Venezuela: This is a revolt of the rich, not a 'terror campaign'

March 21, 2014
Issue 
Thousands march in Caracas to reject the right-wing violence and support the government and National Guard, March 15. Photo from

Images forge reality, granting a power to television and video and even still photographs that can burrow deep into people’s consciousness without them even knowing it.

I thought that I, too, was immune to the repetitious portrayals of Venezuela as a failed state in the throes of a popular rebellion. But I wasn’t prepared for what I saw in Caracas this month: how little of daily life appeared to be affected by the right-wing protests, the normality that prevailed in the vast majority of the city.

I, too, had been taken in by media imagery.

Major media outlets have already reported that Venezuela’s poor have not joined the right-wing opposition protests, but that is an understatement: it is not just the poor who are abstaining ― in Caracas, it is almost everyone outside of a few rich areas like Altamira, where small groups of protesters engage in nightly battles with security forces, throwing rocks and firebombs and running from tear gas.

Only the rich protesting

Walking from the working-class neighborhood of Sabana Grande to the city centre, there was no sign that Venezuela is in the grip of a “crisis” that requires intervention from the Organization of American States (OAS), no matter what US Secretary of State John Kerry tells you.

The metro also ran very well, although I could not get off at Alta Mira station, where the rebels had set up their base of operations until their eviction this week.

I got my first glimpse of the barricades in Los Palos Grandes, an upper-income area where the protesters do have popular support. There, the neighbours yell at anyone trying to remove the barricades ― which is a risky thing to try (at least four people have apparently been shot dead for doing so).

But even here at the barricades, life was pretty much normal, save for some snarled traffic. On the weekend, the Parque del Este public park was full of families and runners sweating in the 90-degree Fahrenheit heat ― before Hugo Chavez, you had to pay to get in, and the residents here, I was told, were disappointed when the less well-to-do were allowed to enter for free. The restaurants are still crowded at night.

Travel provides little more than a reality check, of course, and I visited Caracas mainly to gather data on the economy. But I came away sceptical of the narrative, reported daily in the media, that growing shortages of basic foods and consumer goods are a serious motivation for the protests.

The people who are most inconvenienced by those shortages are, of course, the poor and working classes. But the residents of Los Palos Grandes and Altamira, where I saw real protests happening, have their servants stand in line for what they need. They also have the income and storage space to accumulate some inventory.

These people are not hurting ― they are doing very well. Their income has grown at a healthy pace since the then-Chavez government got control of the oil industry a decade ago. They even get an expensive handout from the government: anyone with a credit card (which excludes the poor and millions of working people) is entitled to US$3000 (about A$3310) per year at a subsidised exchange rate.

They can then sell the dollars for six times what they paid, in what amounts to a multi-billion dollar annual subsidy for the privileged. Yet it is this sector that is supplying the base and troops of the rebellion.

The class nature of this fight has always been stark and inescapable, now more than ever. Walking past the crowd that showed up for the March 5 ceremonies to mark the one-year anniversary of Chavez’s death, it was a sea of working-class Venezuelans, tens of thousands of them.

There were no expensive clothes or $300 shoes. What a contrast to the disgruntled masses of Los Palos Grandes, with $40,000 Grand Cherokee Jeeps bearing the slogan of the moment: “SOS VENEZUELA.”

US rhetoric

When it comes to Venezuela, John Kerry knows which side of the class war he is on. On March 13, just as I was leaving town, the US secretary of state doubled down in his fusillade of rhetoric against the government, accusing President Nicolas Maduro of waging a “terror campaign against his own people”.

Kerry also threatened to invoke the Inter-American Democratic Charter of the OAS against Venezuela, as well as implementing sanctions.

Brandishing the Democratic Charter against Venezuela is a bit like threatening Vladimir Putin with a United Nations-sponsored vote on secession in Crimea.

Perhaps Kerry did not notice, but just a few days before his threats, the OAS took a resolution that Washington brought against Venezuela and turned it inside-out, declaring the regional body’s “solidarity” with the Maduro government.

Twenty-nine countries approved it, with only the right-wing governments of Panama and Canada siding with the US against it.

Article 21 of the OAS’s Democratic Charter applies to the “unconstitutional interruption of the democratic order of a member state” (like the 200 military coup in Honduras that Washington helped to legitimise, or the 2002 military coup in Venezuela, aided even more by the US government).

Given its recent vote, the OAS would be more likely to invoke the Democratic Charter against the US government for its drone killings of US citizens without trial, than it would be to do so against Venezuela.

Kerry’s “terror campaign” rhetoric is equally divorced from reality, and predictably provoked an equivalent response from Venezuela’s foreign minister, who called Kerry a “murderer”.

No 'terror campaign'

Here is the truth about those charges from Kerry: since the protests in Venezuela began, it appears that more people have died at the hands of protesters than security forces.

According to the deaths reported by the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research in the past month, as well as those killed for trying to remove protesters’ barricades, about seven have apparently been killed by protesters’ obstructions ― including a motorcyclist beheaded by a wire stretched across the road ― and five National Guard officers have been killed.

As for violence from law enforcement, at least three people appear to have been killed by the National Guard or other security forces ― including two protesters and a pro-government activist.

Some people blame the government for an extra three killings by armed civilians; in a country with an average of more than 65 homicides per day, it is entirely possible these people acted on their own.

Twenty-one members of the security forces are under arrest for alleged abuses, including some of the killings. This is no “terror campaign”.

At the same time, it is difficult to find any serious denunciation of opposition violence from major opposition leaders. Polling data finds the protests to be deeply unpopular in Venezuela, although they do much better abroad when they are promoted as “peaceful protests” by people like Kerry.

The data also suggest that most Venezuelans see these disturbances for what they are: an attempt to remove the elected government from power.

The domestic politics of Kerry’s posturing are pretty simple. On the one hand, you have the right-wing Florida Cuban-American lobby and their neo-conservative allies screaming for overthrow. To the left of the far right there is, well, nothing.

This White House cares very little about Latin America, and there are no electoral consequences for making most of the governments in the hemisphere more disgusted with Washington.

Economic gains

Perhaps Kerry thinks the Venezuelan economy is going to collapse and that will bring some of the non-rich Venezuelans into the streets against the government.

But the economic situation is actually stabilising. Monthly inflation fell in February, and the black-market dollar has fallen sharply on the news that the government is introducing a new, market-based exchange rate.

Venezuela’s sovereign bonds returned 11.5% from February 11 (the day before the protests began) to March 13, the highest returns in the Bloomberg dollar emerging market bond index. Shortages will most likely ease in the coming weeks and months.

Of course, that is exactly the opposition’s main problem: the next election is a year-and-a-half away, and by that time, it’s likely that the economic shortages and inflation that have risen over the past 15 months will have abated.

The opposition will then probably lose parliamentary elections, as they have lost every election over the past 15 years. But their current insurrectionary strategy is not helping their own cause: it seems to have divided the opposition and united the Chavistas.

The only place where the opposition seems to be garnering broad support is Washington.

[Reprinted from Venezuela Analysis.]


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