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(Council
of State – Official Version)
Citizen
deputy Nicolás Maduro Moro. Why are you laughing? I just learned that
Nicolas’ second last name is Moro, Mr. President, Nicolás Maduro
Moro. This is what happens when someone has a high position in the judiciary,
isn’t it? Nicolas Maduro Moro, president of the National Assembly and
good friend;
Citizen
deputy Ricardo Gutiérrez, first vice-president of the National Assembly;
Citizen
deputy Pedro Carreño Escobar, second vice-president of the National
Assembly;
Deputies
of our Assembly;
Your
Excellencies ambassadors;
Honorable
charge d’affaires and representatives of international organizations
accredited with our government;
Citizen
Doctor Iván Rincón Urdaneta, president of the Supreme Court
of Justice;
Citizen
doctor Germán Mundaraín, president of the Republican Moral Council
and ombudsperson;
Citizen
doctor Oscar Bataglini, head of the National Electoral Council;
Citizen
doctor José Vicente Rangel Ávalos, executive vice-president
of the Republic;
Citizen
ministers of the Executive Cabinet;
Citizen
doctor Marisol Plaza, attorney general of the Republic;
Citizen
Juan Barreto, metropolitan Lord Mayor;
Citizen
governors present at this ceremony;
Citizen
Freddy Bernal, mayor of Libertador Municipality;
All
other mayors;
José
Vicente Rangel Ávalos, mayor of Sucre Municipality, Miranda State;
All
other mayors and mayoresses present;
Citizen
vice-ministers;
Citizen
doctor Orieta Caponi, chancellor of the Bolivarian University of Venezuela
and other university authorities;
University
students;
Citizen
Rear Admiral Orlando Maniglia Ferreira, inspector general of the National
Armed Forces;
Other
officers, generals and admirals of our top military command;
Citizen
presidents of autonomous institutes and state enterprises;
Special
guests to this ceremony; journalists, photographers and camera people from
Venezuela and the world;
Friends
all;
People
of Venezuela:
Today,
January 14, as we know, is the Day of the Divine Shepherdess; Divine Shepherdess,
Shepherdess divine. I want to begin by invoking her, our Shepherdess, invoking
all she means to us, her kindness, her peasant origins, the young worker who
spread and continues to spread kindness, love and affection for all; because
the Divine Shepherdess, as we know, the patron saint of Barquisimeto, the
patron saint of Lara State, has extended her kindness, her radiance, her wisdom,
her strength and her light to all of Venezuela.
So,
accompanied by the Divine Shepherdess, I offer my congratulations to Lara
state, the governor and all the people of that state and through the Divine
Shepherdess, I begin by invoking God, the Almighty, the creator of the universe;
Christ, the redeemer of the peoples, unequaled fighter and the greatest martyr
of all times. I ask for their guidance so that this message I am about to
give will reach not only you, Mr. president, fellow Venezuelans and deputies
but, through you and from this hall, will also reach all the Venezuelan people
and, through you, most illustrious ambassadors accredited to our government,
this message of brotherhood and reflection will reach all the people of the
world.
I
am going to begin remembering one of the most famous men born of these lands,
who ever set foot in Venezuela or in the Americas, an American martyr too,
a martyr, of the struggles for equality, liberty and justice, as Christ was,
a Quixote of these lands. And when I say Quixote, I am remembering that we
are now in the year of the 400th anniversary of the first edition by the Manco
de Lepanto, the immortal Cervantes’, of a monumental work in terms of
not only Spanish literature, but also of world literature, Don Quixote.
Bolivar
was a Quixote, without a doubt, and a Quixote was the man I am especially
remembering today, the Abel of Colombia, a martyr, as Simon Bolivar said when
he learned of his death in Berruecos. He was hardly 35 years old and in only
35 years he had earned the highest honors in the military and political fields,
grand marshal in Ayacucho, one of the liberators of South America, president
and founder of our ever-beloved sister Bolivia: you know who I am speaking
of Antonio Jose de Sucre (Applause).
So,
there, thinking of Bolivia, which was just then being born in those beloved
sister lands, there where one day Bolivar rode, flanked, on one side, by none
other than Sucre and, on the other, by that wonderful Venezuelan and Latin
American, unequalled teacher and revolutionary, the Robinson of America, Simón
Rodríguez; there where Simón Rodríguez exclaimed: “Thomas
More’s utopia is here, it is here in the Americas, either we create
or we fall by the wayside”. So, there, thinking about that birth, Bolivia’s
birth, Sucre gave us those words that we must continue to harvest, re-sowing
them, spreading them to all Venezuelans, Latin Americans, Caribbeans, all
Americans, those from the north, from the center, from the south and even
further, to the world as a whole, so that the dark face of the world truly
begins to change and that this century, the 21st, be the century of virtue,
the century of peace, of human beings rediscovering one another.
Sucre
gave us that phrase: “When Spanish America went to the battlefield to
fight for its emancipation, for its independence, it was understood that it
also fought for liberty and equality, inseparable sisters”. The first,
independence, wouldn’t make any sense without the second, equality.
That equality, that independence, that full liberty, that justice –
Bolivar would say – these must be the queen of all republican virtues,
must become the battle standards of the entire Venezuelan people. They are
the battle standards of the government that I am honored to preside over,
and we must raise them higher every day.
Mr.
vice-president; ministers and top public servants of the republic; generals,
admirals and soldiers, from sunrise to sunset, from cockcrow to moonrise,
liberty, equality and justice must be the standards that light our way every
day.
And
what is more, they must be our standards always and forever, Mr. president,
deputies, ambassadors: liberty and equality, old standards, renewed standards.
That
is the core of the feelings that drive us and the strongest emotion that moves
us, the greatest force that motivates us, the greatest force that motivated
us throughout 2004, from the first of January to the last second of the last
day of December.
As
every year –you know– I bring my written report, on which I was
working intensely until late last night. The vice-president, the minister
of planning, the ministers and the government team got together top work in
coordination. But I am going to spare you a written speech thick with figures,
which, at this late hour, might be nothing short of torture.
However,
I have divided my report on the year 2004 into political, economic, social,
territorial and international areas of government so I can go over the main
areas. I’ve most certainly left some out, because there are so many
details, so many programs, so many projects, there is so much progress that
I haven’t mentioned. At the end of my speech, Mr. President, I will
give you the text of my original report and we will send out enough copies
so that each deputy can go over it. We are also publishing a pamphlet –the
Minister of Communication is in charge of this– which can be circulated
in the streets, because, as I said before, this report is not just for the
National Assembly but also for the whole country.
This
is my sixth report to the nation –on the work we’ve done, I mean,
because I have made other speeches during these six years in office –
and this is the first thing I want to comment on.
Our
sixth year in office ended with 2004. Of course, there have been two terms,
as we know; the first, of two years, was cut short by the decision of the
most sovereign National Constituent Assembly, and then, these four years of
the second term, but that’s six years.
Time,
time, time and space, fundamental elements for understanding life, for understanding
any strategy, any project, for developing any strategic plans. There is no
life without space, there is no life without time.
I
remember that when we were in the opposition, and even before getting involved
in politics, that political mechanism that existed here, which ensured what
they called “alternating governments”, and which they said was
an essential feature of democracy –and we had those five-year terms
in office-- always seemed strange to me personally. The first year, generally,
was for not only the president but also the teams, the most varied teams,
ministries to get their feet wet, to learn, to make all the staff substitutions
that had to be done –and here it was generally everyone– at all
levels and on all fronts.
The
first year was taken up with these tasks, which are normal, to get to know,
to learn even, and the last year was election year, so that in the last year,
when they really should have had government power as political leaders those
presidents, I would imagine, began to lose a large part of them. A terrible
thing, I always thought. These at times irrational alternating governments
need not be an essential rule of democracy.
On
one occasion, in Germany, I asked the governor of Brandenburg –we were
traveling through the countryside to Potsdam– and he understood what
I was saying, that governor, and he talked with such great knowledge about
his state, Brandenburg, of its economy, its history, plans, projects, its
form of government, its organized communities.
I
offer my apologies, because I hadn’t looked to this side and I hadn’t
greeted the Attorney General of the Republic and the Comptroller General of
the Republic, who are here with us; they are here, but I hadn’t seen
them. I welcome them, as I do the comrades from the High Military Command.
So,
that good man explained all of that to me and I was amazed at how much he
knew and understood about his region, his people, and I asked him: “Governor,
how long have you been governor?” He said for something like 22 years.
“And for how many more years can you be governor?”, and he said:
“for twenty two more, that is, it depends on the people: Does the people
want a governor to continue in office? Let’s ask the people”.
A
few days ago, with a good friend of mine who’s called Rosinés,
I was thinking about time, time, and I said to her and to other friends and
relatives: “For this revolutionary process, I would have handed over
the government by now, my stay here would have been fleeting”. Actually,
my time could have been extremely fleeting but that’s not what the people
wanted.
So,
this reflection is in line with the tenets of our Bolivarian Constitution,
the possibility of consecutive re-election, something much better than the
mechanism established by the 1961 Constitution, whose implementation and results
were harmful to the Republic, to the country.
Six
years have passed, there are of course two left in this term and, most probably,
God and the Divine Shepherdess willing, six more in the next term (Applause).
