Bangkok Post

Pastor has faith he can beat Maduro

LITTLE-KNOWN BERTUCCI SAYS VENEZUELA POLL NOT LOST CAUSE

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>> CARACAS: Despite unpopulari­ty and a deepening economic crisis, Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro seems such a certainty for reelection in April that only an evangelica­l pastor has found the faith to run against him.

“I am the light in the darkness,” said little-known pastor Javier Bertucci, so far the only opponent willing to try to unseat the leftist leader in a presidenti­al election which Mr Maduro’s opponents accuse him of rigging.

Mainstream opposition parties say they are boycotting the April 22 poll because they have no guarantees they would be free and fair.

A ballot wasn’t due until December but the Constituen­t Assembly, an all-powerful legislatur­e stacked with Mr Maduro loyalists, announced in January that the date was being brought forward.

Venezuela’s Supreme Court issued a ruling that excludes the opposition coalition Democratic Unity Roundtable from running and banned several prominent opposition figures from participat­ing.

The United States and European Union have imposed sanctions on Mr Maduro and his officials, with Washington calling him a “dictator.”

Fr Bertucci scoffs at assertions from the opposition that he is merely a political stooge to legitimize Maduro’s election.

Other would-be candidates have only a few more days to register.

Analysts believe Henri Falcon, a polarizing figure in the opposition, will eventually emerge as Mr Maduro’s main challenger.

Fr Bertucci, 48, says Mr Maduro is “beatable” in the ballot and criticised the opposition for effectivel­y giving him a clear run to a second six-year term.

“It’s a mistake to leave the way clear [for Mr Maduro] and continue with talk that everyone is cheating,” he said after preaching to a packed congregati­on at his church.

The government “continue to take all the space. They have always had the advantage, but more than 50% of the electorate wants to vote. Why deny them that right?”

There seems little doubt that the few thousand fervent followers who packed a hall to hear him preach this week would vote for him.

People in the congregati­on, young and old, held their arms up in supplicati­on, tears streaming down their faces, as a suited Fr Bertucci murmured into a microphone on a stage over a soundtrack of motivation­al music.

But it’s a stretch to believe Fr Bertucci can make more than a tiny dent in the national vote. Most will say he hasn’t a prayer.

Still, he says his fusion of politics and religious faith is what the country needs to overcome its deep economic crisis, which has made food and medicine shortages the norm.

Evangelica­l movements such as Fr Bertucci’s Maranatha Church have gained ground against traditiona­l churches in Venezuela and across Latin America in recent years.

Fr Bertucci believes he can emulate antigay marriage pastor Fabricio Alvarado, who will contest a run-off vote for the presidency of Costa Rica on April 1.

“If I didn’t believe it, I wouldn’t be here. I can be the next president of this country,” he said. “People want change, a leader with values, because politics in our countries has fallen very low.”

Fr Bertucci added: “I don’t know what Nicolas Maduro communicat­es, but clearly I represent the good and the light,” bringing Christian values to the country.

While Fr Bertucci insists he has no political past, his name was mentioned in the Panama Papers scandal over tax evasion, but he denies wrongdoing.

“I met with a well-known importer and I asked him if we could import meat which would be financed with money from many volunteers,” in his church. But negotiatio­ns broke down, he said, “and nothing happened.”

Like Fr Alvarado, his fellow preacher in Costa Rica, Fr Bertucci makes no bones about rejecting the idea of gay marriage as a “social distortion”.

“I respect the sexual orientatio­n of each individual, but I will never support a law of this kind.”

He will have to leave his role as pastor to contest the election, a decision that “pains my heart, but it’s the right one. God loves this country and it was necessary to make a sacrifice.”

 ??  ?? HAVE FAITH: Supporters of Venezuelan evangelica­l pastor and presidenti­al pre-candidate Javier Bertucci shout as he leaves a news conference in Caracas.
HAVE FAITH: Supporters of Venezuelan evangelica­l pastor and presidenti­al pre-candidate Javier Bertucci shout as he leaves a news conference in Caracas.
 ??  ?? BERTUCCI: ‘I am the light’.
BERTUCCI: ‘I am the light’.

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