Why do people dislike hugo chavez
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez, another Chavez ally, declared three days of mourning nationwide and ordered the Argentine flag hung at half-staff. She also prepared to travel to Venezuela.
Former U. He was a great politician for his country, Latin America and the world. He played a very important role in the development of relations between Venezuela and Russia, so we feel very badly about it. There was no shortage of emotional farewells to a socialist hero who some feel rivaled the revolutionaries of the s. Your go-to source for all the best Black Friday deals: tech, toys, fashion, mattresses, beauty, wellness, travel and more. The holiday, which is a big deal elsewhere, is becoming a thing here, too.
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A supporter of the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez stands in front of the military hospital in Caracas where he died Tuesday. By Paul Thornton. Here is a selection of those letters. Paul Thornton. Follow Us twitter email facebook. The death of democratically elected President Hugo Chavez Frias has evoked serious thoughts and reflections on the meaning of his life and the process he led from peoples and communities throughout the Americas and the world.
Despite much criticism by many right wing governments and people in the West, Hugo Chavez led a process in Venezuela that symbolised the new assertiveness and self-consciousness of nations in Latin America that saw a future for themselves, liberated from the heavy-handed, oppressive and economically draining policies of their powerful neighbour from the North.
But along with the symbolism connected to the new politics of authentic decolonisation that many of the centre-left states embraced, Chavez was committed to a process of providing real, substantive support to states in the region who were willing to pursue a course that could result in a real shift in power in the region. What that signified for many of us in the Afro-descendant communities in the Americas, was that the rise of Chavez and the Bolivarian process that the people of Venezuela had embarked on would raise the spectrums of a new kind of politic in the region.
We hoped that with the new commitment to social inclusion and the ending of all forms of oppression that the issue of race and racial discrimination would become an acceptable and indeed an essential element of the transformation process in the Americas. Under his year leadership, Chavez was able to guide unprecedented government initiatives that led to programmes and policies that resulted in significant progress toward combating the historical legacy of racism and discrimination that historically plagued the country.
Chavez also provided similar parallel support to other nations with predominantly Afro descendant populations, where their governments were not willing to make it a priority.
President Chavez was able to institute many reforms to ensure African descendants in Venezuela could have full and equal access to social, economic and cultural rights. Among the several reforms to support this new recognition of race and culture was the creation in of the Presidential Commission for the Prevention and Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination in the Venezuelan Educational System.
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