Taarifa iliyotolewa na makamu wa raisi wa venezuera bwana Nicolas Maduro ametangaza kuwa Rais wa nchi hiyo bwana Hugo Chavez amefariki dunia kufuatia kusumbuliwa na ugonjwa wa saratani(cancer) kwa muda mrefu. Hugo chavez amefariki akiwa na umri wa miaka 58, alianza kuitawala venezuera tangu mwaka 1999. Munu ailaze mahala pema pepono roho ya marehemu
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Akikagua gwaride wakati wa uhai wake |
Fahamu Hugo Chavez ni nani?
Hugo Rafael Chávez FrÃas 28 July 1954 – 5 March 2013)
was the
President of
Venezuela, having held that position from 1999 until his death in 2013. He was formerly the leader of the
Fifth Republic Movement political party from its foundation in 1997 until 2007, when he became the leader of the
United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV). Following his own political ideology of
Bolivarianism and "
socialism of the 21st century", he focused on implementing socialist reforms in the country as a part of a social project known as the
Bolivarian Revolution, which has seen the implementation of a
new constitution,
participatory democratic
councils, the nationalization of several key industries, increased
government funding of health care and education, and significant
reductions in poverty, according to government figures.
Born into a working-class family in
Sabaneta, Barinas,
Chávez became a career military officer, and after becoming
dissatisfied with the Venezuelan political system, he founded the
secretive
Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200 (MBR-200) in the early 1980s to work towards overthrowing it. Chávez led the MBR-200 in an unsuccessful
coup d'état against the
Democratic Action government of President
Carlos Andrés Pérez in 1992, for which he was imprisoned. Released from prison after two years, he founded a
social democratic political party, the Fifth Republic Movement, and was
elected president of Venezuela in 1998.
He subsequently introduced a new constitution which increased rights
for marginalized groups and altered the structure of Venezuelan
government, and was
re-elected in 2000. During his second presidential term, he introduced a system of
Bolivarian Missions,
Communal Councils
and worker-managed cooperatives, as well as a program of land reform,
whilst also nationalizing various key industries. On 7 October 2012,
Chávez won his country's presidential election for a fourth time,
defeating
Henrique Capriles, and was elected for another six-year term.
Chávez described his policies to be
anti-imperialist, and he was a vocal critic of
neoliberalism and laissez-faire capitalism. More generally, Chávez was a prominent adversary of the United States'
foreign policy. Allying himself strongly with the Communist governments of
Fidel and then
Raúl Castro in Cuba and the Socialist governments of
Evo Morales in Bolivia,
Rafael Correa in Ecuador and
Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, his presidency was seen as a part of the socialist "
pink tide" sweeping Latin America. He supported
Latin American and Caribbean cooperation and was instrumental in setting up the pan-regional
Union of South American Nations, the
Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas, the
Bank of the South, and the regional television network
TeleSur. Chávez was a highly controversial and divisive figure both at home and abroad.
On 30 June 2011, Chávez stated that he was recovering from an operation to remove an abscessed tumor with cancerous cells. He required a second operation in December 2012.Chávez was to have been sworn in on January 10, 2013, but the National
Assembly of Venezuela agreed to postpone the inauguration to allow him
time to recuperate and return from a third medical treatment trip to
Cuba.Chavez died on March 5, 2013, at the age of 58
Childhood
Hugo Chávez was born on 28 July 1954 in his paternal grandmother Rosa
Inéz Chávez's home, a modest three-room house located in the rural
village
Sabaneta,
Barinas State. The Chávez family were of
Amerindian,
Afro-Venezuelan, and Spanish descent.
[10] His parents,
Hugo de los Reyes Chávez and
Elena FrÃas de Chávez, were
working-
lower middle class
schoolteachers who lived in the small village of Los Rastrojos. Hugo
was born the second of seven children, including their eldest,
Adán Chávez.
[11][12] The couple lived in poverty, leading them to send Hugo and Adán to live with their grandmother Rosa,
[13] whom Hugo would later describe as being "a pure human being... pure love, pure kindness."
[14] She was a devout Roman Catholic, and Hugo was an altar boy at a local church.
[15]
Hugo described his childhood as "poor...very happy", and experienced
"humility, poverty, pain, sometimes not having anything to eat", and
"the injustices of this world."
[16]
Attending the Julián Pino Elementary School, Chávez's hobbies
included drawing, painting, baseball and history. He was particularly
interested in the 19th-century
federalist general
Ezequiel Zamora, in whose army his own great-great-grandfather had served.
[17][18] In the mid-1960s, Hugo, his brother and their grandmother moved to the city of
Barinas so that the boys could attend what was then the only high school in the rural state, the
Daniel O'Leary High School.
[19]
Military Academy: 1971–1975
Aged seventeen, Chávez decided to study at the
Venezuelan Academy of Military Sciences in Caracas. At the Academy, he was a member of the first class that was following a restructured curriculum known as the
Andrés Bello
Plan. This plan had been instituted by a group of progressive,
nationalistic military officers who believed that change was needed
within the military. This new curriculum encouraged students to learn
not only military routines and tactics but also a wide variety of other
topics, and to do so civilian professors were brought in from other
universities to give lectures to the military cadets.