This
has nothing to do, as some continue to say, and I don’t know if there’s
anything we can do about those who continue to say this, this has nothing
to do with a personal ambition for power, no, not in the least. It is only
the expression of one will and of many wills, of millions of individual wills
and one, huge, collective will, to use these years to move ahead with building
what we have begun, from the foundations, from the bottom up, this very long-term
project. It’s a 200-year project (Applause).
It’s
a 200-year project, so we will have to and we do have to lay it down on solid
moral, political, social, economic, territorial and comprehensive foundations.
This is our task and always following that principle of Christ: men, human
beings, well, men, women, boys, girls, human beings must always be the alpha
and omega, the beginning and end, human beings.
So,
our sixth year in office is over, the fourth of the second constitutional
mandate and of the first term of the Fifth Republic and also of this new century,
and when one looks at how far we have come, then we could recite those verses
that we have been reciting for many years: “You have to make your own
way”.
We
have been making our own way and at this point –this is not the first
time I’ve said it this way– we could say we’ve been making
our own particular and specific way each one of these last six years of republican
life, of national life.
We
could call year 1999 the year of the National Constituent Assembly and of
the Bolivarian Constitution’s birth. This seems to be the sign that
will be etched forever on 1999.
The
year 2000 was the year of re-legitimizing the three powers and that made it
the year of the birth of the Fifth Republic.
The
year 2001 was the year of the empowering laws; they left their mark on that
year and they left a deep mark on the years that followed, since all of these
laws arose from the sovereign mandate of the people, through the original
1999 Constituent Assembly. But 2001 was also the year when the counterrevolution
or the beginning of the counterrevolution or the mobilization of the counterrevolution
was born.
At
the beginning of 2002, I think I once said that it was the year to live or
to die, and God wanted us to live, and not only us individually, in our personal
lives, but also in our political lives; the year for the republic and the
homeland to live.
2002
was the year of the imperialist attack on Venezuela, but, at the same time,
it was the marvelous year of the revolutionary, popular, civil-military, democratic,
profoundly democratic response (Applause).
So,
we come to 2003, year of the national counter-offensive, after having been
–who could deny it– against the ropes for a good part of 2002,
against the ropes all of 2002, there was even a knock down, but we quickly
got back on our feet. We couldn’t go back on the offensive straight
away however, and that brought us to December 2002.
Now,
2003 was the year of the national counter-offensive in every field and of
the birth of the social missions, as part of this national offensive. However,
as well as being the year of this political and economic offensive, this counter-offensive,
2003 will go down in history as the year of the birth of the social missions
to bring about inclusion and justice.
That
brought us to 2004, and though I must go over things quickly, as I have done
with the five previous years, I must devote more time to 2004, as we could
call this last year, first, the year of the victory of the new democracy;
a great national political victory, a victory for the nation, for the republic,
for the Constitution, not just for one of the country’s political sectors
but for all of them. I even ask God that, as time goes by, those who still
refuse to recognize that 2004 was a great victory for the nation, a great
victory for the whole of Venezuela, that they begin to acknowledge this. I
think some people, many ordinary people have begun to acknowledge this, and
I think that some opposition leaders have also begun to acknowledge it. Therefore,
2004 was the year of the great victory of the new democracy that is here.
Secondly,
it was the year of a fairly solid birth and takeoff of a new economic cycle
that we were hoping for and that we will exploit to the full, and I make a
call to the whole nation, regardless of their political stripe, social origin
or religious belief, to make the best use of this solid base and the beginning
of a new economic cycle of expansion and growth. Thus we may break the vicious
circle of boom and bust to which the economic system — a system which
creates riches for a minority but poverty and misery for the majority, development
for a small group of nations but underdevelopment and total poverty and dependency
for the majority of the world’s nations— has for so long condemned
our economy and those of dependent and underdeveloped economies.
Let
us all make an effort to break this vicious circle (Applause). We can do it.
Venezuela can do it with the support of many of the world’s nations,
of many of the world’s governments, of many investors, of the national
and international private sector. We have the economic plan, nothing is hidden,
we are transparent. We have the political plan, the economic plan, the social
plan, the worldview. This is the plan.
I
want to thank, and believe me when I say I do so sincerely, in good faith
and hope, I want to give special thanks to Albis Muñoz, the president
of FEDECAMARAS, for being with us in this chamber. Welcome (Applause). She
deserves nothing but respect, acknowledgement and affection for being here,
and no one here will boo her, we will applaud her and embrace her as a fellow
Venezuelan (Applause).
Similarly,
I want to acknowledge the presence of the governor of Nueva Esparta state,
Morel Rodríguez (Applause). Welcome, governor, it is a pleasure to
see you here. There he is, next to the mayor of Sucre, and the mayor of Caracas,
and the governor of Bolivar state.
Well,
we’re going to work together. You won the elections, you are the governor.
My commitment and our commitment is to the whole country, to Nueva Esparta,
of course, we really love that state! To Zulia, how we love that state! A
few days ago, I spoke with governor Manuel Rosales of Zulia state and I said
to him too: “Governor, we’re going to work together, you can count
on my full support. We’re going to work together to rescue the land,
in the struggle against large land ownership, in the struggle against drug
trafficking, unsafe borders, armed or unarmed incursions by other countries
which often violate our national sovereignty, especially along that border,
and this is a common task, the struggle against corruption, well, the whole
national project.
President
Nicolás Maduro Moro has just given me some really good news. He gave
me the really good news that yesterday he issued the ruling making VENEPAL
a public utility (Applause). This ruling, which was passed unanimously with
all of the opposition voting in favor, paves the way for the government expropriation
of this company for the benefit of the workers (Applause).
How
could we allow a company not to meet its obligations to the workers, allow
some to leave the country and others to stay, to close the company and to
affect hundreds of families, thousands of persons and not pay the workers
benefits nor respect their labor rights? That violates the Constitution and
the rule of law, of justice; we can’t allow that.
The
striking fact here, I must point out, is that all the opposition deputies
in this parliament voted for this ruling. This is a good sign, an excellent
sign for everyone in the country (Applause).
I
also thank some opposition deputies for being here.
This
is something I have never been able to understand, but, I hope that, little
by little, things will continue to fall into place.
Just
imagine, the National Assembly committee, complying with its constitutional
mandate, came just a few days ago to inform me, the head of state, of the
beginning of the parliamentary session. It was only right for two Social Christian
deputies to be there, and I gave them special thanks for coming to the Palace
and shook their hands with the same affection with which I shook Nicolás
Maduro’s hands and the hands of all the rest of the Bolivarian deputies.
They are Venezuelan, they are deputies.
Suppose
I had said to my household staff: “Don’t let those two deputies
in”. That would be most unbecoming of a head of state. And so the day
must come, in my 14th message perhaps (Applause), --not so far away, right?--
perhaps in my 7th message. We needn’t wait that long, Vice-President
Carreño, perhaps next year the opposition deputies will be here, doing
their duty. They should come and hear the message, so that they can then go
out and criticize it or not. If there’s anything positive in it, well,
then they can think about it, and it is their duty, using the speech and an
analysis of the documents we will be giving you today, to say anything negative
about the government’s performance in the year 2004 and to give their
opinion, objective opinions, we hope, not just those motivated by political
considerations or by the fact that they are the opposition or not.
To
sum up, a new economic cycle of expansion, growth and redistribution of national
income has been born and is moving on. We’re all going to make a big
effort so that we never again fall into a recession, so that we may avail
ourselves of the boost given us by a rate of economic growth that is a record
for us and one of the highest in the world in the last 100 years. The growth
of the Venezuelan economy this year that’s just ended, 2004, is real,
sustained growth (Applause).
In
addition to being the year of the victory of the new democracy, of the birth
and takeoff of a new economic cycle of growth and expansion, 2004 has also
been the year of the consolidation and development of the social inclusion
missions (Applause).
We’ve
made wonderful progress in the social missions. We’ll soon be seeing
some figures. I won’t overburden you, but I have to refer to some figures,
don’t I, Mr. Vice-President? Not all those that you sent me, I’ve
chosen about 10 % of all the figures on economic growth and of social growth
and development, one without the other wouldn’t make sense, because
this, my dear friends, the ambassadors, is one of the dilemmas in which we
are caught. I mentioned it in the last few summits in South America and my
last few trips through Europe and Asia, but mostly here in Latin America,
in my meetings with my fellow presidents from this our Americas.
I
will never forget my good friend, ex president Fernando Enrique Cardoso’s
speech, his valedictory speech. He was leaving to hand over the presidency
of the Federative Republic of Brazil to comrade President Lula Da Silva. It
was in the Dominican Republic, at the last Iberoamerican Summit; Cardoso was
a few days away from handing over the presidency and said a few heartfelt
words, and among the things Fernando Enrique Cardoso said were these words.
I will never forget them, because I used them when I made a speech there.
He said: “I governed Brazil, one of the biggest nations in the world,
for eight years, and in all those eight years, Brazil’s economy didn’t
stop growing”. Then he said an amazing thing: “Neither did poverty
stop growing”.
It has to do with the economic model; growth is not enough, or economic growth
is not enough; it’s all about a model that must make the fair distribution
of national income a priority. And that’s what we’ve started to
achieve in 2004, the year of the emergence and takeoff of a new economic cycle
of expansion and growth, which went hand in hand with a redistribution of
national income, mostly through the social missions, to allocate a very large
volume of resources to that vast number of Venezuelans who always received
next to nothing from government plans, and if they did get anything it was
just crumbs; it’s a matter of structural changes.
