For social
justice in the face of permanent aggression
•
Interview with Venezuelan-American
researcher and lawyer Eva Golinger
Olga Díaz Ruiz and
Geisy Guía (Journalism student)
THE Havana Book Fair has accustomed us to good,
interesting publications. Its 19th edition brings us
Eva Golinger, the Venezuelan-American writer and
lawyer, for the launch of her book, USAID, NED
and the CIA: Permanent Aggression, an ambitious
compilation and analysis of current situations,
written by Golinger and Jean-Guy Allard, a Canadian
journalist resident in Cuba.
On
this occasion, the perspicacity of Golinger, who is
participating in the international fair for the
second time, impelled her to expose the constant
onslaught of U.S. imperialism in Latin America, "which,
to date, we have been unable to halt," after
studying the cases of Cuba, Bolivia, Honduras and
Venezuela.
"This is a visit of exposé, to achieve maximum
impact and, in one way, a pretext to outline that
message and to prompt reflection on the constant
imperial acts of aggression and their various
manifestations." Moreover, it lays out "all the
marvelous things that we have achieved" in the
subcontinent, she affirmed in an interview with
Granma.
Golinger proposes to take up this selection of
political, economic, cultural and social events that
are evidence of Washington’s tactics and strategies
in 2009, maintaining its interference in the region,
as "a weapon in the defense of our revolutions."
At this point in the conversation, she stops to
observe that the coup d’état in Honduras last June
"has taught us the need to take care of our spaces,
to recognize that the enemy is everywhere," adding
that the book is to be published in Honduras this
year.
Likewise the author of The Chávez Code (2005)
and Bush vs. Chávez: Washington’s War on
Venezuela, the writer believes that the
strengthening of Latin American integration,
fundamentally through the Bolivarian Alliance for
the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) has prompted an
increase in U.S. right-wing aggression, "Because we
constitute a threat to its domination in the region."
Integration that has expanded its borders to the
rest of the world, and that "seeks to lift up our
countries without exploitation, or competition,
through the principles of solidarity, integration
and cooperation," she notes, commenting that Cuba
and Venezuela constitute the vanguard of this South-South
union.
Despite the fact that she was born and raised in the
United States and "talks like a gringo" – as she
reproaches herself – Golinger directs all her energy
and passion into fighting for social justice, and
emphasizes that cooperation among ALBA countries "is
perceived outside of our bloc with much hope,
because we are constructing a more just social model."
She gives the example of the Bolivarian Revolution,
which has transformed all sectors of Venezuelan
society, as well as making an impact at
international level on account of that nation’s
significance to the world, with the figure of
Chávez. "We are constructing a country that was in
ruins, despite its natural resources. Then this
president comes along, without experience in
politics, moreover, and look what he’s done!"
In this struggle against constant aggression, the
writer notes the leading role of the alternative
media: "Telesur has had a fundamental role in
dismantling the received opinions of the
international media and in promoting another class
of journalism, which consists of going into and
bearing witness to the facts."
At the same time, she expresses her enthusiasm at
one of the first printed copies of the only
Venezuelan English-language newspaper, Correo de
Orinoco International. "It is the first time
that there is information in English from a
Venezuelan perspective, from the Venezuelan
revolution," she affirms with pride.
Golinger told us that she intends to continue
exposing the principal maneuvers of the powerful in
Latin America and in that proposition, she says, she
can count on her friend and colleague Jean-Guy
Allard.