terror was in line with US foreign policy
and supported by the US government doesn't make harbouring him any
less hypocritical. Join the international outrage over these
double-standards and protest outside the US embassy in London on this
day from 4pm to 7pm. Music, food and an open-mic, with speakers from
Hands Off Venezuela, Bolivia Solidarity Campaign, Colombia Solidarity
Campaign and others. Pass it on!
www.handsoffvenezuela.org
www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk
www.boliviasc.org.uk
On his way back from the International Labour Organisation Conference, Orlando Chirino, National Coordinator of Venezuela's National Workers Union (UNT) will be speaking at a meeting in London.
The UNT was founded in August 2003 as the response of democratic trade unionists in Venezuela to the fact that the unelected and illegitimate leadership of the CTV had supported and participated in the military coup in April 2002 and the bosses lock out in December 2002.
The UNT has now became the main trade union organisation in Venezuela and is actively participating in the struggle for workers' control and co-management that is taking place in state owned companies like Alcasa and Cadafe and recently nationalised ones like Venepal and CNV.
With decades of experience in the trade union movement, especially in the hard struggles of the textile workers, Chirino
became one of the main trade union leaders in the industrial state of
Carabobo, participated in the formation of more than 80 different
unions and was a member of the regional trade union centre
Fetracarabobo. He played a key role in the struggle against the coup in
April 2002, and the bosses lock out of December 2002. He lead the
foundation of the UNT in his capacity as a leader of the Bolivarian
Workers' Force.
Other speakers at the meeting are still to be confirmed, but with growing interest in the British trade union movement about the situation of the trade unions in Venezuela this is a unique chance to come and discuss.
June 15th
7pm
University of London Union
Malet Street
London
WC1E 7HY
(nearest tube stations: Russel Sq, Goodge St, Warren St)
see map
Hands Off Venezuela supporters organised a stall at the conference and we were able to distribute literature and collect 130 signatures (about half of conference delegates) for our open letter to the US trade union movement, including many of the leaders of the union. There was a lot of interest in our stall, delegates were keen to hear about events in Latin America and we had some very interesting discussions. We also made some important new links for the campaign with several delegates agreeing to organise film screenings in their colleges.
Fringe meeting
We held a joint fringe meeting, with Justice For Columbia and the Cuban Ambassador in the conference hall on Saturday evening. The attendance, of around 35, was not bad considering it was cut across to some extent by the late finish of conference and other meetings taking place at the same time.
Zelmys Dominguez, Political Counsellor of the Cuban Embassy spoke first and highlighted the role that Cuba has played in helping other countries around the world develop their health and education systems by providing teachers and doctors. This has been very important in Venezuela. She also explained that US imperialism has been trying to isolate Cuba, and that international labour movement support has been important.
The next to speak was Hubert de Jesus Ballesteros, Deputy Leader of the Fensuagro, the Colombian agricultural workers union, who talked about the climate of repression that exists for trade unionists in Colombia. He explained that assassination of leaders and activists is a standard way for the bosses to deal with the unions, and even ‘respectable’ multinationals are implicated in this.
Noting that there are stark contrasts in Latin America, from the severe repression of Colombia to the situation in Venezuela that is strongly in favour of the working class, the chair, NEC member Maire Daley, introduced Jorge Martin from the Hands Off Venezuela campaign.
Jorge talked about recent pressure by US imperialism to isolate Venezuela diplomatically. A recent article by Otto Reich, describes Castro and Chavez as an axis of evil, while high profile trips to Latin America by Condoleeza Rice and Donald Rumsfelt have attempted to stir up opposition. These attempts have so far been unsuccessful.
He explained that the masses have been the driving force of the revolution at every stage, first in overturning the successful opposition coup, then in saving the economy by taking over the running of industry at the time of the bosses lockout and finally in defeating the opposition during the recall referendum. He went on to list the social gains of the revolution which include the nationalisation of certain factories under workers control, the distribution of unused land to the peasants and the extensive social programme which is introducing universal healthcare and eradicating illiteracy.