I
invite you, fellow Venezuelans, deputies, governors, mayors, to read —and
we must distribute, Mr. Minister of Communication, through all possible channels—
the latest poll of Latinobarómetro taken in Latin America. We should
evaluate it, what it says, a poll that has nothing to do with elections nor
candidacies, no; it’s a structural poll about what the peoples of Latin
America and the Caribbean think.
Among
other things, it reports that a real cultural change is underway in Venezuela,
something they’ve been able to measure over the last few years, because
it’s been going on for several years now, it’s not just a passing
thing. There’s a structural change here, in the cultural area too, which
is where the heart of true change lies.
Fourthly,
the year 2004 has marked the beginning of the model for endogenous territorial
development. The word “endogenous” was in fact not very popular,
let’s put it that way, in Venezuelan slang, it was mostly used in technical
circles and, even so, not very often. Now it’s become widespread. Back
there, in the plains of Barinas, a little girl said to me a few days ago:
“We’re endogenous here, Chávez”. So, she’s
endogenous. And, what’s more, she knew how to explain it, I asked her:
“And what does ‘endogenous’ mean?”. She said only
two little words, which come from here, inside, they come from the heart:
“I’m endogenous”. How lovely, that a little girl feels that
and is able to say so as well! (Applause).
Well,
the model for endogenous territorial development has come into being and we’ve
begun to disseminate it through the length and breadth of Venezuela, and not
only in the country but also something much more important, in peoples’
souls; and this kind of dissemination is much more important than even the
countrywide dissemination.
Fifthly,
2004 was the year when the international counter-offensive began. In the last
part of the year mostly, Venezuela, the Bolivarian government, started a powerful
and strong international offensive, which has had very significant results,
which the country already knows about. Only some of them, because the impact
of many of these results is not precisely instantaneous, but it will happen
in the short, medium and, in some cases, long term
Last
night, for instance, I talked for several hours with a very high level delegation
from the sister Islamic Republic of Iran, the vice-minister of oil and directors
and managers of oil companies, gas companies, businessmen from the petrochemical
industry, and even last night we made the first decisions. How did this come
about? Because of the visit I made to Teheran about a month ago and because
of this recent meeting with President Khatami and his government and the most
important leaders of that sister republic. Last night we took, let me repeat,
a first gamut of decisions about working hard in the month that remains, it’s
just over a month before President Khatami’s visit to Venezuela. He’s
coming here again, he’s going to be handing over the presidency, there
are elections in Iran, he’s already governed for two terms, there’ll
be elections in the middle of the year, and he said to me: “Before leaving
office, Chávez, I want to visit you and the Venezuelan people again
and, what’s more, take our bilateral relations a step forward”.
We were talking last night, by the way, about the petrochemical complex in
Paraguaná.
God
willing, in Paraguaná we’re going to build a powerful complex,
not for the petrochemical industry, but also for trade, for tourism, and last
night we were discussing this project with the Iranians.
So,
with respect to short-term impacts: we are preparing to welcome the Vice-President
of China in a few days, accompanied by a fairly large number of government
and party leaders and businessmen. Over these last three years, Venezuela
has become the major recipient of Chinese investment in Latin America and
the Caribbean, and we are discussing and giving shape to a number of projects…I’m
not going to get ahead of myself, because that will be in the report for a
year from now; but, to sum up, it’s an international counter-offensive.
Sixthly,
2004 has been the year of the big bang, of the political big bang which has
given a kick-start to a new age. We have entered a new stage for which, after
much thought and consideration with my team, I have set 10 important strategic
goals for the new 2005 – 2006 period. So, moving along these 10 strategic
tracks, we can reach the end of 2006 in the best position to continue the
march in the next period until 2013 (Applause).
I
have scarcely gone through two pages, there are about 40 left. No, it’ll
go quicker now.
Well,
that’s more or less the vision that I came to tell you about, I hope
I do a good job of it, of the years that have gone by, taking some time to
focus closely on last year, 2004.
Now,
a few thoughts on 2004’s first big achievement: the victory of the new
democracy. I’ve already said something about this, I just want to go
into more detail on some other aspects that I think are important,
Mr.
President, deputies.
We
all know what we went through: 2002, 2003, and the attempt to turn us away
from the Constitution, coup d’etat, terrorism, economic destabilization,
imperialist aggression, attempts to use international bodies against Venezuela,
something that’s still going on, but those who want to continue down
this road should realize how strong Venezuela is.
Last
night, for example, on CNN —it’s a good thing that TV-Sur will
be coming on air soon (Applause)— they were interviewing a gentleman
who is the president of an inter-American human rights commission, and this
gentleman, irresponsibly, continued to attack the truth and attack this institution,
Venezuela’s National Assembly, to attack our sovereignty and to attack
our government with no compunction whatsoever. He was asked what he thought
about human rights in the Americas. Huh! He spoke only about Latin America,
he didn’t dare speak about the United States, not even on tiptoes. Then
he talked about Cuba, of course, attacked the Cuban people and government
—he couldn’t avoid paying us the honor of putting us in the same
bag as Cuba, it seems— and he said it is worrying that an authoritarian
blueprint is still being applied in Venezuela and that the National Assembly
approved some laws like the Law of the Media —that’s what they
call it— which violates freedom of expression. It goes to show you,
how immoral, how disgusting, but that is what millions of people in the world
hear and see and that’s the power of the media.
Once,
when I was watching CNN, I couldn’t take it anymore and I asked my staff
to call the CNN studio, because it was a live broadcast discussing Venezuela,
and they answer the phone, and after one question they cut off the president
of Venezuela’s voice, they weren’t interested in having the Venezuelan
president give a version different from the one they were giving, which was
an attack on freedom of expression, an attack on just about everyone.
Eduardo
Galeano is still right: “Never before have so few deceived so many.”
The dictatorship that the media exercises over the world is sinister, terrible.
We are sad not because of CNN, but because the Episcopal Conference has gone
back to its old ways and is saying the same as CNN does, that here we are
infringing on freedom of expression.
I call on Venezuelan bishops to put their hand on their heart and have their
portraits painted with Christ the Redeemer (Applause). And we have to say
this to all of them, because silence implies consent.
No,
it’s not enough for someone to clap me on the back and say: “Well,
we, you know, have a different opinion”. No, that clap on the back is
no longer enough, silence implies consent.
But,
after all, we know how they tried to turn Venezuela into a dependent state
using international bodies, how they wanted to intervene in Venezuela, how
they called that so-called consultative referendum, with the revocatory nature
they tried to give it, backed by unlimited, obscene international pressure.
We’re all quite well aware of that.
The
OAS General Secretary set up camp here and once I reached the point of saying
to him: “Look, do you think you’re a proconsul?” Once I
reached the point of saying to him: “If you continue with this attitude,
I am about to declare you a persona non grata and ask you to leave my country”,
I was on the point of doing that (Applause).
Believe
me —I remember my conversations with José Vicente— what
we put up with then, we will never again put up with, we will never again
put up with it!
But,
well, more than all that, 2004 was a great victory for the new Constitution,
the new democracy. And after that unprecedented process of collecting signatures
and in spite of the fact that one of the things that the opposition, the national
and international offensive and some governments said was that President Chávez
would not accept the referendum, that he was not democracy’s man, that
the National Electoral Council was going to follow Chávez’s orders
to prevent the referendum at any cost. In spite of that, August 15 arrived
and all the world saw the giant again: the giant stood up, the giant got up
very early, the giant went to queue up, the giant often spent up to 14 hours
waiting to vote YES or NO, the giant then went home, the giant waited for
the official decision and then the giant triumphed. That giant’s name
is the Venezuelan people (Applause).
Then
came October 31 and your triumph, governors, mayors, lord mayors, regional
legislative councils, in a new demonstration of faith in democracy, faith
in the constitution. So, this is a great victory for the new democracy and
for the political process as well, for the national referendum, of which there
is no precedent, either here in Venezuela or on this continent and I don’t
know if anywhere in the world. The constitution was tested, and it worked,
in spite of all the conspiracies against it.
In
addition to that, democratic institutions made their presence felt more strongly,
the nation began to think that these were indeed the kind of institutions
to dispense justice as justice should be dispensed. Those brave prosecutors
made their appearance, one of whom was foully murdered. And here I want to
pay tribute to Danilo Anderson from this podium and this stage, 2004’s
martyr and a martyr for all times (Applause). For having dared to act, simply
so that justice could be dispensed, just that, and he paid for it with his
life.
There’s
no political persecution of any kind here, as some continue to say in their
own defense. Political persecution? No, justice is just beginning to take
effect here, and that, even when I am not mentioning it as one of my government’s
achievements, is part that giant victory, the victory of the new democracy.
The
National Assembly deserves special consideration, Mr. President, deputies,
because, as we know, in spite of the unceasing wave of sabotage, obstacles
and impediments to the normal functioning of this center for national political
debate, this center for drafting laws to carry the constitutional project
forward and to respond, as behooves us, to the nature of things —as
Montesquieu said— in spite of all that, the National Assembly reached
the end of 2004 with all its engines fired up and going at full steam, passing
laws, many of them, or some of them, over half a century due, such as the
extraordinary Law of Radio and Television Social Responsibility, which you
passed, for the good of the nation, the good of the republic, the good of
truth (Applause), or the Law of the Supreme Court of Justice, another of the
things that that gentleman I referred to took the liberty of criticizing on
CNN last night.
