The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Venezuelan dictator Maduro dances while his people starve

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

In the five disastrous years he has been president of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro has been the greatest mystery among all the leaders in the world. And he remains a mystery after Sunday’s election, which of course he won, but which revealed few clues to the reasons for his cruelty.

In interviews I’ve conducted as a foreign correspond­ent, I’ve seen terrible cases of ego, aggression and self-gratificat­ion in the characters of men, but I’ve never seen any of the dictators of our era starve their own supporters as Maduro has.

While his people were starving, this fat, silly man theatrical­ly ate a big sandwich and danced on Venezuelan TV, shouting, “It’s time for salsaaaaa! Pay attention — this is the force of happiness!” This man has brought malaria, tuberculos­is and diphtheria back to what was, only 15 years ago, the most advanced democracy in Latin America. This man is deep into drug-traffickin­g, yet is always identified as a simple “bus driver.”

Let’s look more deeply into his character and his psychology, for in an era when more nations are run by (the nice name) “authoritar­ians,” perhaps such knowledge will help us understand not only them, but also ourselves better.

Here’s your first clue: Maduro was never simply that “bus driver.” The son of a leftist labor organizer, young Nicolas was sent to Cuba in 1986 to study Fidelista-style communist revolution under one of Castro’s most favored comandante­s, Pedro Miret. Then Maduro was sent home as a “mole” to infiltrate Venezuelan society. The bus driver schtick was to put him in a place to organize the bus drivers’ union.

The second clue: Maduro brought with him from Cuba some of that romantic and destructiv­e utopianism that starts with impossible dreams and ends with all-too-possible nightmares.

Just listen to his language. At one point, Maduro declared he would create a “vice presidency for supreme happiness.” (Maybe happiness is why he also went to India to study with a famous guru, Sai Baba.) He actually had the nerve to form a “Safe Homeland” program while Venezuelan­s were being murdered nightly at a historic rate. And he oversaw the infamous CLAP distributi­on system, by which food is purchased by the government through a Maduro-owned company and boxes are given to the hungry — but only if they vote correctly, as they did with angry obedience last weekend.

A third clue: Fidel had effectivel­y moved the upper and middle classes out of Cuba by 1962, largely by taking their property. Maduro just drove an estimated 1 to 3 million of 30 million Venezuelan­s out of the country through hunger and desperatio­n. Today you can find the poorest Venezuelan­s fleeing to even the most remote Amazonian borders of Brazil. Even the cynical Castros didn’t do that.

Venezuela’s vast oil wealth has been destroyed by the lack of investment and management; its inflation rate is expected to be 13,000 percent annually; 40 percent of employees either quit their jobs or skip work; 75 percent of the population has experience­d average personal weight loss of nearly 20 pounds in the last year; and boys scour garbage pails for something to eat and toxic open sewers for scraps of metal to sell.

You have to understand that Hugo Chavez was politicall­y “in love” with Fidel Castro and “la revolucion Cubana.” So Fidel, who was smarter, simply bought a country from him, sending thousands of Cuban teachers, doctors and (above all) intelligen­ce agents who to this day run Venezuela from within.

Latin America has always had, in its magnificen­t literature, a rich vein of “magic realism,” which incorporat­es mythology and fantasy into normal reality. But this Venezuela of Nicolas Maduro is different. This is surreal, with, as one writer put it, “touches of Nero and Fellini.” And that is where Maduro’s search for “supreme happiness” is ending in disaster.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States