Venezuela's Social Missions in Action
"Much have I travelled in the realms of gold and mainly goodly states
and kingdoms seen....". With these words the poet John Keats tried to
create a romanticised version of the conquest of Latin America by the
Spaniard Cortez.
The same applies to Venezuela today. There are
those on the left who through rose-tinted spectacles only see light and
progress that must not be hurried or criticised. There are others on
the left who supprt what is happening but in a fraternal and friendly
manner, basing themselves on the history of the labour movement
internationally, say that the process of revolutionary change now in
motion must be taken to its logical conclusion. There are those on the
right, including Bush and Blair while he was Prime Minister, who want
to see the end of Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution and are
prepared to use all means, including assassination. to achieve their
aims.
At the same time those on the right, the oligarchy here in
Venezuela and Imperialism internationally, realise that Chavez and the
Bolivarian Revolution have the overwhelming support of the masses of
ordinary people. And to see what has been delivered in terms of health,
education, housing, food and jobs helps anyone to see why Chavez is so
popular.
Just to take one example - that of health. The Barrio
Adentro Mision (the Mission into the Neighbourhood) has brought health
care that is free and comprehensive to millions of people who had
previously been excluded because of the cost of treatment. Access to
this system is not restricted only to Venezuelans. Anyone suffering ill
health, even temporary foreigners like myself, can access the system.
You simply walk into a clinic, give evidence of who you are, state what
your problem is, and receive treatment.
And we are not talking
about the walk-in clinics in the UK that are supposd to reduce the
waiting time in the doctor´s surgeries. Waitig time in these clinics
can be up to 4 and 5 hours, so the queue has been taken out of the
surgeries and transferred to the clinics. Here you walk in and the
waiting time is a few minutes because the level of provision of medical
staff is geared to the needs of the community being served.
It
is obvious that in the space of 8 years, the time that Chavez has been
in power, there has not been sufficient time to train enough doctors
and medical staff to provide this service. For that reason Cuba, which
has one of the best doctor/patient ratios in the world despite the
economic blockade orchestrated by th USA, is able to provide up to
20,000 medical staff to ensure that the Mision provides the correct
level of service.
So here am I, a foreigner in Venezuela, with
the problem of Moctezuma´s revenge that has lasted 9 days and shows no
sign of disappearing. I am a shadow of my former self! Some would say I
needed to lose weight but this is not a good way to do it.
Into
the clinic I go. lLterally two minutes later I am talking to a Cuban
doctor who gives a diagnosis. I am told to go and lie on a bed. Face
down I am told when the nurse comes in. As I obey I am told to loosen
my pants. Waht is she going to do? Not take a sample this way, I hope!
I spot the syringe out of the corner of my eye and promptly shut them.
A sharp pain and then it is over. Back the doctor, pick up a
prescription and off to the chemists. The antibiotics and bottle of
water-laden nutrients come to 24,000 Bolivars, some 6 pounds 50 pence.
The treatment cost absolulely nothing.
To be serious for a
moment. How much electoral support would George Bush get from the
millions of US citizens who never bother to vote if he were to
introduce a free and comprehensive health care system for all who are
ill, nationals or foreign visitors? How much would the popularity of
the Labour Party increase if it were to reduce the prescription charges
for medicines in the whole of the UK, increase the number of doctors
and reduce waiting times?
This experience can be replicatd in
other areas of social life. UNESCO states that oly Cuba and Venezuela
in central and South America are illiteracy free. The Department for
Education in the USA states that millions of US citizens are
"functionally illiterate." Given what is happening in Venezuela and
Cuba perhaps these learned gentleman of the UK and the USA can
understand why there is massive support for Castro and Chavez. If they
don´t, it is because they don´t want to. Acceptance of this support
would raise demnads and expectations in their societies that cannot be
met on the basis of private property and capitalism.
Caracas
November 13th 2007