[20][21][22]
Living in Caracas, he saw more of the endemic poverty faced by working
class Venezuelans, something that echoed the poverty he had experienced
growing up, and he has maintained that this experience only made him
further committed to achieving
social justice.
[23][24] He also began to get involved in local activities outside of the military school, playing both baseball and softball with the
Criollitos de Venezuela
team, progressing with them to the Venezuelan National Baseball
Championships. Other hobbies that he undertook at the time included
writing numerous poems, stories and theatrical pieces, painting
[25] and researching the life and political thought of 19th-century South American revolutionary
Simón BolÃvar.
[26] He also became interested in the Marxist revolutionary
Che Guevara (1928–67) after reading his memoir
The Diary of Che Guevara, although he also read books by a wide variety of other figures.
[27]
In 1974 he was selected to be a representative in the commemorations for the 150th anniversary of the
Battle of Ayacucho in Peru, the conflict in which Simon BolÃvar's lieutenant,
Antonio José de Sucre, defeated royalist forces during the
Peruvian War of Independence. It was in Peru that Chávez heard the leftist president, General
Juan Velasco Alvarado
(1910–1977), speak, and inspired by Velasco's ideas that the military
should act in the interests of the working classes when the ruling
classes were perceived as corrupt,
[28] he "drank up the books [Velasco had written], even memorising some speeches almost completely."
[29] Befriending the son of Panamanian President
Omar Torrijos
(1929–1981), another leftist military general, Chávez subsequently
visited Panama, where he met with Torrijos, and was impressed with his
land reform program that was designed to benefit the peasants. Being
heavily influenced by both Torrijos and Velasco, he saw the potential
for military generals to seize control of a government when the civilian
authorities were perceived as serving the interests of only the wealthy
elites.
[28][30] In contrast to military presidents like Torrijos and Velasco however, Chávez became highly critical of
Augusto Pinochet, the right-wing general who had recently seized control in Chile with the aid of the American
CIA.
[31]
Chávez would later relate that "With Torrijos, I became a Torrijist.
With Velasco I became a Velasquist. And with Pinochet, I became an
anti-Pinochetist."
[32]
In 1975, Chávez graduated from the military academy, being rated one of
the top graduates of the year (eight out of seventy five).
[33][34][35]
Early military career: 1976–1981
I think that from the time I left the academy I was oriented toward a
revolutionary movement... The Hugo Chávez who entered there was a kid
from the hills, a Ilanero with aspirations of playing
professional baseball. Four years later, a second-lieutenant came out
who had taken the revolutionary path. Someone who didn’t have
obligations to anyone, who didn't belong to any movement, who was not
enrolled in any party, but who knew very well where I was headed.
Following his graduation, Chávez was stationed as a communications officer at a
counterinsurgency unit in Barinas,
[37] although the
Marxist-Leninist
insurgency which the army was sent to combat had already been
eradicated from that state, leaving the unit with much spare time.
Chávez himself played in a local baseball team, wrote a column for the
local newspaper, organized
bingo games and judged at beauty pageants.
[38]
At one point he found in an abandoned car riddled with bullet holes a
stash of Marxist literature that apparently had belonged to insurgents
many years before. He went on to read these books, which included titles
by such theoreticians as
Karl Marx,
Vladimir Lenin and
Mao Zedong, but his favourite was a work entitled
The Times of Ezequiel Zamora, written about
the 19th-century federalist general whom Chávez had admired as a child.
[39] These books further convinced Chávez of the need for a
leftist government in Venezuela, later remarking that "By the time I was 21 or 22, I made myself a man of the left."
[40]
In 1977, Chávez's unit was transferred to
Anzoátegui, where they were involved in battling the
Red Flag Party, a Marxist-
Hoxhaist insurgency group.
[41] After intervening to prevent the beating of an alleged insurgent by other soldiers,
[42] Chávez began to have his doubts about the army and their methods in using torture.
[40]
At the same time, he was becoming increasingly critical of the
corruption in both the army and in the civilian government, coming to
believe that despite the wealth being produced by the country's oil
reserves, Venezuela's poor masses were not receiving their share,
something he felt to be inherently un-democratic. In doing so, he began
to sympathise with the Red Flag Party and their cause, if not their
violent methods.
[43]
In 1977, he founded a revolutionary movement within the armed forces,
in the hope that he could one day introduce a leftist government to
Venezuela: the Venezuelan People's Liberation Army (
Ejército de Liberación del Pueblo de Venezuela,
or ELPV), was a secretive cell within the military that consisted of
him and a handful of his fellow soldiers. Although they knew that they
wanted a middle way between the right wing policies of the government
and the far left position of the Red Flag, they did not have any plans
of action for the time being.
[42][44][45]
Nevertheless, hoping to gain an alliance with civilian leftist groups
in Venezuela, Chávez then set about clandestinely meeting various
prominent Marxists, including Alfredo Maneiro (the founder of the
Radical Cause) and
Douglas Bravo, despite having numerous political differences with them.
[46][47]
At this time, Chávez married a working-class woman named Nancy
Colmenares, with whom he would go on to have three children: Rosa
Virginia (born September 1978), Maria Gabriela (born March 1980) and
Hugo Rafael (born October 1983).
[48]
Later military career and the Bolivarian Revolutionary Army-200: 1982–1991
Five years after his creation of the ELPV, Chávez went on to form a new secretive cell within the military, the
Bolivarian Revolutionary Army-200 (EBR-200), later redesignated the Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200 (MBR-200).
