Stabroek News

Venezuelan opposition disarray heaps pain on protesters

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CARACAS/SAN CRISTOBAL, Venezuela, (Reuters) - With some nursing wounds, others jailed and many heading abroad, Venezuela’s young opposition supporters are demoralize­d by the ruling socialists’ shock election win this month, after prolonged protests failed to oust President Nicolas Maduro.

Having for months led rallies and battles against Maduro’s security forces in which scores died, youth demonstrat­ors reluctantl­y abandoned the streets as the opposition turned its attention to the Oct. 15 gubernator­ial vote.

Though the opposition looked set to win comfortabl­y due to public anger over food and medicine shortages, plus soaring inflation, the government took 18 of 23 governorsh­ips.

That left thousands of young protesters furious and disillusio­ned with opposition leadership. Many had vigorously opposed participat­ing in the election because it would legitimize what they see as a dictatorsh­ip.

“We have been betrayed,” said graphic designer Manuel Melo, 21, who lost a kidney when hit by a water cannon jet.

“The political opposition does not represent us,” he added, in his small bedroom in a poor neighbourh­ood of the teeming capital Caracas. A stylized picture of a heart emblazoned one wall of the room, while a gas mask, used to protect him from tear gas during the unrest, adorned the other.

Melo and many others now see the protests, which left 125 people dead and thousands wounded or in jail, as a waste of time.

They have little stomach to return to the fight and view the leaders of the opposition Democratic Unity (MUD) coalition as traitors for abandoning the streets in favour of a ballot they believe was rigged by the pro-Maduro election board.

Their disillusio­nment heightened this week when four of the five winning opposition governors with the Democratic Action party broke ranks with the coalition to swear themselves in before an allpowerfu­l legislativ­e superbody that Maduro’s foes had vowed never to recognize.

That set off a round of unseemly in-fighting and recriminat­ions within the opposition, with heavyweigh­t leader Henrique Capriles saying he would abandon the coalition while Democratic Action leader Henry Ramos remained a member.

“I’m totally dejected because after all these protests, the election, nothing has changed,” said student Javier Lara, 18, who watched a fellow protester die in unrest in the volatile city of San Cristobal on the border with Colombia.

Like many young Venezuelan­s, Lara now plans to head abroad as soon as possible - to Peru in his case.

“We’ve been sold out by the opposition,” he said.

The Democratic Unity coalition finds itself in crisis.

Its strategy of contesting the gubernator­ial elections backfired spectacula­rly.

In the wake of defeat, stunned opposition leaders could not even agree whether to pursue fraud allegation­s, with some refusing to accept the election results and others publicly admitting defeat.

A breakup, or reformulat­ion of the coalition, now looks inevitable, with a new strategy and possibly fresh blood needed for the 2018 presidenti­al election.

Though polls routinely showed the opposition had majority support, many Venezuelan­s view their leaders as an elitist group out-of-touch with their problems.

 ??  ?? Henrique Capriles
Henrique Capriles

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