Electoral Process in Venezuela: “The Best in the World”
By Dr. Maria Páez Victor and Edu MontesantiGlobal Research, July 27, 2017
Url of this article:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/
The renowned sociologist Maria Páez Victor at Law Commission of Ontario in Canada, deeply analyses the Venezuela’s Constituent Assembly to be voted on July 30, in the context of the Caribbean nation, and speaks on the biggest challenges the Bolivarian Revolution faces today.
Edu Montesanti: Professor
Doctor Maria Páez Victor, thank you so very much for granting me this
so important interview; it is an honor to me. What is the importance of
the upcoming National Constituent Assembly in Venezuela? The opposition
claims it is undemocratic: how do you respond to it?
Maria Páez: The
parties and leaders of the violent protests that for three months have
disturbed the peace of Venezuelans, are the very same who in 2002
supported the coup d’etat against President Chávez.
During those tense 48 hours, one of the very first things they did was
to abolish the Constitution of 1999 – the one they now purport to
defend. (See the film, available on the internet: “The Revolution will not be Televised”)
During
18 years, the opposition has denigrated the Constitution. So intense
has been this revolt against it that even after winning the majority at
the National Assembly they insisted that the government was
illegitimate, ignored the rule of law, disregarded sentences of the
Supreme Court, refused to legislate, and declared the main purpose of
the Assembly was to “get rid of Maduro”.
These
paragons are now pretending to be arbiters of democracy and opposing
any constitutional amendment by an elected Constitutional Assembly. They
are now opposing, not the government, but the people themselves.
The
day of reckoning has come. The opposition has orchestrated economic
sabotage, corporate smuggling, black market currency manipulations, full
scale hoarding of food and essential products. They have closed
highways, burned public buildings including a packed maternity hospital,
have dropped grenades from a helicopter on to the Supreme Court
offices, have assaulted, lynched and even burned alive young men of dark
skin “who looked Chavista”. This is a violent opposition steeped in
racism and classism against their own people and in the service of
foreign powers and big oil.
The
opposition parties refused to negotiate with the government, despite a
Peace and Dialogue Table having been established facilitated by 3 former
presidents of Latin America. The opposition insisted on having the
Vatican there; when the Nuncio arrived they still refused. President Maduro then
decided that if the opposition did not want to negotiate with the
government, they would have to negotiate directly with the people – and
called for a Constitutional Assembly to amend the constitution. And they
are terrified.
Constitutional
articles 437,438,439 clearly indicate that the president has the right
to call a Constitutional Assembly to amend the constitution. It is
undisputedly a legitimate process. President Chávez himself spoke of the
need to amend the constitution as a living work to enable facing
whatever new circumstances may come. President Maduro has called for an
amendment now, at this time because it is the very last resort towards a
peaceful solution to the violence in the streets that to this day the
opposition continues to promote.
In
1999, Venezuela was not facing the series of dangers it is facing now,
and it has a dysfunctional National Assembly that refuses to legislate
to face these challenges. At that time paramilitary forces were not
rampant on its western borders, there was no terrorism on the streets,
there was no economic and financial war against the economy, a post-oil
economy was not seriously contemplated, government employees were not
being assassinated, opposition mayors and governors were not harboring
street violence, the Attorney General was not actively supporting
impunity of crimes, there was no blatant abuse of parliamentary
immunity, with officials openly asking foreign powers for their
intervention to overthrow the government, there was scant attention to
the environmental and climate dangers of the country and the Planet.
These have now become serious issues pertaining to the security of the
state.
The
representatives to the Constitutional Assembly will be elected on July
30 by a direct and secret vote that has electronic, paper and digital
safeguards against fraud. Former US president and Nobel Prize winner, Jimmy Carter lauded this electoral process as: “the best in the world.” They will deliberate and amend nine specific areas:
(1) Mechanisms for peace: to counter those who carry out violence, reaffirm the values and mechanisms for justice
(2) Promote a new post-petroleum economy that is productive, diversified, integrationist, safeguard against economic war
(3) Enshrine anti-poverty programs (“misiones”) with constitutional status, securing the state’s social investment
(4) Revise
the justice, security and protection system, promote a preventative and
investigative police system and the penitential system, a stronger
penal code against rape, kidnapping and homicide, strengthen the fight
against terrorism, paramilitaries, narco-traffic and impunity
(5) Promote
further participatory democracy by strengthening communal councils and
communes giving them further constitutional status
(6) Promote a sovereign foreign policy defending the integrity of Venezuela in a multipolar world
(7) Promote the new Venezuelan identity and spirituality based on pluri-cultural and diversity of the people, art and culture
(8) Guarantee the future for youth, their social rights: cultural, educational, work and technology.
(9) Work towards countering climate change and protect the environmental conditions of life in the Planet.
The
constitutional changes do not contemplate “making Maduro president for
life” or “eliminating elections forever” as the opposition propaganda
machine accuses.
Edu Montesanti: What are the big challenges facing Venezuela today, and what are the best ways to win such challenges?
María Páez: The
biggest challenge to Venezuela is that international forces could back
opposition groups and paramilitary groups to militarily overthrow the
government. Big oil is behind this. They lobby the USA and its allies
because they want to solely control the largest oil reserve in the
planet that lies in Venezuela. With a former CEO of Exxon Mobil at the
head of the US State Department, the danger to Venezuela became greatly
enhanced. The wealthy upper classes of Venezuela are playing the role
they have always historically had since Independence: being the lackeys
of whatever world power is dominant. Their country is money and they
want to control the oil money that flows to the state. When they ruled
Venezuela during the previous 40 years, the equivalent of 15 Marshal
Plans disappeared into their pockets.
The best way to counter the dangers that face Venezuela is clear.
(1) Firstly,
as long as the Bolivarian government is onside of its people, defending
their human rights, their sovereignty as a people, promoting their
participation in democracy and promoting equality and social justice,
the Bolivarian Revolution will have their support.
(2) Secondly,
President Chavez transformed the armed forces – no longer is their main
function a repressive one (learned at the sinister School of the
Americas), but one that sees itself as defender of the people and their
Constitution, their identity is now that of the descendants of
Bolívar’s liberation army.
(3) Thirdly,
Venezuela has amply proven to be a real Good Neighbour with ALBA,
Petrocaribe, Telesur, UNASUR and CELAC. It is organically linked to its
region. It has also developed close relations with Russia, China, India,
Africa and parts of Europe: it is no longer a backwater country. The
USA may have undisputable military might, and a dangerous ally in
Colombia, but an attack on Venezuela would create significant
international and internal domestic strife for the USA.
Edu Montesanti: Facing
a violent opposition, its principal supporter, that is, the US, and the
media war, what has made possible for the Bolivarian Revolution in
Venezuela to survive to date almost 19 years after Hugo Chávez took
power?
María Páez: The
opposition cannot overthrow the government of Venezuela without
significant backing of the majority, without backing of the Armed Forces
and without international backing. That is the sane, rational view.
However,
the USA empire, with a dangerously ignorant and erratic president at
its helm could take the insane path of arming the opposition to provoke a
full scale civil war, possibly with Colombian troops. My prediction is
that such an evil adventure, while painful, will ultimately fail.
The
Spanish Empire also consistently underestimated the resiliency and
resolve of the Venezuelan people, not for nothing they are called “el
bravo pueblo”.
Disclaimer: The contents of this article are of sole
responsibility of the author(s). The Centre for Research on
Globalization will not be responsible for any inaccurate or incorrect
statement in this article.Copyright © Dr. Maria Páez Victor and Edu Montesanti, Global Research, 2017
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