There was a lively discussion that focused on how best to build links with the workers in each of these countries, especially Colombia and Venezuela, and on what we can do to help. The meeting helped to prepare the ground for the motion before conference to support Venezuela.
Conference motion
The motion on Venezuela was heard in the international discussion on Monday morning. The mover of the motion, Darrel Cozens from West Midlands region, drew attention to the gains that the revolution has meant for ordinary people, pointing to the social programmes that are bringing health and education to young and old. He also explained that Venezuela has become a beacon of hope to the oppressed across Latin America, noting especially the recent demonstrations and uprisings in Bolivia over multinationals exploiting the country’s gas reserves.
The speakers on the motion were very well received and the motion unanimously supported. This opens the way for greater links between this union and those in Venezuela and this will be further advanced by the commitment to participate in a joint union delegation to Venezuela to see the revolution in action.
The conference was a step forward for the campaign and has given us many new links and points off support to build upon. The task now is to follow up on these and use them to spread the word about the Bolivarian Revolution and Hands Off Venezuela, to which NATFHE already agree to affiliate at last year’s conference.
Text of the motion:
This conference congratulates and supports the Bolivarian Revolution and the Venezuelan government for utilising the country’s wealth and resources for reforms to benefit the working class, the poor and the landless.
Conference views with alarm however the bellicose statements being made by the USA and its allies Columbia and the financial oligarchy in Venezuela which pose a real threat to these reforms.
Conference agrees to join with the NUJ to organise a trade union delegation to Venezuela in solidarity with the Revolution and to support a delegation to the World Youth Festival in Caracas in August 2005.
Key signatories to the Open Letter to US Trade Unionists.
Fawzi Ibrahim, NATFHE, Treasurer
Paul Mackney, NATFHE, General Secretary
M. O’Mara,
NATFHE, Ex – President
Paul Bennett, NATFHE, Fulltime Officer
M. Daley, NATFHE, NEC
D. Armstrong, NATFHE, NEC
J. Clay, NATFHE, NEC
M. Jardine, NATFHE, NEC
Stephanie Sanders, NATFHE, NEC
The Hands Off Venezuela campaign has received a letter from the UNT in which the UNT leadership expresses its support and recognition for the campaign. We provide a scanned version of the signed letter (signatures of Ruben Linares and of Orlando Chirino, Stalin Perez and Eduardo Piñate), which is a tremendous recognition for the solidarity work we are doing throughout the world!
Reconocimiento de la UNT a Manos Fuera de Venezuela
Los abajo firmantes, miembros de la Coordinación Nacional de la Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (UNT) queremos hacer llegar nuestro reconocimiento a la Campaña "Manos Fuera de Venezuela" por las distintas campañas de solidaridad que viene realizando en apoyo al proceso de cambios que vive nuestro país y en particular al movimiento obrero revolucionario venezolano.
Reconocemos en particular la positiva labor que esta campaña ha llevado a cabo en relación a las organizaciones políticas y sindicales de la clase obrera en distintos países de Europa y otros continentes con el fin de colaborar en la difusión de la realidad del movimiento sindical venezolano entre los activistas polìticos y sindicales de la izquierda, denunciar las manipulaciones mediáticas del imperialismo contra la revolución bolivariana y colaborar en el reconocimiento de la UNT por parte de varias organizaciones sindicales de diferentes países.
Deseamos que esta colaboración continúe y llamamos a todos los colaboradores de la campaña "Manos Fuera de Venezuela" en los distintos países a continuar trabajando en pro de esos mismos objetivos tal y como lo han venido haciendo hasta ahora.
Firmado,
Orlando Chirinos, Stalin Perez Borges, Ruben Linares, Eduardo Piñate (Coordinacion Nacional UNT)
UNT recognition of Hands Off Venezuela
The signatories, members of the National Coordination of the National Workers Union (UNT) would like to send our recognition to the Hands Off Venezuela campaign for the different solidarity campaigns it has organised in support of the process of changes which our country is living through and particularly of the Venezuelan revolutionary trade union movement.
