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resisting arrest with violence
10th August 2005, 14:43
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050810/ap_on_...HNlYwMlJVRPUCUl (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050810/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/venezuela_indigenous_lands;_ylt=Ak8pJLwDks35NJtFmb VvHV.3IxIF;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl)

Chavez Gives Land Titles to the Indigenous
By THAIS LEON, Associated Press Writer
Tue Aug 9,10:02 PM ET



Six of Venezuela's indigenous communities received title to their ancestral lands on Tuesday in a ceremony that Venezuela's president said reversed centuries of injustice.

President Hugo Chavez said he hoped the government would be able to turn over titles to 15 other indigenous communities by the end of the year.

"What we're recognizing is the original ownership of these lands," Chavez said during the ceremony. "Now no one will be able to come and trample over you in the future."

He was joined by Kari'na Indians wearing traditional dress, face paint and strings of colored beads.

But Chavez warned that the process of granting legal ownership must respect Venezuela's "territorial unity," and he urged other indigenous groups not to ask for "infinite expanses of territory."

"Don't ask me to give you the state's rights to exploit mines, to exploit oil," Chavez said. "Before all else comes national unity."

The documents recognize land ownership by six indigenous communities with some 4,000 people and territory covering 314,000 acres in the eastern states of Anzoategui and Monagas.

One woman from the Kari'na community thanked Chavez, saying: "He has been the first president who has kept his word to a people who have been stripped of their lands."

An estimated 300,000 Venezuelans belong to 28 indigenous groups, many living in the country's sparsely populated southeast.

South American countries have made various efforts to grant indigenous groups legal ownership and control over their traditional territories.

In neighboring Colombia, indigenous groups in officially recognized communities can administer justice, receive state funds and have their own government.

Brazil has set aside more than 12 percent of its territory for indigenous communities, and in Peru various laws declare the rights of indigenous groups to ancestral territory in the Amazon.

But problems have arisen in some countries as miners and loggers have moved onto Indian lands. And in various countries, a key debate has revolved around the state's rights to what lies underground, such as oil and mineral wealth.




Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.


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bolshevik butcher
10th August 2005, 17:55
Good news. Solidarity with the bolivarian reovlution!

Red Rebel
10th August 2005, 20:03
Solidarity with the bolivarian reovlution!

You do mean Venezuelan, right?

Good article though. Venezulean socialism is making much progress.

bolshevik butcher
10th August 2005, 21:22
Yeh, bolivarianism is the name of chavez' sort of socialism. His party is called the bolivarian movement or soemthing.

Commie Girl
10th August 2005, 21:40
Originally posted by Clenched [email protected] 10 2005, 02:22 PM
Yeh, bolivarianism is the name of chavez' sort of socialism. His party is called the bolivarian movement or soemthing.
In reference to Simon Bolivar

bolshevik butcher
10th August 2005, 21:47
Yeh, the man that liverated latin america form spannish colonialism.

Paradox
10th August 2005, 21:51
Yeah. That's good to hear. Funny though, cuz I just found this article from 2000, at the World Socialist Movement's website:

Anti-Chavez Piece (http://worldsocialism.org/wsm-pages/venezuela.html)

Looking at all the progress that's been made, it's interesting to read this earlier piece of criticism. Of course, they are right in one sense, it is capitalism that's developing in Venezuela. Still, as I've said before, I think Venezuela serves as a good example for the development of the "Third World" to the point where a true Communist revolution can occur.

bolshevik butcher
10th August 2005, 21:58
When first elected chavez just aimed to change capitalism and clean out corruption. Now he has gone beyoned htis and called for a transition into socialism.

fernando
11th August 2005, 15:39
Originally posted by Clenched [email protected] 10 2005, 08:47 PM
Yeh, the man that liverated latin america form spannish colonialism.
One of the men who liberated Latin America :)

bolshevik butcher
11th August 2005, 18:08
sorry, thats a fair point. The man famous for his part in the lbieration of alatin america form colonial rule,, thats more accurate.

viva le revolution
11th August 2005, 23:31
Long live the Bolivarian Revolution! support with Chavez!
This is major step in latin america to come to terms with it's sovreignity and independance from the monroe doctrine.