Supreme
Court of Justice? We are well aware of what went on there for a century, and
what happened to our country and us over the last few years. You need only
remember that decision about the power vacuum and that there was no coup d’etat
and that the president had gone on a picnic, so to speak, to Orchila for a
weekend, therefore, no one was guilty here, there had been no crime, according
to those honorable votes, except those of the president of the Supreme Court,
Dr. Iván Rincón and eight other judges, who saved the honor
of the highest court in the land (Applause).
Well,
a great victory for the new democracy, the Venezuelan constitution and democracy
were tested and, my goodness, what a trial by fire it was! We passed the test
and we have emerged stronger than ever. We give thanks to God and thanks to
our people for 2004 (Applause).
Secondly,
I said that 2004 marked the birth and takeoff of a new economic cycle. Let’s
look at a few figures, which I’m sure you’re aware of, but they
are an important part of my report, Mr. President. The growth of the Gross
Domestic Product of Venezuela up to the third quarter, since we don’t
have the official figures for the fourth quarter yet, we’ll have to
wait for them so we can tell you about them officially, even though some figures
have already been leaked. ECLAC, for example, has said that Venezuela’s
growth was the highest on this continent in 2004, and that’s the way
it was. But, the cumulative growth for these three quarters, up to September,
is 20.8 % of the Gross Domestic Product, and that’s a world record.
We haven’t heard of any economy in the last 50 years that has grown
at that rate, and everything indicates that the real growth for last year,
once the figures for the last quarter have been taken into account, will be,
in the worst case scenario, 15 %, and in the best, close to 20 %, 18 % maybe.
But, even given the impossible situation that growth in the last quarter was
0 %, it would still end up at 14 %, and that’s an impossible supposition,
so growth this year will be higher than 15 %.
That,
citizen president of FEDECAMARAS, Venezuelan businessmen, that is positive
for everyone. Let us go forward together, so that 2005 continues the expansion
of this solid, sustainable growth for the benefit of the whole country.
How
sad I felt in last year’s economic report and the one for the year before
that, when the Venezuelan economy plummeted by 8 % or 9 %. What’s more,
I knew it was not due to the government’s mistakes, not due to economic
mistakes, not due to the incorrect implementation of an economic policy. No,
all of us here know, and even the harshest critics of my government should
admit it, that the revolution’s economic plan has been working, working
since 1999, 2000 and 2001, when that madness at the end of 2001 broke loose
for no real reason, for no real reason! Because this government considers
itself to be the government of all and for all, and wants to listen to everyone
and take everyone into account, from the richest to the poorest, from the
darkest to the fairest of skin, including mixed race people, women, men, peasants,
indigenous peoples, city dwellers, young people, not so young people, elderly
people. My commitment is to everyone, that’s what I feel. I ask God
that one day those who don’t believe this, those who don’t believe
me, realize the truth.
Admiral
Maniglia, inspector general of the Armed Forces, was remembering, as he told
me, that over 40 years ago he was reading the speech that President Kennedy
gave when he took office back then in 1961. Last night in the early hours
of the morning –this is something I thank the admiral for very much–
a copy of that speech was delivered to me. In 1961, Kennedy spoke of the revolution
of hope. Kennedy said that those who block the way for peaceful revolution
are, at the same time, clearing the way, perhaps without realizing it, for
violent revolutions.
What
a great speech Kennedy gave on that day in January 1961; we were almost all
of us children, with one or two exceptions. Some of us here were certainly
already teenagers, like my friend Santiago de León, you were already
a cadet, weren’t you? You were already a cadet that year? What year
did you start at the Academy? In 1958, you see, he was in fourth year or had
already graduated. I will recommend something to you –the deputy fell
from a horse and had a bone fracture– ask my brother Fidel for the formula,
for he has fully recovered and is now rushing around.
Mr.
Ambassador, I pray that Fidel Castro can give his formula for full and rapid
recovery to Deputy and Colonel Santiago de León (Applause). He fell
off his horse; well, he says that it was the horse that fell (Laughter), and
I think that it probably was, because he’s a brilliant horseman, I’ve
seen him. The horse fell and, of course, so did he.
Well,
what a great speech of Kennedy’s: the revolution of hope. Just look
what happened to Kennedy in Dallas shortly afterwards.
Okay,
so, this successful economic growth is not owed to the government, Mr. President,
it is owed to the workers, to the public sector, the private sector, to the
real public and private managers, to the private and public businessmen, to
the honest investors, who are in the majority, and I acknowledge them from
here, and ask for a round of applause for all of them (Applause).
We’ve
performed a kind of miracle, we’ve pulled the economy out of the ditch
into which it had fallen –I had thought of bringing a screen and some
overhead projections, but no, we’d rather do the pamphlet. This is not
the right place for an overhead projection.
But
take note of these details, these figures. The growth of non-oil economic
activity, because some may say: Ah! The price of oil! No, the non-oil economy
grew much more than the oil economy. The building sector, for example, grew
40.3 % --let’s remember that this is all the first three quarters, the
last quarter’s not included; financial institutions grew 27.2 %; transport
and storage grew 25.5 %; trade and services grew 24.8 %; the manufacturing
sector grew 20.7 %. The private manufacturing sector, for example, just listen
to these figures: vehicle production 161.3 %, wood production 132.3 %, clothing
manufacturing 85.1 %. Shirts as beautiful as the one Juan Barreto is wearing,
for example. Dr. Albis Muñoz has been offered one, Mr. Mayor, and please
send one to me too, Venezuelan-made shirts.
Well,
this sector grew 85.1 %, the clothing sector; furniture manufacturing 71.2
%.
Inflation
was much lower –this figure is the official figure for the whole year,
from the Central Bank– than we ourselves had estimated. Some critics,
some economic analysts, who should do their homework, because they’ve
got a doctorate from I don’t know where, and doctorate on top of doctorate,
and, well, they said to all of the media, at the beginning of the year, that
Venezuela was heading for hyperinflation, that no one could stop it, that
the government was rubbish, etc. Well, inflation was 19.2 %. It’s still
very high, but you have to remember that it had already reached 12 %, it was
about that at the end of 2001 and it’s gone down from more than 30 %.
Under the previous government, it reached 100 %, I think that was in 1996
that it was higher than 100 %. It came from up there, from the wuthering heights,
and now we’re aiming for single digit inflation. Now we are, not dreaming,
no, we’re coming close to 10 %, to go lower than 10. Then came the madness
and inflation went higher than 30 % again; now, this year, it’s at 19.2
%, and inflation will continue to go down in 2005.
I’m
calling on all of us to work towards that end.
In
the first place, I want to call on the Central Bank itself –as they
say in La Hojilla now: “With all due respect, ah, with all due respect”,
whenever they hit you it’s with “all due respect”-- with
all due respect, it seems to me that the method to measure inflation is not
the best, because they only measure it in Caracas. There should be a method
of measuring inflation in the country’s major cities and in the countryside.
Of course, that costs more, and you’d have to look for more people,
but that creates more employment. But what does the Central Bank do? Their
method is to go out and shop, for there’s a group of people who go out
to buy things and they go to a supermarket. I recently asked someone from
the Central Bank: “But you don’t go to MERCAL, you don’t
buy at MERCAL”. And it turns out that at MERCAL – we’ll
look at the figures a little later- all through this year, inflation was zero,
because they didn’t raise the price of any food product by a single
cent, zero inflation (Applause). And MERCAL is not just a couple of corner-shops,
MERCAL is today the biggest food distribution network in Venezuela, that supplies
good and cheap food to almost 10 million people and we’re going to continue
growing in 2005.
Now,
we must undertake a revision of the way we measure inflation, it seems to
me that it doesn’t grasp the real situation in the country. It’s
as if you were going to measure, the quality of the soil in Lara state, and
you were going to measure from Carora up. Well, what it will come out as is:
“Lara state is infertile”, someone might say. “No, but,
what are you talking about; why don’t you go and measure it over there
in the valley of Quibor or the Turbio River valley, or in Apure”. If
we’re going to measure in the Caribén dunes, south of Capanaparo,
there is some very acid soil, but along the axis from San Fernando to Biruaca
the soil is incredibly rich.
These
are some rather modest comments, because I am not an expert on the subject,
but I have put this question several times to the ministers in the economic
cabinet and to some Central Bank officials.
Anyway,
we accept that this is the figure, 19.2 %, but I call on the whole country.
Do you know why? Firstly, as we increase production, we are attacking one
of the structural causes of inflation, and, secondly, there is another factor
here that has a big influence on inflation, more than you could imagine, and
that is speculation, speculation in the distribution chains. There are organizations
or people who buy a kilo tomatoes back there on the banks of Guárico
river, let’s say at X bolívares, and come here to Caracas, paying
very little for transport and storage, to sell it at five times Xs, thus speculating.
I
call on all of you, governors, mayors especially, those who work in the executive
branch, financial supervisory bodies and, well, on the nation’s sense
of morality, that we all do our bit so that these urges to make a quick buck,
with no regard for my comrade or my brother, are definitively eliminated.
Well,
to sum up, inflation will continue to decrease, as will unemployment; that’s
another real figure from last year. It makes me really happy to tell you about
it, because what happened in previous years made me really sad, after all
we had done to bring unemployment down as we had done to 11 % in December
2001. However, unemployment went shooting up after the terrorist strikes,
after the employer’s lockouts, the factory closings, sabotage and all
that stuff, and unemployment shot up to over 20 %, and that’s not counting
underemployment.