We recognise, particularly, the positive role played by this campaign regarding the political and trade union organisations of the working class in different countries of Europe and other continents with the aim of collaborating in explaining the reality of the Venezuelan trade union and left wing political activists, denouncing the imperialist media manipulation against the Bolivarian revolution and collaborating in getting the UNT recognised by several trade union organisations from different countries.
We wish to see the continuation of this collaboration and we appeal to all the Hands Off Venezuela supporters in different countries to continue to work in favour of the same aims as they have done until now.
Signed
Orlando Chirinos, Stalin Perez Borges, Ruben Linares, Eduardo Piñate (National Coordinators of the UNT)
Hands Off Venezuela (http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org). Speaking at a meeting in solidarity with Venezuela in London on Wednesday May 25, Frances O'Grady, Deputy General Secretary of the British Trade Union Congress, made clear the opposition of the TUC on US interference in Venezuela. "We oppose intervention of countries like the USA in Venezuela's internal affairs" said O'Grady, adding: "last week I'm pleased to say the TUC executive formally agreed to raise concerns about US intentions, including threats to the President, with the British Foreign Office"
She expressed in no uncertain terms that the official position of the British trade union movement was one of support for the Venezuelan government against any foreign threats. "As trade unionists we absolutely reserve the right to stand side by side with the Venezuelan government in opposing threats of military - or any other kind of intervention, while at the same time raising any concerns about any government anywhere in the world if there is unwarranted interference in the internal affairs of working people and their unions."
This was the result of a meeting convened by Hands Off Venezuela supporter and general secretary of the National Union of Journalists a few weeks ago. At the meeting, a number of national officials of UNISON, the FBU, the RMT, NATFHE, TGWU and the GMB, with whom we have been discussing the situation of the trade union movement in Venezuela, expressed their concern about the increased belligerence of Washington's statements on Venezuela.
Regarding the proposal raised by the Venezuelan business federation, FEDECAMARAS, to open an International Labour Organization Commission of Enquiry on alleged violations of trade union freedoms by the Venezuelan government, Frances O'Grady explained in no uncertain terms that the British TUC will oppose it. "But for those who may ask, and I am anticipating here, whether the TUC will support Venezuelan employer attempts to bring an ILO complaint against the Venezuelan government, then let me make it clear: we will resist any attempt to turn the ILO into a political football. Concerns about Venezuela frankly look small compared to the killings and the collusion that happen every day in Colombia. And yet, the Colombian unions' calls for an investigation backed by the UK trade union movement and backed by the South African government have fallen on deaf ears. So, we may be simple trade unionists, but we are not naive."
The proposal, which will be discussed at the ILO International Labour Conference taking place from May 31 – June 16, has been promoted by the Venezuelan opposition, and particularly the business federation FEDECAMARAS. This is the same body that participated in the military coup against president Chavez in April 2002, and whose president Pedro Carmona was the country's illegitimate president during the short lived coup. Opposition to their proposal by the TUC, with member unions representing 6 and half million workers, will certainly carry a lot of weight within the European trade union movement. The TUC’s opposition to the proposal also comes against strong pressure from the British employers federation CBI.
O'Grady summed up the position of the TUC by explaining that "the achievements of the Venezuelan government are truly impressive, and we support them. And while we will always retain our right to express concerns about union freedoms, we would say neither of these positions are negotiable and they can go hand in hand. We want to listen and learn much more from our Venezuelan sisters and brothers and support them in building both social justice and free trade unionism."
The patient work of the Hands Off Venezuela campaign in Britain over the last 3 years has certainly raised the profile of Venezuela within the trade union movement. A number of unions have already passed motions on Venezuela and this year's trade union conference season will see most British unions discussing similar ones. All of this is preparing the ground for a full discussion on Venezuela at the forthcoming TUC congress in September.
The audio files for Frances O'Grady statement can be heard here:
http://www.handsoffvenezuela.dsl.pipex.com/ogrady1.mp3