[20][49][50] Taking inspiration from three Venezuelans whom Chávez deeply admired,
Ezequiel Zamora (1817–1860),
Simón BolÃvar (1783–1830) and
Simón RodrÃguez (1769–1854), these historical figures became known as the "three roots of the tree" of the MBR-200.
[51][52]
Later describing the group's foundation, Chávez would state that "the
Bolivarian movement that was being born did not propose political
objectives... Its goals were imminently internal. Its efforts were
directed in the first place to studying the military history of
Venezuela as a source of a military doctrine of our own, which up to
then didn't exist."
[53]
However, he always hoped that the Bolivarian Movement would become
politically dominant, and on his political ideas at the time, remarked
that "This tree [of BolÃvar, Zamora and RodrÃguez] has to be a
circumference, it has to accept all kinds of ideas, from the right, from
the left, from the ideological ruins of those old capitalist and
communist systems."
[54]
Indeed, Irish political analyst Barry Cannon noted that the early
Bolivarian ideology was explicitly capitalist, but that it "was a
doctrine in construction, a heterogeneous amalgam of thoughts and
ideologies, from universal thought, capitalism, Marxism, but rejecting
the neoliberal models currently being imposed in Latin America and the
discredited socialist and communist models of the old Soviet Bloc."
[55]
In 1981, Chávez, by now a captain, was assigned to teach at the
military academy where he had formerly trained. Here he indoctrinated
new students in his so-called "Bolivarian" ideals, and recruited those
whom he felt would make good members of the MBR-200, as well as
organizing sporting and theatrical events for the students. In his
recruiting attempts he was relatively successful, for by the time they
had graduated, at least thirty out of 133 cadets had joined it.
[56] In 1984 he met a Venezuelan woman of German ancestry named
Herma Marksman
who was a recently divorced history teacher. Sharing many interests in
common, she eventually got involved in Chávez's movement and the two
fell in love, having an affair that would last several years.
[57][58] Another figure to get involved with the movement was
Francisco Arias Cárdenas, a soldier particularly interested in
liberation theology.
[59]
Cárdenas rose to a significant position within the group, although came
into ideological conflict with Chávez, who believed that they should
begin direct military action in order to overthrow the government,
something Cárdenas thought was reckless.
[60]
However, some senior military officers became suspicious of Chávez
after hearing rumours about the MBR-200. Unable to dismiss him legally
without proof, they re-assigned him so that he would not be able to gain
any more fresh new recruits from the academy. He was sent to take
command of the remote barracks at
Elorza in
Apure State,
[61]
where he got involved in the local community by organizing social
events, and contacted the local indigenous tribal peoples, the
Cuiva and
Yaruro.
Although they were distrustful due to their mistreatment at the hands
of the Venezuelan army in previous decades, Chávez gained their trust by
joining the expeditions of an
anthropologist
to meet with them. His experiences with them would later lead him to
introduce laws protecting the rights of indigenous tribal peoples when
he gained power many years later.
[62] While on holiday, he retraced on foot the route taken by his great-grandfather, the revolutionary
Pedro Pérez Delgado
(known as Maisanta), to understand his family history; on that trip, he
met a woman who told Chávez how Maisanta had become a local hero by
rescuing an abducted girl.
[63]
In 1988, after being promoted to the rank of major, the high-ranking
General RodrÃguez Ochoa took a liking to Chávez and employed him to be
his assistant at his office in
Caracas.
[64]
Operation Zamora: 1992
In 1989,
Carlos Andrés Pérez (1922–2010), the candidate of the
centrist Democratic Action Party, was elected President after promising to oppose the United States government's
Washington Consensus and financial policies recommended by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). Nevertheless, he did neither once he got into office, following instead the
neoliberal
economic policies supported by the United States and the IMF. He
dramatically cut spending, put prominent men in governmental posts.
Pérez's policies angered some of the public.
[65][66][67]
In an attempt to stop the widespread protests and looting that followed
his social spending cuts, Pérez ordered the violent repression and
massacre of protesters known as
El Caracazo,
which "according to official figures ... left a balance of 276 dead,
numerous injured, several disappeared and heavy material losses.
However, this list was invalidated by the subsequent appearance of mass
graves", indicating that the official death count was inadequate.
[68][69][70] Pérez had used both the
DISIP political police and the army to orchestrate
El Caracazo. Chávez did not participate in the repression because he was then hospitalized with
chicken pox, and later condemned the event as "
genocide".
[71][72]
Disturbed by the
Caracazo, rampant government corruption, the domination of politics by the Venezuelan oligarchy through the
Punto Fijo Pact, and what he called "the dictatorship of the IMF", Chávez began preparing for a military coup d'état,
[70][73] known as Operation Zamora.
[74]
Initially planned for December, Chávez delayed the MBR-200 coup until
the early twilight hours of 4 February 1992. On that date, five army
units under Chávez's command moved into urban Caracas with the mission
of overwhelming key military and communications installations, including
the
Miraflores presidential palace,
the defense ministry, La Carlota military airport and the Military
Museum. Chávez's immediate goal was to intercept and take custody of
Pérez, who was returning to Miraflores from an overseas trip. Despite
years of planning, the coup quickly encountered trouble. At the time of
the coup, Chávez had the loyalty of less than 10% of Venezuela's
military forces,
[75]
and, because of numerous betrayals, defections, errors, and other
unforeseen circumstances, Chávez and a small group of rebels found
themselves hiding in the Military Museum, without any means of conveying
orders to their network of spies and collaborators spread throughout
Venezuela.