Unemployment
this year 2004, stood at 10.9 % in December (Applause), another big step forward,
10.9 %. We’re moving in that direction. And now we have to break the
10 % floor. We’re aiming for one digit, as we are in inflation, and
we’re going to get there, I ask for national unity to achieve it, and,
united, we will make it.
Some
other economic performance figures are all the result of my government’s
very clear economic policies. For example, the Casa Corporation has been reborn.
They had dismantled it during the Fourth Republic. In 2004, the Casa Corporation
increased its storage capacity in silos by 425 %, and it’s now that
this will begin to bear fruit for national production and justice, mostly
in the countryside. You know what I’m referring to. The silos, or many
of them, were in the hands of a group of merciless exploiters, who paid the
small producer a pittance so that he could then offer a deal to the monopolists.
We have now regained control of more than 400 % of storage capacity.
The
MERCAL programs or the MERCAL mission, the soup kitchens that are up and running
all across the country, have now reached 1,047, and this number will continue
to grow. That’s MERCAL, maximum protection. Now that the governors are
re-elected or recently elected – what pleasure it gives me my good comrade
of many years standing, Brigadier Francisco Rangel, in this chamber, in his
capacity as governor of Bolívar state (Applause). What pleasure it
gives me to see you here as governor! Well, to mention just one case, I’ve
already spoken about the governor of Nueva Esparta, Morell Rodríguez,
all the governors. Johnny Yánez Rangel is over there, and over there
is Tarek William Saab, making his debut as governor of the state of Anzoátegui
(Applause). Liborio Guarulla is over there. He wasn’t re-elected. There
were no elections in Amazonas. We know there is going to be elections next
year. Governors, who else is out there? mayors, there is Antonio Muñoz,
who was re-elected governor in Portuguesa state (Applause). We’re all
going to work to speed up this project, this soup kitchen program, which you
know is to care for street children; well, anyone who lives in the most abject
poverty.
The
MERCAL mission has already begun to sell, is selling quality food, at even
lower than the regulated price, to 9 million, and we’re heading for
10 million people as 2005 begins – I’m talking about the end of
2004-; there are now 9 million people who benefit from the MERCAL mission.
In
January 2004, they started the year with a sale of 250 tons a day of food
and growth was dramatic and they now sell 3,535 tons of food a day, after
a logistic effort unprecedented in Venezuela in which, as in almost all of
our projects, the Armed Forces has played a crucial role (Applause). I ask
for a special round of applause for my comrades from the glorious Venezuelan
Bolivarian Armed Forces, the National Armed Forces, and for the governors,
the mayors, all the volunteers and the public in general who participated.
This is the way to go, everybody united, everybody involved.
The
private sector has been cooperating too, helping this mission. In the middle
of the year, I authorized MERCAL to make regional purchases so they could
expand the range of products supplied. And who sold to MERCAL? Private producers
from all regions of the country. There’s even MERCAL down there in San
Cristóbal, and in Mérida, in the Supermercales, they sell flowers,
they sell products other than those in the basic food basket, they sell handicrafts.
Now there are plans to even sell very cheap, quality clothing in some MERCAL,
and this range of products will continue to expand in 2005 and in coming years.
The
growth of sales in MERCAL, to sum up, was of 631 % in 2004.
Agriculture,
I’m an enthusiastic supporter of agriculture, because we continue to
put our heart and soul into the national agriculture project, and we’ve
started the year –as all of you know– full steam ahead, because
no agricultural project will be successful in Venezuela if we do not do away
with the obnoxious legacy of large land ownership (Applause). This is a true
structural flaw.
In
2004, in spite of this structural flaw, of this enormous obstacle and many
others, the number of hectares harvested, the amount of land harvested rose
by 10.4 %; good progress in 2004.
The
increase in production, especially in some branches that have a short growing
cycle, was as follows: black beans 48.2 %, corn 13.5 %, cotton 73.6 %, and
that is the result of government decisions and of coordination with producers
and governors. I remember the Cotton Plan, that’s what we called it,
on the banks of the Orinoco and Apure rivers, which had no credit, no machinery,
and we started by giving a little bit of support, what we have in fact given
isn’t a great deal, some support, but there, where people need everything,
and look at the results, look at the response we get from our people, look
at the response we get from our farmers. The cotton production growth was
73.6 %.
Rice
45.8 %, and I want to offer special congratulations to the farmers in Guárico
and Portuguesa states for this great accomplishment, and to governors Manuit
and Antonia Muñoz for this increase in rice production (Applause).
Beans
55.9 %, and potatoes a modest 4.8 %. We had some problems with potatoes but,
still, there was a slight growth.
In
this new economic cycle, it is worth quoting the following figures about the
economy, especially about the social economy. The Bank of the Sovereign People
gave 5,368 credits amounting to 21.7 billion bolívares. The Microfinancial
Development Fund approved 6.186 credits amounting to 25 billion bolívares;
the Women’s Bank approved 12, 045 micro-credits amounting to 10.2 billion
bolívares and BANDES gave out 10, 297 micro-credits amounting to 92.7
billion bolívares. This is one of our revolution’s policies,
this policy of micro-credits to the poorest, which is accompanied by, or rather
preceded by training, by community organization, so that the investment may
be effective, and it is being effective.
Thirteen
irrigation systems have been reactivated nationally; we also reactivated the
irrigation systems of the rivers Guárico and Tiznado and three irrigation
systems in Aragua state.
Industrial
production –this is very important information, because it also gives
an idea of the recovery achieved in the Venezuelan Corporation of Guayana
and in other areas of domestic industrial production, and the governor of
Bolívar state deserves a great deal of credit for this, as does the
current president of the VCG, Rafael Sánchez Márquez.
VCG-Alcaza,
Aluminios del Caroní’s production rose by 25 % in 2004. The production
record in Venalum and in VCG-Proforca was beaten. The energy output of VCG-Edelca,
the Caroni electrification, increased by 16 %. The total income of VCG was
5,5 billion bolívares and, throughout the country, 251 companies were
re-industrialized. I’d like to repeat my message to the domestic private
sector. How could anyone think that we want to destroy any company? Not one,
not a single one! What we want is coordination, to have a concerted action
between the government, the state, the private sector and the workers to continue
with this process of re-industrializing the country, of democratizing the
economy, of pushing a productive, diversified economic model as the sovereign
constitution demands, which allows us to generate enough wealth to be distributed
amongst all, so we may achieve the goal that Bolívar set for us almost
200 years ago: the greatest possible degree of happiness for all.
The
financial sector, and this is very important too, and here we have to express
our appreciation for the coordinated action of the public and private banks,
with one or two exceptions, but they’re just exceptions. The level of
financial intermediation –and this is very important for national development–
increased by 32.12 %. This is the bank’s most important role, not speculation,
nor encouraging capital flight.
Furthermore,
to continue giving a boost, this time to the public financial sector, the
country’s fund for economic and social development was set up. You may
remember how they made fun of me for using a word from the back of beyond,
they started that joke about the little billion, do you remember? The little
billion for Chávez. Well, no, it’s not the little billion for
Chávez, anyway, it was two little billion in the end (Laughter). The
squeaky wheel… (The public shouts out: “Gets the grease!”)
That’s right. Two billion dollars! That’s not for me or for salary
increases for the president, the ministers and the bureaucracy. No. All of
that money, which we finally called FONDESPA –a name I never liked,
but, well, it stuck– FONDESPA (Fund for the Economic and Social Development
of the Country), was founded then. Since the Central Bank wouldn’t have
it any which way, in order not to go on fighting with my friend Diego Luis
Castellanos, who I thank very much for his work as head of the Central Bank,
because I soon will be appointing a new president of the Central Bank (Applause).
In a few days I will be sending my choice to this Assembly for its consideration,
as the constitution ordains. Diego Luis is coming to the end of his term in
office, he’s a good friend, you know, I hold him in high esteem. I send
him my greetings from here, with all due respect, everything I have said to
him is always with all due respect.
We
reached an agreement with the Central Bank, you see, because the constitution
and the law provide that there has to be an agreement between the government
and the Central Bank. They finally agreed to the following: not to use the
international reserves, but to use a part of oil income; instead of accumulating
reserves, we created the revolving fund of up to 2 billion dollars. It’s
begun to fill up again, because we have already distributed the 2 billion,
but this is for projects of such great importance to all of us, as, for example,
the La Vueltosa hydroelectric power station. This is one of those projects.
I don’t have the list handy, but the other one is the motorway to the
east. The other project has to do with special allocations to accelerate work
on the subways, the Los Teques subway, for example, which I hope to open…when
was it, Carrizales, what did they tell us? God willing, we’ll open it
in 2006 – it’s one hell of a subway for Los Teques! Ten minutes
from here to Los Teques, that’s amazing!
We’ve
allotted money from this fund for another thermoelectric plant in the middle
of the country; to the Conviasa airline, which is already flying, thanks to
this fund, Conviasa taken off (Applause); to the Ezequiel Zamora sugar mill,
there in Barinas, the building of which was making very slow progress for
lack of resources, now we’ve speeded up the construction of this mill,
which is going to be one of the best in all of South America, Latin America
and the Caribbean.
