Another video from MayDay
Barrio TV, marcha 1ro. de mayo 2013
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=aGzDNgRJB5U







[AUDIO] Venezuelan presidential elections and the opposition attempted
coup<http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/elections_fraud_coup.htm>
03 May 2013

Hands Off Venezuela

   - <http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/elections_fraud_coup/print.htm>
   -
   
<http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/component/com_mailto/link,647c7c25c2e268e76e332f9147c99a3419f26db8/template,rt_camber/tmpl,component/>

On April 29, Jorge Martin from the Hands Off Venezuela campaign was
interviewed by Sylvia Richardson from Latin
Waves<http://www.latinwavesmedia.com/>on
the results of the Venezuelan presidential election on April 14, the claims
by the opposition that there had been fraud and the challenges facing the
Venezuelan revolution.

Latin Waves is broadcast on CJSF, the Simon Fraser University radio station
in Vancouver, but then syndicated to a whole series of radio stations
across North America and beyond.

Here's the full audio of the interview:

click on url:

http://www.handsoffvenezuela.org/elections_fraud_coup.htm

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

**

*Resolutions for HOV Conference 2013*
*

On the April 14 presidential election

Defend the Bolivarian revolution – respect the democratic will of the people

On April 14, the Bolivarian candidate Nicolás Maduro won the presidential
elections with 7,586,251 votes (50.61%) against the opposition candidate
Henrique Capriles who received 7,361,512 votes (49.12%), with a turnout of
79.69%.

The opposition refused to recognise the results of the election and has
launched a campaign of violence. On the night of April 15 several CDI
health clinics were attacked across the country, as well as alternative and
state media outlet buildings and journalists, offices of the United
Socialist Party of Venezuela, etc. As a result of this politically
motivated violence 9 people were killed, all of them in the Bolivarian camp.

The noisy campaign of the opposition was combined with a national and
international media campaign, international interference and pressure (from
the United States, Spain and OAS), etc. In effect, the aim was to create a
situation of chaos, challenge all of the democratic institutions and
prepare the way for a coup, just as in April 2002.

Faced with this campaign, described by president Maduro as a “developing
coup d’Etat” we note the following:

- the Venezuelan presidential election was conducted on the basis of the
same electoral register, voting system and machines as the October 7
presidential election, the results of which the opposition did recognise

- the voting machines and systems were audited prior to the elections, on
election day and the day after, with the presence of opposition technicians
and no complaint was registered

- on election night 54% of polling booths, chosen randomly, were publicly
audited with the presence of opposition and Bolivarian observers. The
voting results recorded by the voting machines were checked against the
paper receipts in the boxes. No complaints were registered.

- the elections were observed by over 170 international observers from many
countries including India, Brazil, Great Britain, Argentina, South Korea,
Spain and France. Among the observers were two former presidents (of
Guatemala and the Dominican Republic), judges, lawyers and high-ranking
officials of national electoral councils. All of them stated that the
elections had been free and fair and the system transparent, reliable,
well-run and thoroughly audited.

- all governments around the world have now recognised the democratically
elected president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, with the exception of the
United States.

- instead of following the legal procedures for challenging the result or
lodging specific complaints, the opposition incited violence. No complaints
were lodged with the National Electoral Council until four days later, when
9 people had already been killed.

- at the demand of the opposition, the National Electoral Council decided
to audit the remaining 46% polling booths. The opposition then said it
would not participate in this audit and would not recognise its results and
will challenge the election results in front of the Supreme Court of
Justice.

Hands Off Venezuela conference resolves therefore to:

- recognise the democratically elected government of Nicolas Maduro

- explain the real issues involved and counter the lies, manipulation and
half-truths of the mass media regarding the Bolivarian revolution and
particularly the election process

- campaign to defend the democratically expressed will of the Venezuelan
people and the election of President Maduro against any attempts to remove
him by means of a coup

- reject the hypocrisy of the so-called “democratic” opposition which is
the same one which organised the coup in 2002 and has constantly attempted
to remove the democratically elected government of Venezuela and destroy
its Bolivarian revolution

- demand that those responsible for the violence and the killings of the
days after the elections should be brought to justice and punished, both
those who committed those acts as well as those who are responsible for
incitement - enough impunity

- redouble our efforts to defend the Bolivarian revolution and organise
solidarity with it in the British trade union and labour movement and
amongst the population in general

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Solidarity with the women workers of GOTCHA - for nationalisation under
workers control

This Hands Off Venezuela conference notes the courageous struggle of the
women workers of Gotcha, the textile factory in Aragua.

We note that:

- the workers of Gotcha attempted to form a union in order to address the
problems of health and safety, working conditions, legal rights and others
there were facing in the period of 2006-08.

- the owner of the factory responded by making all of them redundant and
abandoning production

- the workers of Gotcha decided to take over the installations, occupy them
and start to produce under workers control from 2008.

- since the beginning of the occupation the workers have had to face many
attempts by the former owner and also bureaucrats in state institutions
(like electricity company Corpoelec) to sabotage their production.

- the workers at Gotcha also face problems derived from their lack of any
legal status.

- the workers of Gotcha have been struggling for the expropriation of the
factory under workers control, as has been done previously by the
Bolivarian government in the cases of Venepal, CNV, INAF and others.

- the workers of Gotcha have played an active role in the national movement
for workers control

- the women workers of Gotcha are an inspiring example of how workers can
produce without bosses, but bosses cannot produce without workers.

We therefore resolve to:

- organise solidarity with the struggling women workers of Gotcha within
the British trade union movement.

- to request from the Bolivarian government of Nicolas Maduro the
expropriation of the factory, so that the company can be nationalised under
the democratic control of the workers themselves.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hands Off Venezuela Steering Committee proposal

Katerina Annis, Amancay Colque, Darrall Cozens, Jorge Martin, Rodrigo
Trompiz, Rob Sewell, Julian Sharpe, Matt Stevenson, Ronnie Turus, Rob Walsh
– honorary president: John McDonnell*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

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