[76]
Furthermore, Chávez's allies were unable to broadcast their prerecorded
tapes on the national airwaves, during which Chávez planned to issue a
general call for a mass civilian uprising against the Pérez government.
Finally, Chávez's forces were unable to capture Pérez, who managed to
escape from them. Fourteen soldiers were killed, and fifty soldiers and
some eighty civilians injured during the ensuing violence.
[77][78][79]
Realising that the coup had failed, Chávez gave himself up to the
government. On the condition that he called upon the remaining active
coup members to cease hostilities, he was allowed to appear on national
television, something that he insisted on doing in his military uniform.
During this address, he invoked the name of national hero
Simón BolÃvar
and declared to the Venezuelan people that "Comrades: unfortunately,
for now, the objectives we had set for ourselves were not achieved in
the capital city. That is, those of us here in Caracas did not seize
power. Where you are, you have performed very well, but now is the time
for a reflect. New opportunities will arise and the country has to head
definitively toward a better future."
[80] Many viewers noted that Chávez had remarked that he had failed only "
por ahora" (for now),
[20][81][82][83][84]
and he was immediately catapulted into the national spotlight, with
many Venezuelans, particularly those from the poorer sections of
society, seeing him as a figure who had stood up against government
corruption and
kleptocracy.
[85][86][87]
Chávez was arrested and imprisoned at the San Carlos military
stockade, where he remained wracked with guilt, feeling responsible for
the coup's failure.
[88][89] Indeed, pro-Chávez demonstrations that took place outside of San Carlos led to his being transferred to Yare prison soon after.
[90] The government meanwhile began a temporary crackdown on media supportive of Chávez and the coup.
[91] A further attempted coup against the government occurred in November, which was once more defeated,
[73][92] although Pérez himself was impeached a year later for malfeasance and misappropriation of funds for illegal activities.
[93][94]
Political rise: 1992–1998
Whilst Chávez and the other senior members of the MBR-200 were in prison, his relationship with
Herma Marksman broke up in July 1993.
[95] She would subsequently become a critic of Chávez.
[96] In 1994,
Rafael Caldera (1916–2009) of the centrist
National Convergence
Party was elected to the presidency, and soon after taking power, freed
Chávez and the other imprisoned MBR-200 members as per his pre-election
pledge. Caldera had however imposed upon them the condition that they
would not return to the military, where they could potentially organise
another coup.
[97][98]
After being mobbed by adoring crowds following his release, Chávez went
on a 100-day tour of the country, promoting his Bolivarian cause of
social revolution.
[99]
Now living off a small military pension as well as the donations of his
supporters, he continued to financially support his three children and
their mother despite divorcing Nancy Colmenares around this period. On
his tours around the country, he would meet
Marisabel RodrÃguez, who would give birth to their daughter shortly before becoming his second wife in 1997.
[100][101]
Travelling around Latin America in search of foreign support for his
Bolivarian movement, he visited Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia, and
finally Cuba, where the Communist leader
Fidel Castro
(1926–) arranged to meet him. After spending several days in one
another's company, Chávez and Castro became friends with the former
describing the Cuban leader as being like a father to him.
[102]
Returning to Venezuela, Chávez failed to gain mainstream media
attention for his political cause. Instead, he gained publicity from
small, local-based newspapers and media outlets.
[103]
As a part of his condemnation of the ruling class, Chávez became
critical of President Caldera, whose neoliberal economic policies had
caused inflation and who had both suspended constitutional guarantees
and arrested a number of Chávez's supporters.
[104]
According to the United Nations, by 1997 the per capita income for
Venezuelan citizens had fallen to US$ 2,858 from US$ 5,192 in 1990,
whilst poverty levels had increased by 17.65% since 1980, and homicide
and other crime rates had more than doubled since 1986, particularly in
Caracas.
[105]
Coupled with this drop in the standard of living, widespread
dissatisfaction with the representative democratic system in Venezuela
had "led to gaps emerging between rulers and ruled which favoured the
emergence of a
populist leader".
[106]
A debate soon developed in the Bolivarian movement as to whether it
should try to take power in elections or whether it should instead
continue to believe that military action was the only effective way of
bringing about political change. Chávez was a keen proponent of the
latter view, believing that the oligarchy would never allow him and his
supporters to win an election,
[107] whilst
Francisco Arias Cárdenas
instead insisted that they take part in the representative democratic
process. Cárdenas himself proved his point when, after joining the
Radical Cause socialist party, he won the December 1995 election to become governor of the oil-rich
Zulia State.
[108]
Subsequently changing his opinion on the issue, Chávez and his
supporters in the Bolivarian movement decided to found their own
political party, the
Fifth Republic Movement (MVR –
Movimiento Quinta República) in July 1997 in order to support Chávez's candidature in the
Venezuelan presidential election, 1998.
[77][109][110][111]
The election of a leftist president in Venezuela in 1998 foreshadowed
what would, in the following seven years, become a wave of successes
for left-leaning presidential candidates in Latin America...
