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Venezuelan violinist plays on in protest

Venezuelan police react by detaining violinist for 19 days

- By Rachelle Krygier and Anthony Faiola

On the tense streets of Caracas, Wuilly Arteaga battles riot police with the strains of his violin.

CARACAS, Venezuela — On the streets of this tense capital, protesters challengin­g government troops often throw rocks, bottles, even Molotov cocktails. But Wuilly Arteaga battled riot police with the defiant strains of his violin.

A fixture in the front lines in recent months, playing on despite stinging volleys of tear gas, the 23-year-old became a symbol of the opposition to President Nicolás Maduro’s authoritar­ian government. Videos of Arteaga concentrat­ing on his music amid scenes of chaos quickly went viral, and were shared in Venezuela to boost morale among the protesters.

They also made him a target.

During a demonstrat­ion in July in eastern Caracas, as Arteaga played a song called “Soul of the Plains,” Maduro’s national guard swooped down on him. His story provides a window on the tactics of a government that has allegedly used intimidati­on, torture and propaganda to cement its power.

“Imprisonin­g him was the government’s way of trampling the opposition and punching its dignity, of showing that they’re willing to detain and torture one of its most emblematic symbols of peaceful resistance,” said Alfredo Romero, executive director of the legal activist group Foro Penal and Arteaga’s attorney.

The slight, copperskin­ned violinist is among the ranks of perhaps the least likely of Venezuela’s protesters — a band of classicall­y trained musicians who have provided the soundtrack for the country’s opposition movement.

At least one has paid with his life.

The latest uprising against Maduro — the anointed successor of Hugo Chavez, who died in 2013 — dates to April, but the movement has wilted in recent weeks following the government’s creation of a new super congress. The allpowerfu­l body, stocked with Maduro loyalists, including his wife and son, was mandated by a July 30 referendum that was internatio­nally condemned as fraudulent. Since then, it has moved swiftly against government opponents, launching what it calls a truth commission that critics fear will be used to silence dissent.

In the weeks before the vote, dozens of young musicians took to the streets, some with their instrument­s. Gian Cientorame, a 25-year-old percussion­ist, was detained with Arteaga and freed the next day. Francisco Gamboa, who plays viola, spent 27 days detained before being freed last week.

In early May, another viola player, Armando Canizales, 17, was killed during a protest.

“He was a rebel, like every young person, and just wanted a better country,” Canizales’s high school professor Pedro Sevillano told the Venezuelan website Runrun.es. “He was nice, and studious ... He was going to study medicine ...”

Like Arteaga, most of the rebel musicians were trained through the Simón Bolívar Musical Foundation, better known locally as El Sistema — a state-sponsored music education program that dates to the 1970s and has earned internatio­nal recognitio­n for creating opportunit­ies for poor youths. The program predates Chavez, but he latched on to it, promoting it abroad as evidence that his socialist-tinged “Bolivarian revolution” could feed minds as well as mouths.

The musical director of El Sistema’s main orchestra, renowned conductor Gustavo Dudamel, had long avoided the subject of politics. But hours after Canizales was killed in May, Dudamel tweeted a video of himself denouncing government tactics.

“I raise my voice against violence and repression,” he said. “No one can justify the spilling of blood. It’s time to stop ignoring the just call of the people who are being suffocated by an intolerabl­e crisis.”

This month, Dudamel published an opinion piece in the New York Times in which he railed against the new Constituen­t Assembly. The government appeared to respond by canceling an El Sistema orchestra tour of the United States. Days later, Maduro lashed out at Dudamel, who now heads the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic.

“Welcome to politics, Gustavo Dudamel,” Maduro said on national television. He added: “I hope God forgives you.”

Arteaga grew up in a poor family, living in an aluminum-roofed house in Valencia, about 81 miles from Caracas. He bought his first violin with money he earned working at a Caracas cybercafe, initially learning how to play it via YouTube videos. When he was 19, he ran away from his strictly religious home, where he wasn’t permitted to play.

He arrived in Caracas in 2015 and lived off street performanc­es. For two years, he also studied at El Sistema and played with a government orchestra.

“I was obliged to play in ceremonies with Maduro and to sign things supporting the president,” he said in an interview this month. “I rebelled against that. Eventually I left.”

After Canizales’s death, Arteaga played at the teenager’s funeral. Within days he was back on the streets with his violin.

Among Arteaga’s mostviewed videos is one of him in late May crying after government troops broke his violin during a protest. It captivated the Spanishspe­aking world, leading several people, including the celebrity salsa singer Marc Anthony, to send him new violins.

His girlfriend, 21-yearold Hazel Pinto, has played her clarinet alongside Arteaga at demonstrat­ions since May.

“With music he encourages people, even me, to keep pushing back,” she said. “I can’t explain how, but despite the effects of tear gas, I can keep blowing air into my clarinet.”

Last week, after spending 19 days in a military detention facility in western Caracas, Arteaga was released.

During his captivity, he said, he slept on the floor in an unventilat­ed room with about 15 other prisoners. Guards hit him on the head with his violin, destroying it. That and other beatings, he said, damaged his hearing in one ear. Guards, he added, taunted him and burned his hair with a lighter.

The night after his release, Diosdado Cabello, a senior member of Maduro’s inner circle, released a video on national television. In it, Arteaga denies he was mistreated in jail, attacks the media and insists guards never broke his violin.

“You remember that violinist, what’s his name?” Cabello said on national TV, pretending to play the violin. Before unveiling the video, he adds: “Let’s see what Wuilly says. It’s good to listen to the other side.”

The next day, Arteaga responded in the local media, calling the video a doctored montage of unrelated and coerced answers.

“It mixes answers,” he said. “I was tortured, prisoners are tortured, and they did destroy my violin.”

 ?? FEDERICO PARRA/GETTY-AFP ?? Opposition demonstrat­or Wuilly Arteaga plays a violin during a May protest in Caracas against President Nicolas Maduro.
FEDERICO PARRA/GETTY-AFP Opposition demonstrat­or Wuilly Arteaga plays a violin during a May protest in Caracas against President Nicolas Maduro.

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