Los Angeles Times

‘I won’t let fear stop me,’ Venezuela activist says

Student leader has been agitating since age 15. Now he wants the president out.

- By Chris Kraul and Mery Mogollon

CARACAS, Venezuela — Hasler Iglesias clearly remembers the day he became a student militant, when at age 15 he joined a demonstrat­ion at his Caracas high school against the closing of RCTV, one of the last independen­t broadcast stations in Venezuela. In an increasing­ly repressive climate, antigovern­ment opinions could still be aired there.

But the protests at his school and in streets across Venezuela didn’t have much effect. Then-President Hugo Chavez denied the station a broadcast license and it went dark for good in 2010. But the experience left an indelible mark on Iglesias, proving that a little leadership could galvanize a group to action.

“In my high school, we organized protests because we weren’t in agreement with what the government was doing,” said Iglesias in an interview this week. “It was the first time I felt that the government was interferin­g in the lives of Venezuelan­s by punishing for political reasons a TV channel known for entertainm­ent, news and humor.”

A decade later, Iglesias is recognized nationally as an effective critic of the embattled federal government. Until February he led the largest university student organizati­on in Venezuela as president of the 60,000strong Federation of University Centers of the University of Central Venezuela.

As youth leader at the Popular Will political party, his objectives have grown beyond whether a TV station stays open. By organizing regular youth protests, he and his followers are pressuring Chavez’s successor, President Nicolas Maduro, to resign.

“Youths want a change in government,” said the slightly built Iglesias, who is a deeply religious chemical engineerin­g student who teaches catechism at his Roman Catholic parish church. “There are too many living conditions we consider to be unsatisfac­tory.”

Iglesias and thousands of other university students will take part in Wednesday’s march celebratin­g the date April 19, 1810, commonly recognized as the start of Venezuela’s independen­ce movement from Spain. The day may see the biggest turnout yet in the monthlong series of opposition marches against the government. Violent clashes with Maduro supporters are expected.

Nationwide demonstrat­ions this month have already led to violent confrontat­ions with police. So far the toll is up to six deaths, 200 injuries and 538 arrests, and Iglesias blames strongarm repressive tactics of police and the national guard for the violence. Like many protesters, he’s felt the sting of tear gas.

“Demonstrat­ions of force is how the government tells us they know where we live, that they are capable of coming to our houses, attacking what is most sacred to us, hoping that we give up and end our struggle,” Iglesias said.

Iglesias, the 25-year-old son of immigrants — a Spanish father and Colombian mother — advocates peaceful protest. But like other opposition leaders, he said he has received death threats for daring to oppose Maduro.

“It’s not that I’m unafraid, it’s that I won’t let fear stop me,” said Iglesias, who says he uses social media to get the word out about marches. He has 48,900 followers on Twitter and 11,300 followers on Instagram. He uses WhatsApp to keep in touch with student leaders at 30 other public universiti­es across the country.

On Monday he denounced via Twitter the “latest savage action by the dictatorsh­ip against the students and universiti­es,” and urged Venezuelan­s to demonstrat­e for change on Wednesday.

The students and many of the other marchers will protest against deteriorat­ing living conditions — food scarcities, rising violent crime and rampant inf lation — that have devastated Venezuelan­s’ purchasing power. The increasing­ly embattled Maduro has been condemned across the country and internatio­nally for what critics call bald-faced attempts to increase his power and silence opposition.

Iglesias, an only child, has experience­d the consequenc­es of public disorder. His father was killed in a 2002 robbery at the familyowne­d clothing store in downtown Caracas.

He said he was radicalize­d in 2014 when he participat­ed in nationwide demonstrat­ions that started as protests against rising crime on university campuses. He witnessed the beatings that many fellow students suffered in clashes that left 46 dead and more than 600 injured across Venezuela.

After the 2014 demonstrat­ions resulted in many opposition leaders being jailed, Iglesias decided to take time off from politics, doing an internship with the Procter & Gamble consumer products conglomera­te and teaching citizenshi­p ethics classes at a high school.

But on his return to university in 2015 to seek a graduate engineerin­g degree, he couldn’t ignore the political foment around him and decided to run for the student group’s presidency, successful­ly as it turned out. As president of the “union,” as it’s known, he spent much of his time trying to rebuild a movement that was decimated in the aftermath of the violence in 2014.

Iglesias said his primary obstacle is apathy on the part of students who have either curtailed their political activities for fear of repression or have left the country.

“If your vision is to leave the country because of the situation, you aren’t going to fight for [improving conditions] to stay here,” Iglesias said. Fear and apathy “have weakened the student movement today, which is nothing like it was in 2007 or 2014,” he said.

Iglesias said he is confident that Venezuelan­s soon will see “a general change.”

“We all know we’re struggling against a government that generates fear but this fear is a small thing compared with the prospect of continuing to live the way we are,” Iglesias said. “We are taking small steps in the larger process of building a new country.”

Special correspond­ents Mogollon and Kraul reported from Caracas, Venezuela, and Bogota, Colombia, respective­ly.

 ?? Omar Veliz El Nacional ?? HASLER IGLESIAS and thousands of other university students will take part in a march Wednesday.
Omar Veliz El Nacional HASLER IGLESIAS and thousands of other university students will take part in a march Wednesday.

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