Well,
a real oil-sowing season, and I am going to borrow that phrase from the well-remembered,
much-respected Dr. Arturo Uslar Pietri, who –as we all know– when
we hadn’t yet been born, back then in the forties, when our country
was governed by general Isaías Medina, he spoke of an oil-sowing season.
Anyway, we set up 29 trusteeships through the Bank for Social and Economic
Development.
Exchange
controls worked efficiently in 2004, efficiently and rapidly to see to the
demands of importers and of the Venezuelan economy. We even exceeded 10 billion
dollars in allocations in 2004, exchange controls pretty well suited to the
needs of the country. The interest rate dropped to 15.6 %, which is also very
important. The country risk dropped to 379 basic points. Our international
reserves broke a historic record and reached 24 billion dollars at the closing
of the year. Venezuela is one of the few countries in the world that can pay
all or almost all of its foreign debt with its international reserves, a true
record.
The
rate of royalties stood at 20 %; that’s also very important: it’s
now at 16.6 %. This year we began a process of recovering full oil sovereignty.
You know that previous governments signed agreements that were really harmful
to our national interests. One of these came under the so-called oil opening,
under which agreements were made which allowed the foreign companies with
which we were working, --and we are working well with all of them-- to not
pay, or pay practically no royalties. In fact, 1 % is almost nothing. Where
in the world does oil pay only 1% royalties? Well, not in Iraq, not even with
all that’s happening there, and which we really regret. That was done
violating the 1961 constitution and violating the old Hydrocarbons Law. So,
we took the decision to implement the provisions of the law, including what
the previous law said, which had already been repealed: 16.6 % royalties.
This is a first step towards the recovery of full national oil sovereignty.
The
financial sector, I want a round of applause for SENIAT, for its first-rate
performance this year (Applause), for superintendent Vielma Mora and all the
officials and workers in SENIAT (Applause).The increase in tax collection
this year was 136.7 % and non-oil tax income reached 85 %. This really is
a record in Venezuelan history.
This,
Mr. President, with respect to the other information I’ve already mentioned,
is one of the most important indicators of 2004: the birth and takeoff of
a new economic cycle of growth and expansion. Let’s take care of it,
let’s continue to sow and fertilize it, so that, in a very short time,
we shall have a sound Venezuelan economy. We have the wherewithal to do this.
I pray to God and let’s do all that we have to do so that the Venezuelan
economy continues to get back on track and, moreover, continues to get back
its sovereignty and its capacity to create happiness for all Venezuelans.
Thirdly,
I said, deputies, that 2004 saw the strengthening and expansion of the social
inclusion missions. Here too, allow me to give you some statistics.
The
coffee’s here, that’s brilliant, because it helps me to get my
strength back, and it helps all of you too, coffee’s very good, it was
a good initiative by President Nicolás Maduro.
Thank
you, Mr. President, for the excellent coffee that they have here in the Assembly
(Applause).
Do
you want a coffee, José Vicente? He drinks tea with milk, a green Chinese
tea that Khan…Chino, you should drink green tea. I’m really so
happy to see you, comrade! (Applause). What a scare you gave us, José
Khan, deputy and friend. You have to go on a diet, take good care of yourself,
walk (Something is said to him).
I’m
giving the coach signal, as Rosinés tells me too. Okay, cool.
The
missions, the wonder of 2004! Moreover, 2005 will be a year in which the social
missions will speed up and new missions will begin. For example, Barrio Adentro
is now entering its second phase. This very year we’re going to launch
Barrio Adentro II. I’m going to tell you something about this mission,
which I planned with my good friend and comrade Fidel Castro. In the visit
we made to Cuba in December, we began working already, because it is part
of the Cuba-Venezuela Cooperation Agreement, and, besides, we have signed,
within the international offensive, the Strategic Alliance Agreement which
gives birth to the Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America (ALBA) in Latin
America and the Caribbean (Applause).
Now,
listen compatriots from all over Venezuela, these figures concerning the missions,
they give us a certain idea, a certain idea of how marvelous these revolutionary
programs are..
The educational missions were joined by a total of 3,844,000 people in 2004.
Do your arithmetic, of the approximate 25 million that we already are, according
to INE (National Statistics Institute) figures, we are nearing 26 million.
We are on our way to 30 million, the giant is growing.
There
are 3,844,000 people participating in the educational missions. And who were
these people? The excluded; they had been left out. This from Robinson I,
Robinson II to Sucre; facilitators of the great national group of volunteers
of the educational missions, 250,000, a true army of volunteers; facilities
prepared, the premises, 2,624 at national level, more than 15 million cassettes
produced , more than 90 million printouts distributed; 1,640,000 family libraries
delivered, with a priority to the new readers and the children that completed
the 6th grade.
I
want to acknowledge the Cuban people and government, because all these cassettes,
printed material and family libraries have been produced in Cuba. Thank you
distinguished Ambassador; convey our thanks to President Fidel Castro (Applause).
Robinson
Mission I was joined by 1,411,000 Venezuelans and up to now 1,371,595 have
completed the literacy course; 1,300,000, almost 1,400,000. Soon Venezuela
will be an illiteracy-free region. We have not tried to go too fast with this,
because you have to follow the strictest procedures and meet the strictest
requirements, imposed by ourselves, in the first place, and by the U.N. in
the second place, since there are world parameters to meet; but soon, and
I ask you all to step up in the next few months Mission Robinson I: Literacy
Campaign, I certainly can.
Well, there are 1,371,000 who have completed the course.
Mission
Robinson II enrolled –this is very important to finish primary school,
and these are all quality processes– 1,261,000 Venezuelans and 87,000
facilitators are with them in 81,300 premises. Also, a mass scholarship plan
began in 2004. This had never happened before in all of Venezuela’s
history. For example, for Robinson II,100,862 scholarships are being granted
to the poorest students, to the most needy ones, because they are, as Victor
Hugo said, and I quote him again, les miserables, those who lived in poverty
all of their lives. The light of hope has arrived for them. Thank you God
for allowing us to bring the light of hope to so many people! (Applause).
The
effectiveness of the Cuban method I certainly can has been proven once again.
Of course, we have “Venezuelanized” it here, we have even adapted
it by regions. This method is not the same in Zulia as it is in La Guayana,
or over there in Margarita, distinguished Governor, or in el Táchira,
so we have been regionalizing the I certainly can method.
The
I certainly can and I certainly can continue methods have had an effectiveness
of 97 %. I certainly can continue is a Venezuelan invention.
All
the regions are being benefited. There is not a single region that has not
been benefited from these Robinson educational missions, including the penitentiaries,
incorporating the indigenous languages over there where our brothers in Amazonas,
in Bolivar, in La Goajira, in the Mesa de Guanipa, in the Amacuro Delta live.
We have published booklets in indigenous languages. We are saving indigenous
languages that were being lost in the voices of the jungle, because the indigenous
people did not know how to write. Now they are learning to write their own
language, besides Spanish, abiding by the Constitution. That had never before
been done in Venezuela and I think that it is being done in very few places
in the world today.
The
Ribas Mission is also a marvelous mission to complete secondary school. Seven
hundred and twenty-six thousand six hundred and eighty-one Winners in 29,000
premises all over the country, with 31,000 facilitators and 3,700 coordinators
have joined the mission! And there are the scholarships. The scholarships
of the Ribas Mission have already reached 200,000, and they are scholarships
– to put it in terms of dollars, distinguished ambassadors – of
100 dollars a month each, which gives us a total of 200,000 in the Ribas Mission.
It is 100,000 in Robinson II – we have already gone over 100,000, but
let us round it off to 100,000 –and this year we are reaching 150,000.
We said, Aristóbulo, 200,000 and a bit more, but let us round it off
to 200,000 in Ribas. It’s 300,000, and the Sucre Mission also has 100,000
scholarships. There are 400,000 scholarships only in the missions. We are
not talking about the regular education system. At 100 dollars a month, it
is 40 million dollars a month. Forty million dollars a month!
Neoliberals
say that’s losing money. Ah, they don’t know the truth of life!
Man,
the human being, said Christ; I repeat, alpha and omega; Bolivar said, “Nations
will march toward their greatness at the same pace as their education marches”
These scholarships will enable those hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans
to subsist while they study. Otherwise, most of them would not be able to,
they would end up dropping out as they did 20 years ago, or 40 in some cases,
or more. A 90-year-old man who learned to read and write answered my question:
“And why didn’t you ever go to school? He said: How could I, Mr.
President, if I began working with my father in our smallholding since I was
five years old? He enrolled me in a little school, but I could not study,
hunger did not let me.” That’s what he said.
If
we don’t help them now with that 100-dollar-a- month scholarship, once
again they will be driven away from the classroom by hunger, poverty, and
more than poverty, destitution.
That
is what is marvelous about these missions which we, distinguished governors,
ministers and deputies, must continue to put our souls into. Let us put our
souls into these missions to strengthen them even more and to extend them
throughout our land.
Well,
now, the Ribas Mission has 201,540 scholarships and, I repeat, 726,681 people
enrolled. The Sucre Mission included 334,453 high school graduates, of whom
155,999 finished the university initiation program (PIU) in 2004. 76,864 enrolled
in university studies and 53,069 are in the municipalization program, right
there where they live, in 10, 816 chapters all over the country.
We
have already begun the construction of the university villages with all the
equipment required; because we will gradually improve the missions. Right
now, many are watching the lessons in a house yard, although almost all of
them are in high schools during the evening or in Bolivarian schools, or in
the town hall, or in a church.
