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Bolivarian revolution goes to Manchester and Cambridge

The speaking tour by Venezuelan revolutionary student leader Ronny Pante continued in Manchester and Cambridge. Report and pictures.
ronny_cambridge-eventoAfter a successful start at SOAS, the Ronny Pante speaking tour went north towards Manchester on Tuesday October 24. Here the University of Manchester Students Union had organised a meeting for the Venezuelan student leader to speak at. There were more than 25 students present and Ronny explained the impact the Venezuelan Revolution is having on the education system. He stressed that it is not only a question of winning free education for all, but also of transforming the teaching methods and contents and above all of politicising the students and getting them more involved in society in general. He explained how in the past there was a conscious effort to keep students away from politics and to give graduate professionals the feeling that they were part of an elite, separate from the people. A new law on social service for universtity students was aimed at counteracting that, he said.

After Ronny's speech there was a lively debate. Quite a lot of the it was on the question of how far the revolution has gone and wether it can be mantained solely on oil revenues. Ronny explained that this debate was also taking place in Venezuela itself and it had given rise to an open discussion on socialism as the only way forward.

Finally, Ronny thanked all those who had helped organise the meeting, particularly Patrick Smith who is the campaigns officer of UMSU, and Rob Owen who is the president of the union, and made a passionate appeal for all students to get involved in the Stop the Fees demonstration in London on October 29th.

franelasThe day after, the tour proceeded to Cambridge, where a group of students have set up a Hands Off Venezuela society. Here the debate covered a wide range of subjects, including the elections in Ecuador and Venezuela's bid for a temporary seat in the UN Security council. Asked about Venezuela's relations to North Korea, Ronny said that Venezuela was against weapons and war and had condemned North Korea's nuclear weapons test. But he insisted that the main point was that Venezuela's revolutionary government was in favour of the principle of the rights of peoples to self-determination, and that the US was being hypocritical on this issue, turning a blind eye to other country's nuclear weapons just beacuse they are friendly to her.

When asked about the role of oil revenues in sustaining the social programmes, Ronny explained that this is obviously an important factor, but that without the political will, oil revenues on their own would not guarantee anything. He gave the cambridge10smexample of Cuba, a country which has been blockaded by the US for more than 4 decades, with very limited resources after the fall of the USSR, and which still dedicates most of its limited resources to mantaining first class health and education systems.

The meeting ended with a group photo of the participants making the two open hands sign which shows support for the campaign to reelect Chavez with 10 million votes in the December 3rd presidential elections.

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