Luiz Inácio "Lula" da Silva in Brazil in October 2002, then
Lucio Gutiérrez in Ecuador in January 2003,
Néstor Kirchner in Argentina in May 2003,
Tabaré Vázquez in Uruguay in October 2004,
Evo Morales in Bolivia in December 2005,
Rafael Correa in Ecuador in November 2006, and then
Daniel Ortega
in Nicaragua, also in November 2006. While some of these moderated
[towards the centre or centre-right] significantly shortly after taking
office, such as Gutiérrez and da Silva, they represent a wave of
left-of-center leaders whose election came as a bit of a surprise given
the... disorientation within the left around the world.
Gregory Wilpert, German-American political analyst (2007).
[112]
1998 election
At the start of the election run-up, most polls gave
Irene Sáez, then-mayor of Caracas' richest district,
Chacao, the lead. Although an independent candidate, she had the backing of one of Venezuela's two primary political parties,
Copei.
[113]
In opposition to her right-wing and pro-establishment views, Chávez and
his followers described their aim as "laying the foundations of a new
republic" to replace the existing one, which they cast as
"party-dominated"; the current constitution, they argued, was no more
than the "legal-political embodiment of
puntofijismo", the country's traditional two-party
patronage system.
[114] This revolutionary rhetoric gained Chávez and the MVR support from a number of other leftist parties, including the
Patria Para Todos (Motherland for All), the
Partido Comunist Venezolano (Venezeuelan Communist Party) and the
Movimiento al Socialismo (Movement for Socialism), which together fashioned a political union supporting his candidacy called the
Polo Patriotic (Patriotic Pole).
[111][115]
Chávez's promises of widespread social and economic reforms won the
trust and favor of a primarily poor and working class following. By May
1998, Chávez's support had risen to 30% in polls, and by August he was
registering 39%.
[116] Much of his support came from his 'strong man' populist image and charismatic appeal.
[117]
This rise in popularity worried Chávez's opponents, with the
oligarchy-owned mainstream media proceeding to attack him with a series
of allegations, which included the claim – which he dismissed as
ridiculous – that he was a
cannibal who ate children.
[118] With his support increasing, and Sáez's decreasing, both the main two political parties, Copei and
Democratic Action, put their support behind
Henrique Salas Römer, a
Yale University-educated economist who representated the
Project Venezuela party.
[119]
Chávez won the election with 56.20% of the vote. Salas Römer came
second, with 39.97%, whilst the other candidates, including Irene Sáez
and Alfaro Ucero, gained only tiny proportions of the vote.
[94][120]
Academic analysis of the election showed that Chávez's support had come
primarily from the country's poor and the "disenchanted middle class",
whose standard of living had decreased rapidly in the previous decade,
[121] although at the same time much of the middle and upper class vote had instead gone to Salas Römer.
[122]
Following the announcement of his victory, Chávez gave a speech in
which he declared that "The resurrection of Venezuela has begun, and
nothing and no one can stop it."
[120]
Presidency: 1999–2013
First Presidential Term: 2 February 1999 – 10 January 2001
A triumphant Hugo Chávez visiting
Porto Alegre, Brazil in 2003.
Chávez's presidential inauguration took place on 2 February 1999, and
during the usual presidential oath he deviated from the prescribed
words to proclaim that "I swear before my people that upon this moribund
constitution I will drive forth the necessary democratic
transformations so that the new republic will have a
Magna Carta befitting these new times."
He subsequently set about appointing new figures to a number of
government posts, including promoting various leftist allies to key
positions; he for instance gave one of the founders of MBR, Jesús
Urdaneta, the position in charge of the
secret police; and made one of the 1992 coup leaders, Hernán Grüber Ódreman, governor of the Federal District of
Caracas.
Chávez also appointed some conservative, centrist and centre-right
figures to government positions as well, reappointing Caldera's economy
minister Maritza Izaquirre to that same position and also appointing the
businessman Roberto Mandini to be president of the state-run oil
company
Petroleos de Venezuela. His critics referred to this group of government officials as the "
BoliburguesÃa" or "Bolivarian bourgeoisie",
and highlighted the fact that it "included few people with experience in public administration."
He also made several alterations to his presidential privileges,
scrapping the presidential limousine, giving away his entire
presidential wage of $1,200 a month to a scholarship fund, and selling off many of the government-owned airplanes, although
alternately many of his critics accused him of excessive personal
expenses for himself, his family and friends.The involvement of a number of his immediate family members in Venezuelan politics has also led to accusations of
nepotism, something Chávez denies. Meanwhile, in June 2000 he separated from his wife Marisabel, and their divorce was finalised in January 2004.
Although he publicly used strong revolutionary rhetoric from the
beginning of his presidency, the Chávez government's initial policies
were moderate, capitalist and centre-left, having much in common with
those of contemporary Latin American leftists like Brazil's president
Lula da Silva. Chávez initially believed that capitalism was still a valid economic model for Venezuela, but that it would have to be
Rhenish capitalism or the
Third Way that would be followed rather than the
neoliberalism which had been implemented under former governments with the encouragement of the United States. He followed the economic guidelines recommended by the
International Monetary Fund and continued to encourage foreign corporations to invest in Venezuela, even visiting the
New York Stock Exchange in the United States in an attempt to convince wealthy investors to do so.