There
are many priests… Just as I lashed out a while ago against the Catholic
leadership, I want to wholeheartedly embrace the Venezuelan priests that are
everywhere amongst our people, crying out and struggling in this valley of
tears, with Christ’s cross and the sublime love for the great causes
of the peoples (Applause).
Very
well then, 100,000 scholarship students. Just look at these data that minister
Samuel Moncada has given me and that come from a statistical survey.
I
ask all the ministers, Mr. Vice-President, all the ministers, especially those
of the social areas, to continue developing instruments to measure reality
with a greater accuracy; and to understand the mathematics of it, it is essential
to contrast, to compare, if not, it is difficult to understand.
When
I was telling you a while ago that Banco del Pueblo gave so many loans this
year, 2004, I forgot to mention how many it gave in 2003, in order to have
an idea of the progress. If not, how can we contrast it? That is nature, the
colors, the contrast, it’s the day, the night.
I
want to continue insisting on this, and especially with the mathematicians,
like minister Merentes. Everyone should have a good statistics team in the
governors’ offices, the mayors’ offices, to measure, to measure
ourselves and admit our errors, to correct them, to look at the variables.
Here’s
some data collected by the Ministry of Higher Education’s team. Look
at these details, these are strange data, we could call them that, strange
data: in 2004, Venezuela, for the first time, had a million and a half students
in higher education. Someone might say: “Well, that’s because
of population growth”, and it might be logical to explain it in this
way. But let’s look a little further into this data.
In
2004 alone, 400, 000 students began to pursue higher-education studies! This
figure is equal to 80 % of all the university students that there were in
Venezuela in 1998. There has never been in all of Venezuela’s history
a year that had such a sudden increase in higher education. Half of the 400,000
new students in 2004 came from the Sucre Mission.
Higher
education budgets.
Previous
governments had budgets more or less frozen. We have to remember here that
they even went as far as to suggest privatizing higher education, with that
neoliberal tell tale that, well, students in higher education could work and
pay for their studies. This would have sealed the fate of the poor forever.
Compared
to 1998, between 1999 and 2004, the higher education budget has increased
thirty six times. The number of students benefited jumped from 14,000 in 2003
to 104,000 in 2004, and the figure allocated to the students reached 128 billion
bolívares.
And
this figure provides us with some strange data, extraordinary data, which
I mentioned in Alo Presidente: in a year and a half, the Sucre Mission has
managed to bring more students into higher education than all of the graduates
of the Central University of Venezuela in its entire history, and the CUV
is 280 years old. Official data: in a year and a half, the Sucre Mission has
managed to bring into higher education more students than all of the graduates
from the Central University of Venezuela in its entire history (Applause).
Here
are the figures.
The
total number of graduates from the Central University between 1725 and 2004
is 146,646, and the number registered in the Sucre Mission is 264, 007. And
when the Sucre Mission begins to turn out graduates, I am sure –I dare
to predict– that within five or six years the Sucre Mission will have
had more graduates in five years than the Central University has had in its
entire history. This is what we hope for.
The
other amazing and miraculous mission, the Barrio Adentro Mission, just look
at these facts:
The
recorded number of visits to the doctor in Barrio Adentro, the historic total
is close to 86,500,000. Once again, thanks to Cuba, to its doctors, thanks
to Venezuelan doctors, to the Cuban and Venezuelan nurses and to all the volunteers,
the health committees, thanks to the governors, the mayors, thanks to all
of those who are working in this miraculous mission of justice (Applause).
Render unto God that which is God’s and unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s.
Well
then, this curious data that the Minister of Health Francisco Armada gave
me: in the five years between 1993 and 1998, records show that 70 million
people went to the doctor in the public system or in what was left of it.
In five years, 70 million visits to the doctor! In 2004 alone, in Barrio Adentro
alone, 76 million people visited the doctor, more than all the visits in the
whole country in the five years before we took office (Applause).
What’s
more, there were 20 million visits to the doctor made in the traditional health
system in 2004; but we started out with 14 million, 12 million visits in 2000.
We have improved the capacity of the traditional health system, so with the
traditional public health system and Barrio Adentro combined, we had almost
100, 000 million visits to the doctor in 2004 alone. This is a record, I think
it’s a world record, if we take into account the size and makeup of
our population, that is to say, four times the Venezuelan population, as if
each Venezuelan had, on average, made four visits to the doctor.
I
hope you realize the importance of this. We are securing medical care to all
Venezuelans and especially those who have been excluded all of their lives.
We now have 20,000 Cuban doctors and dental surgeons and the number of Venezuelan
doctors continues to grow. And I appeal to Venezuelan doctors and nurses.
I congratulate those who have already joined, but let’s all, governors
and mayors, launch a national campaign, let’s go looking for doctors.
There are many who would like to join, let’s make it easier for them
to join this mission, to join their Cuban fellow doctors.
135
million cases have been seen in Barrio Adentro, a hundred and thirty five
million cases! This includes the visits to the doctor, this is the accumulated
total for 2003 and 2004, 86 million; home visits amount to 35 million, because
the doctors make home visits, they don’t just see people in their offices;
family visits are 12,472,000; visits by nurses is 17,988,000; lives saved,
and this isn’t poetry, these are verified facts, and, quite simply,
if the doctor hadn’t been nearby, the person would have died; 22,012
Venezuelans who would have been in the graveyard today if it hadn’t
been for the Barrio Adentro Mission, twenty two thousand and twelve! 1,339
baby deliveries attended by doctors. And something that is very important
in terms of our vision of preventive healthcare, and that’s educational
activities, 48, 066, 000 educational activities throughout Venezuela.
In
the first week of 2005, we set off at full steam, 2, 047, 000 cases were seen
in the first week of 2005, in just one week, there were 1, 238, 821 visits
to the doctor in that one week. In that first week of 2005, the average number
of visits per doctor per day was 18.3. My, these Cubans work hard! Mr. Ambassador,
please convey to each and every one of them our admiration, our appreciation
and our gratitude. 18.3 (Applause).
Here
are some details about the Barrio Adentro Mission, and here we are not including
the thousands of Venezuelans who went to Havana for delicate surgeries, as
part of the Miracle Mission, delicate eye surgeries. Thousands of Venezuelans
have regained their sight, from children to elderly people; that’s the
Miracle Mission, which is part of the Barrio Adentro Mission.
Now,
I’m not going to fall into the temptation of making announcements here;
I’ll limit myself to this one, which is very important, and we’ll
talk about this in more detail in Alo Presidente and on other programs. I
want to say –I’ve already told you about it, but now I’m
going to give you more details-- that we have started phase II of Barrio Adentro,
and this will consist of something that very few people are going to believe
right now. Some will say Chávez is delirious, go get a doctor, a psychologist,
like when Jean Valjean got to court and they were going to condemn a poor
man, for they said that he was Jean Valjean and Valjean had changed his identity,
he was a fugitive, he was the mayor who was much loved in those towns. When
he saw that they were going to condemn the poor man- he could have remained
quiet, how noble was that man!- he entered as the mayor and said to the Chief
Justice: “Mr. President, arrest me, I am Jean Valjean, free that man.”
A few people will think that way. Then the Chief Justice didn’t believe
the mayor, a very prestigious mayor who was also very good, like Juan Barreto,
like Pepe Rangel, like Freddy Bernal. How good, Freddy, that the rubbish…
Now it is true (Laughter), now we are indeed going to win the war on rubbish.
Thanks to Mayor Freddy Bernal (Applause), of course, he had help, so did Juan
Barreto.
No,
honestly, you can count on my and our support. We’re going to support
a special project with PDVSA social funds to make Caracas into a clean city.
And I ask the support of all the men and women of Caracas (Applause), and
all those who support Caracas.
What
has come of the Magallanes? Magallanes made a leap forward, says President
Nicolás, but into the void (Laughter).
Okay,
very well, on that occasion, when Jean Valjean said “Arrest me, your
honor. Release that man, he is innocent”, well, nobody believed him,
he himself had to call the three witnesses who had been in prison for many
years, and the three said: “Yes, he is Jean Valjean, that is he, he
was a prisoner with me, and with me, and with me”, and, at that time,
Jean Valjean himself was mayor. He called the prisoners one by one. “And
you? Do you have a date tattooed on you? Take off your shirt. The date on
which the emperor disembarked”, Napoleon, and, in fact, there it was,
and he showed them that he was Jean Valjean.
Well,
Mr. President, let no one here call a psychologist or a doctor after I say
this, but this is what we’re going to achieve in the agreement with
Cuba that has already been approved by both presidents, President Fidel Castro
and your humble servant, and we’re already working to make it come true.
We need the support of the whole country, governors, mayors, communities,
private businessmen too, all deputies, and it’s possible and we’re
going to do it.
