Hands Off Venezuela

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hands Off Venezuela is a political lobby group based in the United Kingdom and with branches in many other countries. [1] The campaign was established in December 2002, following the Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002, with the aim of increasing public and political awareness in the UK and elsewhere of the Chávez government's social and political reforms[2] and to counter what they see as a US funded propaganda campaign in the west to paint Chávez as a dictator and a threat to democracy.[3]

Hands Off Venezuela logo
Hands Off Venezuela logo

The organisation was founded by the International Marxist Tendency's Alan Woods, a Welsh Trotskyist and political writer, who wrote an appeal [4], calling for "defence of the revolutionary process in Venezuela" and to defend the Bolivarian Revolution, to oppose US intervention in Venezuela, and to ensure that information about what was happening in Venezuela would reach the international labour movement.

Some Venezuelan HOV supporters welcome Chávez to London, May 2006
Some Venezuelan HOV supporters welcome Chávez to London, May 2006

The organisation's most visible work has been in issuing press releases which counter unfavourable western media reports on the Chávez government, organising protests and participating in national anti-war demonstrations, and work in the British Trade Union Movement. The organisation also has a strong presence on UK university campi, where they hold regular lecture sessons on developments in Venezuela, organise visits by Venezuelan Trade Unionists, and screen documentaries.

Their most notable successes to date have included the visit by Hugo Chávez to Vienna, where he spoke at a Hands Off Venezuela rally attended by 5,000 youth [5][6], and the participation in the organisation of the visit by Hugo Chávez to London as a guest of Venezuela supporter Mayor Ken Livingstone (During this trip Chávez refused to meet UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, who he described as a "pawn of [US] imperialism" [7]), and also the resolutions of official support passed by the British Trade Union Congress (Motion 79), the Scottish Trades Union Congress (Resolution 108[8]) and an Early Day Motion (EDM 487[9]) raised in the House of Commons by supporter John McDonnell, MP.

Other important supporters include Jeremy Dear, general secretary of the British National Union of Journalists and George Galloway and his RESPECT party [10].President Chávez has himself officially thanked the organisation for their work [11].

In 2006 HOV launched a 24 page glossy promotional magazine, also called "Hands Off Venezuela".

[edit] See also

[edit] Cited references

  1. ^ Launch statement of the Iranian Hand Off Venezuela Campaign, (link), HOV, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  2. ^ About Hands Off Venezuela, (link), HOV, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  3. ^ The Independent labels Hugo Chávez a "dictator", (link), Letter to Editor, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  4. ^ Original HoV appeal, (link), URL accessed July 27, 2006
  5. ^ "Hugo Chávez Addresses Mass Rally Organised by Hands Off Venezuela", (link), venezuelanalysis.com, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  6. ^ "President Hugo Chávez Frias visits Vienna to speak at Hands off Venezuela Rally!", (link), VHeadline.com, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  7. ^ "Hugo Chávez to Meet With London Leftists, But No Gov't Bigs", (link), FoxNews, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  8. ^ "Resolution 108", (link), HOV, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  9. ^ "Early Day Motion 487", (link), Parliament.uk, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  10. ^ "Old Labour: Hugo Chávez's UK propagandists" by Aleksander Boyd, (link), Vcrisis.com, URL accessed July 27, 2006
  11. ^ "Chavez praises Marxist.com and backs Hands off Venezuela campaign", (Press Release), HOV, URL accessed July 27, 2006

[edit] External links