To increase his visibility abroad, Chávez spent fifty-two days of his
first year as president outside of Venezuela, travelling the world
meeting various national leaders, such as American President
Bill Clinton, Governor of Texas
George W. Bush and Chinese Premier
Jiang Zemin.
Whilst he was remaining fiscally conservative, he introduced measures
in an attempt to alleviate the poverty of the Venezuelan working class.
Chávez immediately set into motion a social welfare program called
Plan BolÃvar 2000, which he organised to begin on 27 February 1999, the tenth anniversary of the
Caracazo
massacre. Costing $113,000,000, Plan BolÃvar 2000 involved 70,000 army
officers going out into the streets of Venezuela where they would repair
roads and hospitals, offer free medical care and vaccinations, and sell
food at cheap prices.
Chávez himself described the Plan by saying that "Ten years ago we came
to massacre the people. Now we are going to fill them with love. Go and
comb the land, search out and destroy poverty and death. We are going
to fill them with love instead of lead."
In order to explain his latest thoughts and plans to the Venezuelan
people, in May he also launched his own Sunday morning radio show,
Aló Presidente (
Hello, President), on the state radio network, as well as a Thursday night television show,
De Frente con el Presidente (
Face to Face with the President). He followed this with his own newspaper,
El Correo del Presidente (
The President's Post),
founded in July, for which he acted as editor-in-chief, but which was
later shut amidst accusations of corruption in its management. In his television and radio shows, he answered calls from citizens,
discussed his latest policies, sung songs and told jokes, making it
unique not only in Latin America but the entire world.
Constitutional reform
Chávez then called for a public
referendum – something virtually unknown in Venezuela at the time – which he hoped would support his plans to form a
constitutional assembly,
composed of representatives from across Venezuela, as well as from
indigenous tribal groups, which would be able to rewrite the nation's
constitution. The referendum went ahead on 25 April 1999, and was an
overwhelming success for Chávez, with 88% of voters supporting the
proposal.
Following this, Chávez called for an election to take place on 25
July, in which the members of the constitutional assembly would be voted
into power.
Of the 1,171 candidates standing for election to the assembly, over 900
of them were opponents of Chávez, but despite this, his supporters won
another overwhelming electoral victory, taking 125 seats (95% of the
total), including all of those belonging to indigenous tribal groups,
whereas the opposition were voted into only 6 seats.
On 12 August 1999, the new constitutional assembly voted to give
themselves the power to abolish government institutions and to dismiss
officials who were perceived as being corrupt or operating only in their
own interests. Whilst supporters of the move believed that it could
force reforms that had been blocked by corrupt politicians and judicial
authorities for years, many opponents of the Chávez regime argued that
it gave Chávez and the Bolivarians too much power at the expense of
their political opponents, and was therefore dictatorial.
The elected members of the constituent assembly put together
a new constitution,
and a referendum on the issue of whether to adopt it was held in
December 1999; the referendum saw an abstention vote of over 50%,
although amongst those voting, 72% approved the new constitution's
adoption.
The new constitution included increased protections for indigenous
peoples and women, and established the rights of the public to
education, housing, healthcare and food. It added new environmental
protections, and increased requirements for government transparency. It
increased the presidential term from five to six years, allowed people
to
recall presidents by referendum, and added a new presidential two-term limit. It converted the
bicameral legislature, a Congress with both a Senate and a Chamber of Deputies, into a
unicameral one comprising only a
National Assembly.
[155][156][157][158]
The constitution gave greater powers to the president, not only by
extending their term but also by giving them the power to legislate on
citizen rights as well as the economic and financial matters that they
were formerly unable to do.
It also gave the military a role in the government by providing it with
the mandated role of ensuring public order and aiding national
development, something it had been expressely forbidden from doing under
the former constitution.
As a part of the new constitution, the country, which was then
officially known as the Republic of Venezuela, was renamed the
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (República Bolivariana de Venezuela) at
Chávez's request, thereby reflecting the government's ideology of
Bolivarianism and the influence of Simón BolÃvar on the nation as a
whole.
Second Presidential Term: 10 January 2001 – 10 January 2007
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This section requires expansion with: Information on the land reform program and workers' councils. (March 2011) |
Under the new constitution, it was legally required that new
elections be held in order to relegimatize the government and president.
This
presidential election in July 2000
would be a part of a greater "megaelection", the first time in the
country's history that the president, governors, national and regional
congressmen, mayors and councilmen would be voted for on the same day. For the position of president, Chávez's closest challenger proved to be his former friend and co-conspirator in the 1992 coup,
Francisco Arias Cárdenas, who since becoming governor of Zulia state had turned towards the political centre and begun to denounce Chávez as autocratic.Although some of his supporters feared that he had alienated those in
the middle class and the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy who had
formerly supported him, Chávez was re-elected with 59.76% of the vote
(the equivalent of 3,757,000 people), a larger majority than his 1998
electoral victory, again primarily receiving his support from the poorer sectors of Venezuelan society.