Now
I will tell you: this year with Barrio Adentro II, we’re going to open
600 diagnostic centers all across the country; as of now, we have 84 which
we opened at the end of the year. Because, of course, a doctor in a neighborhood,
in the countryside, in the city, or wherever he is, alone with his stethoscope,
his thermometer and some other equipment, well, Fidel said to me: “Chávez,
it’s like sending a soldier to war, but armed with a harquebus, without
a compass and without map”, and that’s true. And if we consider
the shortages that we still have in our health system, which we’ve been
shoring up a lot in a group of our hospitals, especially in the Military Hospital
thanks to the Minister of Defense Jorge García Carneiro (Applause),
to the director of the Military Hospital (Applause), because the Military
Hospital has been turned into a Barrio Adentro center. Of course we’ve
renovated it from the basement to the roof. The Clinical University Hospital
has also been giving a great deal of support to Barrio Adentro, and other
hospitals too. But there are big shortages in most of the hospitals that we
have been addressing and that we will continue to address; but there is no
doubt that this led us to draw up the plan for the diagnostic centers. As
of now, we have 84, but we’re going to open 600 all across the country.
By the end of the third quarter, according to the plan we have, Minister Armada,
they should be completed.
These
diagnostic centers operate out of small locales and all are going to have
the necessary equipment –to serve the middle class as well. What does
any surgery cost today? What does a tomography cost? How many middle class
families are hard pressed because of a disease and four medical exams? Well,
these clinics will provide such services free of charge for all (Applause).
In
December Fidel showed me in Havana a letter from an upwardly mobile middle
class Venezuelan engineer that lives on the east side of Caracas. While taking
a taxi home –this was recently, in November- he felt a sharp pain and
the worried driver told him: “Sir, I know a nearby Barrio Adentro clinic,
do you want me to take you there?” And that’s where he ended up.
It was late at night but these centers operate 24 hours. They performed the
pertinent exams on him –they have emergency services- he rested a while,
they gave him painkillers, an emergency medicine, and they told him to return
the following day for further exams. He returned, they did the tests and it
turned out he even had a cataract. He ended up going to Cuba where he had
a cataract operation and returned home cured. So, it was he, a middle class
Venezuelan engineer that sent a letter Fidel was nice enough to show me: “Look
Chavez, you see how grateful people are?”
Therefore
I want to tell the entire country today that this is not only available to
the middle class but also to those that have a high income and economic status.
They are open 24-hours to any Venezuelan or any other person visiting the
country from anywhere in the world, there’s no distinction made, they
are open to all.
Six
hundred diagnostic centers. What’s the minimum they will have? Governors,
start looking for locales. Starting today I am requesting all governors, Governor
Morel, all governors, all mayors, it doesn’t matter if they are Accion
Democratica, why should it matter to me?, I’ll give them special recognition,
and even from any political party, from here on the east side of Caracas,
the mayors of the east, besides Pepe Rangel, the mayors of Baruta, of Chacao,
we must also set up free diagnostic centers for those who live in those communities
(Applause). They are all Venezuelans.
An
X-ray machine and other modern equipment, an ultrasound, an endoscope, an
electrocardiograph, to do the diagnostic work I explained. The second cause
of death in Venezuela, after traffic accidents, is heart attacks, heart disease.
And the painful accidents are a public health problem that also must be addressed.
Hence we also have to carry out a stronger campaign, all cabinet members,
ministers of education, health, and I’m making a call to the news media
to help out as well.
There’s
going to be an electrocardiograph, not just for diagnostic purposes; it’s
important that people get a check up even if they are feeling like a teenager
(Laughs). Why are you laughing so? What other word can I use? Fresh as a grapes.
Thanks Mr. Carreño, they are so delicious (Laughs). Excuse me Mr. Deputy,
vice president. Like grapes, as Pedro Carreño suggested. Thanks Carreño.
Look,
it’s not just for the diagnosis, it is necessary to do a heart check
up. This is done in 10 or 15 minutes, the diagnosis, to evaluate the heart
functioning. Besides, we are going to include a defibrillator to treat heart
emergencies. When heart attack or pre-heart attack occurs, many people die
because there are no such machines close by. The majority of people who die
from heart attack don’t die at the moment. They die on route to wherever
they are going. Often nervous people put them in a car, there’s no doctor,
there’s no ambulance, or they arrive at the hospital and no one’s
on duty to attend to them and the person dies. Most die on the road.
So
these are going to be available in the entire country, as well as defibrillators
for emergency pre-heart attacks or attacks; there will be a clinical laboratory
in each center, especially equipped for blood and stool exams where microbes
and viruses can be detected so the doctor can treat them directly. It’s
like a soldier, a pair of binoculars and a map, it’s identifying the
problem. It’s an ultra-micro-analytical system to verify the presence
of a virus like dengue, hepatitis or AIDS, that wasn’t detected through
the blood and stool exams. And I am making a call to step up the campaign
and actions to prevent AIDS, which continues to cause grief on the planet,
and of course, threatens with its presence here in Venezuela. You always tend
to think: “No, I can’t get it,” that’s what you always
think, a natural mechanism, no?, like the paratrooper accustomed to saying:
“No, I jump and nothing happens to me”.
Thus,
this ultra-micro-analytical system allows to detect the presence of viruses.
I’ve
only spoken on the first aspect of Barrio Adentro II, the 600 diagnostic centers;
but, besides, they are going to be accompanied by other components including
600 eye clinics. Besides the ophthalmologist services, something very important
to save lives, there will also be 600 intensive care units with artificial
respiration machines (Applause).
We
are going to install all that. I always ask God for his help. Fidel, since
he is an atheist, the last time he wrote me he said: “Chavez, may God
help you and your friends.” Fidel Castro is a Christian in the social
sense; he always clarifies, in the social sense. Therefore, I’m asking
God to help us and I ask for help from the entire nation. This is not only
the responsibility of the government. Yes, we are most responsible, but I
am asking everyone for help, everyone.
The
Alo Presidente telephone lines are open to any Venezuelan. If anyone on the
east side of Caracas or in the middle class districts, like Santa Monica,
for example, which I know or Prado de Maria, which I also know well –I
used to live there- in any city or over there in the east, La Trinidad, if
any family has a locale they’d like to make available to the Barrio
Adentro Mission, then let us know, call us on the Alo Presidente line or through
any other of the many existing channels, or the media, or at Miraflores or
the Ministry of Health to start once and for all. Governors and mayors, let’s
start identifying locales. They can’t be just any place because they
need to be located in conjunction with the Barrio Adentro system. They can’t
be disconnected; they must be part of the system that we have already begun:
the neighborhood doctor’s offices, the health clinics, etc.
I
continue with the miracle: we are going to install 600 physical therapy and
rehabilitation centers throughout the country (Applause). What happens with
the many people that even go to Cuba or elsewhere and have an surgery on a
knee, arm or other body part? They return here and don’t have the money
to pay for rehabilitation; which is long in many cases, or for life, just
as with those who suffer from a cerebrovascular accident that needs permanent
treatment. But how can we maintain it? This is very important for the full
mental and physical health of the individual and society. These 600 physiotherapy
and rehabilitation centers are going to have the necessary equipment for the
following areas: electrotherapy, hydrotherapy, mechanical therapy and gymnasiums,
occupational therapy, defectology, speech impediments, and podology. These
areas are going to be treated in the 600 physical therapy and rehabilitation
centers.
But,
besides that, an even crazier idea, or the most quixotic of all, is going
to be the following: We are going to install 32 –to date this is the
number we believe necessary-- high-tech diagnostic centers, one for each state
and the metropolitan district; there might be two in Miranda and Zulia, in
some states; but at least there will be one in each state. We’re estimating
32, with the most advanced equipment existing today in the world.
For
these high-tech diagnostic centers we need to find locales and if there are
none available then find property and start building. We are already working
on the blueprints of a model center.
These
facilities are going to have nuclear magnetic resonance technologies; they
are going to have tomography equipment capable of 16 or more virtual slices,
the most modern in the world, they are going to have three dimensional ultrasound
equipment for the heart and other organs. Each of these 32 high-tech diagnostic
centers are going to have a video endoscope, a complete laboratory, an ultra-micro-analytical
system and a moveable X-ray table.
And
to continue advancing this year with Barrio Adentro Mission, the Bolivarian
University, with the help from other universities in the country, and based
on the Barrio Adentro Mission, this year we are going to begin classes for
20,000 young people of the Sucre Mission to become integrally trained general
practitioners (Applause). The first figure we estimated, Ministers of Higher
Education and of Health –over there are Samuel and Francisco; they,
besides are very young and can work 28 hours a day- was very modest, it is
not enough. We need to speed things up. So, the rounded off figure is 20,000
young people to begin the first stage of their education to become integral
general practitioners, so that they can meet the needs of Barrio Adentro.
And although we don’t want the Cuban doctors to leave us, you are aware
that it is only fair and necessary that they do so someday, in the coming
years, to return to our dear and sisterly Cuba when we are capable not only
of filling their posts but also to follow their example, and why not, within
a few years, just as Cuba has generously provided us with nearly 20,000 doctors
and dentists, who are here body and soul carrying out their mission in Venezuela
–just recently, a few days ago, one of those doctors died in a traffic
accident, a young woman, it was very painful for us. In the not too far off
future, Venezuela, Bolivarian Venezuela, should also –to be faithful
followers of the ideals of Bolivar-- have legions of doctors and then join
with Cuba and many other nations of the Americas and the world to combat the
tragedy of poverty, the tragedy of destitution, anywhere in the world where
our participation is needed (Applause).
Mr.
President, honorable deputies, 2004 was the year of the strengthening and
expansion of the missions for social inclusion; and this year, 2005, we are
going to continue strengthening and widening the initiatives of inclusion.
Fourthly,
as I said a while ago, 2004 was also the year for activating the model of
endogenous territorial development. As to |