EVENT: Celebrating the advances for Black communities in the new Venezuela
TONIGHT – Monday 22 October 2012: NUS Black Students’Campaign Black History Month event with Diane Abbott MP & Doreen Lawrence on the advances for Black communities in the new Venezuela. The event also features the Venezuelan Ambassador and former Higher Education minister Samuel Moncada.
VENEZUELA – CHALLENGING RACISM TO CREATE A SOCIETY OF EQUALS
By Aaron Kiely, NUS Black Students’ Officer

The re-election of Hugo Chavez earlier this month underlined once again how it is Latin America that is the beacon of hope in the world for all those looking for alternatives to austerity.
His landslide re-election was the 15th election since Hugo Chavez came to office in 1999. His coalition of supporters has won all but one of these elections showing how policies that put ordinary people first can win broad support.
Whilst Venezuela’s amazing achievements in access to free education and free healthcare are increasingly becoming a reference point, what is less know about Venezuela is how its struggle for equality has meant that it has had to place anti-racism at the heart of its struggles.
Situated on the Caribbean, Venezuela has a shared history with Jamaica, Barbados and other islands marked by the transatlantic slave trade. Like the rest of Latin America it was also deeply affected by Spanish colonialism and its crime of exterminating much of the original inhabitants of that continent. As a result Venezuela is an incredibly diverse society, three quarters of its population are mixed heritage, of African origin or Indigenous origin.
However as its wealth and power have always been dominated by a small, white elite, the struggle for equality in Venezuela has had to place tackling racism and discrimination at its centre.
The government of Hugo Chávez has done more than any other in Venezuelan history to challenge racism that has affected Venezuela and to celebrate Venezuela’s African heritage.
Hugo Chávez is the first president in Venezuela’s history to honour his Indigenous and African ancestry and has said “Hate against me has a lot to do with racism. Because of my mouth, because of my curly hair. And I’m so proud to have this mouth and this hair, because it’s African.”
Likewise opposition to the government’s attempts to eradicate privilege has been met with a racist backlash. In the recent election campaign a key newspaper aligned to the right-wing opposition published a cartoon labelling a stream of sewage and flies as being of “African descent” and implying this was an example of how Chavez was wrecking the county.
Following Chavez’s victory, a Chilean MP tweeted “The Monkey has Won” and later “bananas are now free in Venezuela” The MP is from one of the right-wing parties resisting the social change underway across Latin America and which has its origins in backing General Pinochet who carried out the coup in Chile in 1973 when the progressive left government was bombed out of power.
Against such a backdrop, a huge range of measures have been taken to give rights to Afro-Venezuelans and to Indigenous communities and to tackle racism.
For the first time in Venezuela’s history, the 1999 Constitution made clear Venezuela is a multi-ethnic and multicultural society, and provided a system of protection for Indigenous peoples and those of African descent, known as African-Venezuelans.
Concrete action to tackle racism includes the establishment of a special committee of the Parliament to deal with equal rights for Black people which led to the 2011 Law Against Racial Discrimination.
Whilst racist campaigns continue from the opposition owned media, the government has established a special office, within the Ministry for Culture, so that Venezuela’s African heritage is properly recognised: May 10 is now celebrated as African-Descendent Day.
Within the Ministry for Education a Presidential Commission has been set up to tackle racism in education and to ensure that curricula reflect Venezuela’s multicultural character. For the first time ever, Venezuela’s 2011 census allowed individuals to identify themselves as being of African descent. This came at the request of social organizations representing African-Venezuelans and will enable governments to better respond to their specific needs in the future.
Despite these progressive government policies, racism remains a feature of Venezuelan society as it does with all countries. But with its historical legacies of colonialism and slavery that Venezuela, the effect of these changes should not be underestimated.
Likewise the solidarity that Venezuela has shown with its Caribbean neighbours has been greatly appreciated. Organisations such as the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas include a number of Caribbean nations in development schemes and Petro-Caribe provides the region with cheap energy. Just last week CARICOM – the organisation of 15 Caribbean nations – thanked Hugo Chavez for the support in providing energy to the islands at more manageable costs which is allowing more money to be spent on social projects.
Likewise in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake in Haiti, Venezuela was singled out by the Haitian government for the support it has provided. Its President explained that “The cooperation with Venezuela is the most important in Haiti right now in terms of direct impact…we are grateful to president Chavez for helping us from the bottom of his heart”.
At a time where in much of the world living standards are being driven backwards and racism is being whipped up to scapegoat and distract from the real culprits, the principles of equality, solidarity and anti-racism in Venezuela are more vital than ever. That is why for Black History Month the NUS Black Students Campaign and Venezuela Solidarity Campaign, supported by the Venezuelan Embassy, are hosting this meeting looking at how the social progress in Venezuela under the government of Hugo Chávez has benefited the Black communities in Venezuela and the wider Caribbean.
Event details
Monday 22 October, 7.30pm, Bolivar Hall , 54-56 Grafton Way, London, London W1T 5DL, 1 minute from Warren St tube.
Speakers include:
* Diane Abbott MP and Doreen Lawrence, who will give an eyewitness account of her recent visit to Venezuela for the election that saw Hugo Chávez re-elected
* Ambassador Samuel Moncada, former Higher Education Minister will look at the legacy of historic racism in Venezuela
* Luke Daniels, Caribbean Labour Solidarity
* Aaron Kiely NUS Black Student’s Officer on the social progress underway in Latin America
* With a celebration of Afro-Venezuelan culture including live percussion and the showing of a photo exhibition on Venezuela’s Black communities