That year, Chávez helped to further cement his geopolitical and
ideological ties with the Cuban government of Fidel Castro by signing an
agreement under which Venezuela would supply Cuba with 53,000 barrels
of oil per day at preferential rates, in return receiving 20,000 trained
Cuban medics and educators. In the ensuing decade, this would be
increased to 90,000 barrels a day (in exchange for 40,000 Cuban medics
and teachers), dramatically aiding the Caribbean island's economy and
standard of living after its "
Special Period" of the 1990s. However, Venezuela's growing alliance with Cuba came at the same time
as a deteriorating relationship with the United States: in late 2001,
just after the
American-led invasion of Afghanistan in retaliation for the
11 September attacks
against the U.S. by Islamist militants, Chávez showed pictures of
Afghan children killed in a bomb attack on his television show. He
commented that "They are not to blame for the terrorism of
Osama Bin Laden
or anyone else", and called on the American government to end "the
massacre of the innocents. Terrorism cannot be fought with terrorism."
The U.S. government responded negatively to the comments, which were
picked up by the media worldwide
Chávez's second term in office saw the implementation of social missions, such as this one to eliminate illiteracy in Venezuela.
Meanwhile, the 2000 elections had led to Chávez's supporters gaining
101 out of 165 seats in the Venezuelan National Assembly, and so in
November 2001 they voted to allow him to pass 49 social and economic
decrees. This move antagonized the opposition movement particularly strongly.
At the start of the 21st century, Venezuela was the world's fifth largest exporter of
crude oil, with oil accounting for 85.3% of the country's exports, therefore dominating the country's economy.Previous administrations had sought to privatise this industry, with
U.S. corporations having a significant level of control, but the Chávez
administration wished to curb this foreign control over the country's
natural resources by nationalising much of it under the state-run oil
company,
Petróleos de Venezuela S.A.
(PdVSA). In 2001, the government introduced a new Hydrocarbons Law
through which they sought to gain greater state control over the oil
industry: they did this by raising royalty taxes on the oil companies
and also by introducing the formation of "mixed companies", whereby the
PdVSA could have joint control with private companies over industry. By
2006, all of the 32 operating agreements signed with private
corporations during the 1990s had been converted from being primarily or
solely corporate-run to being at least 51% controlled by PdVSA.
Growing opposition and the CD
During Chávez's first term in office, the opposition movement had
been "strong but reasonably contained, [with] complaints centring mainly
on procedural aspects of the implementation of the constitution" However, the first organized protest against the Bolivarian government
occurred in January 2001, when the Chávez administration tried to
implement educational reforms through the proposed Resolution 259 and
Decree 1.011, which would have seen the publication of textbooks with a
heavy Bolivarian bias. The protest movement, which was primarily by
middle class parents whose children went to privately run schools,
marched to central Caracas shouting out the slogan "Don't mess with my
children." Although the protesters were denounced by Chávez, who called
them "selfish and individualistic," the protest was successful enough
for the government to retract the proposed education reforms and instead
enter into a consensus-based educational program with the opposition. That year, an organization known as the
Coordinadora Democrática de Acción CÃvica (CD) was founded, under which the Venezuelan opposition political parties, corporate powers, most of the country's media, the
Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce, the
Frente Institucional Militar and the
Central Workers Union all united to oppose Chávez's regime.The prominent businessman
Pedro Carmona (1941–) was chosen as the CD's leader. They received support from various foreign sources.
The CD and other opponents of Chávez's Bolivarian government accused
it of trying to turn Venezuela from a democracy into a dictatorship by
centralising power amongst its supporters in the Constituent Assembly
and granting Chávez increasingly autocratic powers. Many of them pointed
to Chávez's personal friendship with Cuba's Fidel Castro and the
one-party socialist government in Cuba as a sign of where the Bolivarian government was taking Venezuela. Others did not hold such a strong view, but still argued that Chávez was a "free-spending, authoritarian
populist" whose policies were detrimental to the country For instance, Venezuelan lawyer and academic Allan R. Brewer-CarÃas, a
prominent and vocal opponent of Chávez, made the claim that under his
regime the country had "suffered a tragic setback regarding democratic
standards, suffering a continuous, persistent and deliberate process of
demolishing institutions and destroying democracy, which has never
before been experienced in the constitutional history of the country."
Other academics have argued that the opposite was true, and that "the
Chávez government is in fact more democratic than previous ones" because
of the increased checks and balances introduced by the 1999
constitution and the introduction of workers' councils
The pro-Chávez political analyst Gregory Wilpert argued, in his study
of the Bolivarian administration, that the opposition movement was
dominated primarily by members of the middle and upper classes. He
further argued that this wealthy elite was particularly furious at the
Bolivarian government because they themselves had lost much of their
dominance over Venezuelan politics with the introduction of the 1999
constitution and the relegitimization of all areas of government that it
required
He went on to argue that this wealthy elite subsequently used its
control of the country's mass media to create an anti-Chávez campaign
aimed primarily at the middle classes, stirring up the latent racism and
classism that existed in Venezuelan culture.One of the most prominent examples of this was through the popularization of the racist term
ese mono ("that monkey") which began to be applied to Chávez by his opponents who would also often accuse him of being "vulgar and common".
Both Venezuelan and Western opposition media also characterized
Chávez's supporters, who were known as the Chávistas, as being "young,
poor, politically unsophisticated, antidemocratic masses" who were
controlled, funded and armed by the state,
and they were regularly referred to as "hordes" in opposition media
discourse, which also commonly referred to the Bolivarian Circles as
"terror circles".
