The Star Malaysia

Why Venezuelan­s have lost hope life will change

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VENEZUELA is so short on food that tens of thousands are going hungry or even starving. Its murder rate is among the highest in the world. Its economy is so crippled that the average shopper spends 35 hours a month waiting in line – three times more than in 2014.

Yet, even as the country becomes increasing­ly unlivable, the socialist government is more entrenched than it has been in years. A sense of hopelessne­ss has settled over what was once among the richest nations in South America, a belief that nothing will really change.

To understand why people have given up, look at Jhorman Valero and his family.

Three years ago, Valero dragged his 24-year-old cousin, Bassil da Costa, to join thousands of others in a nationwide protest against the administra­tion of President Nicolas Maduro. Hours later, Bassil was bleeding in his arms, the first of more than 40 people to be killed during weeks of unrest.

Now Valero and Bassil’s sister, Yenicer da Costa, no longer bother to protest, even on the anniversar­y of the 2014 protest.

“What’s the point of protesting if they just kill you in the streets and, three years later, everything is even worse?” she said. The fear inspired by the 2014 crackdown weighs heavily on the present, with a government that is selectivel­y repressive.

Many of more than 100 political prisoners were arrested that year and remain in jail, according to human rights groups. Most are being held incommunic­ado in the dungeons of El Helicoide, a spiral-shaped modernist landmark built as a shopping mall during the 1950s oil boom, which is now the headquarte­rs of the all-powerful Sebin intelligen­ce police.

The creation last month of an “anti-coup commando unit” headed by the vice president has stoked fears of more roundups. The unit already has arrested three members of the party of Leopoldo Lopez, the highest-profile prisoner, who led the protest at which Bassil was killed.

As the price of oil has fallen and laid bare years of mismanagem­ent, Maduro’s administra­tion has responded by becoming more repressive. It has purged state institutio­ns of potential traitors, kept out foreign reporters, detained prominent businessme­n and declared null all decisions by the opposition-controlled congress.

As a result, the young people who would be the natural fuel for any street protest movement are not turning out. At demonstrat­ions these days, there are more grandparen­ts than youths.

One reason is that so many young people have simply fled the country.

The protest this month got off to an inauspicio­us start, with an older man shouting, “Where are all the students?” “They didn’t come!” called back Diego Cerboni, student union president at the private Santa Maria University.

Cerboni estimates 100 students are leaving Santa Maria each week, forcing professors to consolidat­e sections and cancel under-enrolled classes at the 12,000-student campus.

One recent survey found 88% of young Venezuelan­s want to emigrate.

Venezuelan­s accounted for more US asylum requests than any other country last year – more than 18,000, compared to a few hundred in 2013. So many people are applying for passports that the government has run short of supplies and all but stopped issuing them.

“The government has a smart strategy. They keep us looking over our shoulder, keep us busy looking for food and medicine. You’re working on how to get out of the country, and you don’t have time to march,” Cerboni said.

The streets are not always calm. Twice last year, the opposition rallied hundreds of thousands of people to protest the Maduro administra­tion. But while popular movements have helped topple government­s in places like Egypt and Ukraine, Venezuela’s protests seem to have had little effect on the political calculus of those in power.

“Ever since the fall of the Berlin Wall, a lot of people are walking around with this myth in our heads that if you get enough people into the streets, the government will fall. And that’s just not true,” said Steven Levitsky, a professor at Harvard University who specialize­s in Latin American politics.

The loss of hope is also tied to the opposition’s failure to present a clear alternativ­e to the government. It is perenniall­y divided and absorbed by its own internal ego battles.

The government has successful­ly made use of legal loopholes to hobble the opposition without much internatio­nal protest. For much of last spring and summer, the opposi- tion appeared to be getting back on track, collecting some 2 million signatures – 10 times the required minimum – to force a recall referendum against Maduro.

Polls suggest 80% of the country want to vote him out. But after a mass demonstrat­ion with a million people in September grabbed internatio­nal headlines, the government suspended the recall drive.

The Obama administra­tion then dispatched a top diplomat to walk back the opposition leaders and tempt them with a Vatican-sponsored dialogue, which has since collapsed.

In hindsight, to many it felt like capitulati­on, with the only result being that Maduro was never punished for trampling on the constituti­on. Now, there is an effort underway to block opposition parties from competing in future elections altogether.

The opposition may have found a more willing partner in US President Donald Trump, who abruptly broke with the Obama administra­tion’s policy of relative restraint toward Venezuela. Trump met with protester Lopez’s wife in the White House and slapped drug sanctions on Maduro’s vice president within 30 days of taking office.

But while such a display of bravado is red meat to opposition hardliners, it could alienate the vast majority of Venezuelan­s who still revere the late President Hugo Chavez. And it only increases the odds that corrupt officials will close ranks for fear of being hunted down should they ever lose power.

“It’s the exact wrong thing. The opposition needs to convince the ruling elite that there’s life after Maduro; that if they allow a transition, they’re not going to end up in jail or exile. If the regime elite remains united, there’s nothing in a protest movement that forces them to leave,” Levitsky said.

The protest to commemorat­e the 2014 deaths eventually grew to a few hundred people. Bassil’s mother, Jineth Frias, showed up, somewhat reluctantl­y, and marched with other parents in front of a sign that said, “We remember our young.”

For the most part, she sees little point in taking to the streets, and turns to prayer instead. At her modest home on the outskirts of Caracas, she has built a tiny altar with a framed picture of Bassil in the black and yellow jersey of his favourite soccer team, hung alongside a statue of the Virgin Mary.

In the three years since his death, her family’s predicamen­t, like that of Venezuela, has only worsened. Her refrigerat­or is almost always empty and as a result she’s lost 10 kilograms, in what Venezuelan­s call the “Maduro Diet.”

“I know it sounds terrible,” she confides between tears, “but I thank God he’s not here to see this.” — AP

 ??  ?? In memoriam: Jhorman Valero pointing to the image of his late cousin Bassil, stenciled on the terrace wall of his home in Guatire, Venezuela. — AP
In memoriam: Jhorman Valero pointing to the image of his late cousin Bassil, stenciled on the terrace wall of his home in Guatire, Venezuela. — AP

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