IMAGE: CNS photo/Joe Skipper, Reuters
By Ana Rodriguez-Soto
DORAL,
Fla. (CNS) — They called Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro a dictator and a
gangster. They recounted personal experiences of torture, beatings and
intimidation at the hands of government thugs and jailors.
They
told of blatant disregard for the rule of law and the will of the people. A
mother held up photos of her 22-year-old daughter, killed by a bullet to the
head after a protest march.
About
a dozen exiles of Venezuela’s “Bolivarian revolution” sat around a table in the
rectory of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church Aug. 23 telling Vice President Mike
Pence sad tales of their country’s 18-year tailspin, from democracy to
dictatorship, from oil riches to widespread misery.
“I
ask for all those who have fallen,” said an emotional Maria Eugenia Tovar,
mother of Genesis Carmona, a university student and beauty queen killed during
protests in 2014 in Valencia, in the state of Carabobo.
Tovar
and other witnesses say the bullet came from government-sanctioned mobs — “colectivos”
— who appeared after the military corralled the protesters and left. Feeling
persecuted since then, Tovar and her family sought refuge in Miami.
So
did Francisco Marquez, 30, an activist with Voluntad Popular (the will of the
people) who became a political prisoner for four months in 2016. He recalled
how his jailors forced him to march naked and “run under gunfire in handcuffs
just to mess with my head.”
“I
don’t think governments realize how much torture is done in Venezuela,” said
Marquez, whose dual U.S.-Venezuela citizenship probably expedited his release.
He noted that “to stay on the front page means a lot, more than you could
possibly know, to people who are still in jail.”
Ramon
Muchacho, the mayor of Chacao, a district of Caracas, escaped the country after
being stripped of his position and sentenced to 15 months in prison for failing
to halt anti-government protests.
“There
is no democracy in Venezuela. There is a dictatorship in Venezuela,” Muchacho
said, adding that he also sees no peaceful way to change it. “It is not
possible for us, the Venezuelan people by ourselves, to bring back democracy
and freedom to Venezuela. We need help.”
The
exiles agreed that sanctions must be placed upon individuals who collaborate
with the Maduro regime, including many who have fled with their wealth to South
Florida. They added that other nations in Latin America, and especially the
European Union, also need to impose sanctions and stop supporting the regime
financially.
“We
need more sanctions. We need to stop the enemy in Venezuela so they cannot buy
tools for repression,” said Ernesto Ackerman, founder of a grass-roots group
called IVAC, which stands for Independent Venezuelan-American Citizens.
Several
of the exiles compared Venezuela’s situation to Cuba’s, but not because of
ideology — although Venezuela has copied Cuba’s model for repression since the
days of Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez. A number of top officials in the
regime, including Maduro’s vice president, have been accused of
narco-trafficking.
“We
are fighting against gangsters,” said Warner Jimenez, a businessman and mayor
of Maturin in the state of Monagas. His businesses confiscated, his family
persecuted, he hid from the authorities for three weeks before making his way
to South Florida earlier this year.
“Please
don’t allow Venezuela to become another Cuba,” Jimenez said.
Carlos
Vecchio, another activist with Voluntad Popular who spent three months in
hiding before leaving his homeland, thanked the Cuban community already here
for making exile “easier, because your family, without knowing, set the flag of
freedom in South Florida.”
He
was specifically addressing U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, who sat in on the
meeting along with U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, and Florida Gov. Rick
Scott. The stories were not new to them. But the exiles were buoyed by the fact
that the vice president of the United States, fresh from a tour of Latin
America, had asked specifically to come to Doral and listen to them in person.
“This
room is a testament to the brutality of the Maduro regime,” said Pence. “I am
deeply moved, and frankly deeply humbled, by the courage around this table.”
He
promised to “convey your stories back to the president of the United States.”
Sitting
in the church next door, waiting for the same politicians to speak to them,
were about 1,000 more people, many of them members of the parish that has
become the “spiritual home” of South Florida’s Venezuelan diaspora; a parish
led by a Venezuela native, Father Israel Mago.
Those
gathered in the rectory and in the church heard hopeful words from the
vice-president regarding the current administration’s attitude toward
Venezuela’s government.
“President
Trump has made it clear that the United States of America will not stand by as
Venezuela crumbles,” Pence told those gathered.
The
Trump administration, he assured them, will work with other nations in this
hemisphere to continue slapping meaningful sanctions against individuals in the
Maduro regime — including Maduro himself, who already is one of only four
heads of state directly sanctioned by the U.S. government.
It’s
a short list populated by Bashar Assad of Syria, Kim Jong Un of North Korea and
Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, noted Diaz-Balart.
The
Trump administration “will continue to bring the full measure of American
economic and diplomatic power to bear until democracy is restored in
Venezuela,” promised Pence. “There’s more to come,” he added, avoiding
specifics other than to say the U.S. seeks “a peaceable solution” to
Venezuela’s woes.
He
urged the countries of the region “to do more, much more,” but promised the
Venezuelan community: “We are with you and we will stand with you … America
first does not mean America alone … The birthright of freedom belongs to all of
our people in this New World.”
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Rodriguez-Soto is on the staff of the Florida Catholic, newspaper of the Archdiocese of Miami and the dioceses of Orlando, Palm Beach and Venice.
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