Such descriptions have been refuted by certain academics, such as
Cristóbal Valencia RamÃrez, who, after studying Chavista groups, have
argued that they consist of people from many classes of society, and are
educated and largely non-violentChavista-run organizations have since claimed to have been the target
of violent attacks from opposition groups: for instance, the Ezequiel
Zamora National Farmers' Coordinator estimated that 50 Chavista leaders
involved in the land-reform program had been assassinated during 2002
and 2003
Coup, strikes and the recall referendum
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This section requires expansion with: greater detail on the various events described, using a wider range of academic sources.. (July 2011) |
On 11 April 2002, mass protests took place in Caracas against the
Bolivarian government, during which guns were fired, and violence ensued
involving both pro- and anti-Chávez supporters, the police and the
army.
Twenty people were killed and over 110 were wounded. A group of high-ranking anti-Chávez military officers, likely supported
by figures in the business community, media and certain political
parties
[which?], had been planning to launch a coup against Chávez and used the civil unrest as an opportunity. After the plotters gained significant power, Chávez agreed to step down, and was transferred by army escort to
La Orchila,
and although he requested to be allowed to leave the country, he
refused to officially resign from the presidency at the time.
Nonetheless, the wealthy business-leader
Pedro Carmona declared himself president of an interim government. Carmona abolished the 1999 constitution and appointed a small governing committee to run the country. Protests in support of Chávez along with insufficient support for Carmona's regime, which many felt was implementing
totalitarian measures, led to Carmona's resignation and Chávez was returned to power on 14 April.
Chávez's reaction to the coup attempt was to moderate his approach,
implementing a new economic team that appeared to be more centrist and
reinstated the old board of directors and managers of the state oil
company
Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA), whose replacement had been one of the reasons for the coup.
At the same time, the Bolivarian government began preparing for
potential future uprisings or even a US invasion by increasing the
country's military capacity, purchasing 100,000
AK-47 assault rifles and several helicopters from Russia, as well as a number of
Super Tucano
light attack planes from Brazil. Troop numbers were also increased,
with Chávez announcing in 2005 the government's intention to increase
the number of military reserves from 50,000 to 2,000,000.
In December 2002, the Chávez presidency faced a
two-month management strike
at the PdVSA when he initiated management changes. As Wilpert noted,
"While the opposition labelled this action a 'general strike', it was
actually a combination of management lockout, administrative and
professional employee strike, and general sabotage of the oil industry.
The Chávez government's response was to fire about 19,000 striking
employees for illegally abandoning their posts, and then employing
retired workers, foreign contractors and the military to do their jobs
instead. This move further damaged the strength of Chávez's opposition
by removing the many managers in the oil industry who had been
supportive of their cause to overthrow Chávez.
Following the failure of these two attempts to remove Chávez from
power, the opposition finally resorted to legal means in order to try to
do so. The 1999 constitution had introduced the concept of a recall
referendum into Venezuelan politics, and so the opposition called for
such a referendum to take place. A
2004 referendum to recall Chávez
was defeated. 70% of the eligible Venezuelan population turned out to
vote, with 59% of voters deciding to keep the president in power.
Unlike his original 1998 election victory, this time Chávez's electoral
support came almost entirely from the poorer working classes rather
than the middle classes, who "had practically abandoned Chávez" after he
"had consistently moved towards the left in those five and a half
years".
Meanwhile, some figures in the opposition movement began calling for
the United States military to intervene and invade the country in order
to topple Chávez.
"Socialism of the 21st century"
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This section requires expansion with: further information on Chávez's adoption of socialism and the policies implemented in 2005 and 2006.. (July 2011) |
[Bolivarian] socialism would be 'based in solidarity, in fraternity,
in love, in justice, in liberty, and in equality' and would mean the
'transformation of the economic model, increasing cooperativism,
collective property, the submission of private property to the social
interest and to the general interest', created 'from the popular bases,
with the participation of the communities'. This socialism was not a
dogma, however, but 'must be constructed every day'.
Barry Cannon, Irish political analyst (2009)
The various attempts at overthrowing the Bolivarian government from
power had only served to further radicalize Chávez. In January 2005, he
began openly proclaiming the ideology of "
Socialism of the 21st Century", something that was distinct from his earlier forms of Bolivarianism, which had been
social democratic in nature, merging elements of capitalism and socialism. He used this new term to contrast the
democratic socialism
which he wanted to promote in Latin America from the Marxist-Leninist
socialism that had been spread by socialist states like the Soviet Union
and the People's Republic of China during the 20th century, arguing
that the latter had not been truly democratic, suffering from a lack of
participatory democracy and an excessively authoritarian governmental
structure.
In May 2006, Chávez visited Europe in a private capacity, where he
announced plans to supply cheap Venezuelan oil to poor working class
communities in the continent. The Mayor of London
Ken Livingstone welcomed him, describing him as "the best news out of Latin America in many years".
Third Presidential Term: 10 January 2007 – 10 January 2013
In the
presidential election of December 2006, which saw a 74% voter turnout, Chávez was once more elected, this time with 63% of the vote, beating his closest challenger
Manuel Rosales, who conceded his loss.The election was certified as being free and legitimate by the
Organization of American States (OAS) and the
Carter Center.
[199][200][201] After this victory, Chávez promised an "expansion of the revolution."
Source of Chavez history: wikipedia