Venezuela: How grassroots solidarity is helping to break the US blockade

March 5, 2020
Issue 
The 2020 Venzuela solidarity delegation visited communities engaged in grassroots organising against the impacts of the US blockade. Photo: Katherine Delgado.

As the United States ratchets up its sanctions on Venezuela, organisations in Australia are stepping up efforts to promote people-to-people solidarity.

Since 2014, the US has imposed more than 300 unilateral measures on Venezuela, including new sanctions last month on its state airline CONVIASA and on Russian state energy giant Rosneft for its dealings with Venezuela鈥檚 oil company PDVSA.

The blockade, which seeks to strangle Venezuela鈥檚 economy with the aim of bringing down the government, has cost the South American nation an estimated US$116 billion and as many as 40,000 lives.

In response, a solidarity delegation organised by the Venezuela Solidarity Campaign (VSC) and the Latin Solidarity Network (LASNET) visited Venezuela in January/February to see first-hand the impact the blockade is having on the Venezuelan people.

The delegation was comprised of independent journalist Joe Montero, union teacher Helen Whooley and LASNET activist Lucho Riquelme.

With the help of the Bolivar and Zamora Revolutionary Current (CRBZ), the three travelled to various parts of Venezuela to see how the country鈥檚 economic crisis and the sanctions were affecting people and how communities were organising to overcome them.

They were also able to hand over funds that had been raised by VSC, LASNET and the Australia-Venezuela Solidarity Network (AVSN) for projects being run by Venezuelan social movements.

Speaking to 91自拍论坛, CRBZ鈥檚 Katherine Delgado said of the delegation: 鈥淲e are extremely grateful for this gesture of solidarity by Australian social organisations and unions that are following events in Venezuela and that have come here to see the reality the establishment won鈥檛 show.鈥

Among the projects that received funds is a social-political agroecological school run by the CRBZ.

Delgado said the group was 鈥渧ery grateful for the concrete solidarity shown in terms of the help provided for our agroecological school,鈥 where farmers get the opportunity to learn how to produce in an environmentally-friendly and collective manner.

Funds were also handed over for an audiovisual project, 鈥淐ommunes to the helm鈥, run by the National Network of 颁辞尘耻苍别谤辞蝉听测听颁辞尘耻苍别谤补蝉聽(commune activists). It aims to produce a series of videos documenting how communities are empowering themselves to overcome the crisis by organising into communal councils and communes.

National Network of Comuneros鈥 Atenea Jim茅nez told GL 鈥渢he solidarity we have received from our brothers and sisters in Australia has been of great help鈥.

She explained the money raised had been used to 鈥渂uy a camera, tripod and memory drive and to upgrade our editing equipment鈥 for the project, 鈥渨ith the aim of recording the processes of communal construction underway.

鈥淩ight now, we have begun working on an alternative energy project that involves installing solar panels in rural areas.

鈥淲e hope that through our project we can show others what is possible if we organise ourselves, together with the strong bonds of solidarity we have with other peoples of the world.鈥

Commenting on the importance of this solidarity, Jim茅nez said: 鈥淰enezuelan workers are living through one of the most difficult moments of our history.

鈥淜nowing that we have the support of other peoples around the world and being able to count on concrete solidarity such as this that goes beyond just words, is for us the realisation of working-class internationalism.

鈥淚t is something that we especially treasure and value.鈥

Delgado agreed: 鈥淭his solidarity is important, in fact key for the times we are in, in which the Venezuelan people and the country are been attacked and economically blockaded.

鈥淭he reality is that the measures the US government has taken do not impact on the government but rather on the people, the great majority who find themselves in a state of vulnerability.

鈥淭hese gestures are beautiful acts of solidarity because they show that those who are on the side of the disadvantaged, even with the little they have, are helping those who have even less, in our case due to the blockade.

鈥淲e want to strengthen these bonds to help us remain strong and let the Venezuelan people know what is happening in other countries.

鈥淚n doing so we are, little by little, breaking the blockade imposed on us by the US and large corporations.

鈥淚t is up to us as social movements to building solidarity from below so that together we can confront the capitalist system that is killing humanity and planet.鈥

[Federico Fuentes is an AVSN national co-convenor.聽The AVSN is organising a fundraising film night, showing 鈥淰enezuelans under siege鈥 on April 4, 6pm at the Sydney Resistance Centre, 22 Mountain St, Ultimo. If you would like to contribute in some way to these and other solidarity fundraising projects contact or via Facebook.]

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