Miami Herald

YEMEN CRISIS

- BY LEOPOLDO LOPEZ Leopoldo López was a political prisoner of the Maduro dictatorsh­ip for seven years. He currently lives in exile in Spain.

President Biden made the right decision to cut off military aid to the Saudi coalition fighting in Yemen’s civil war. We can all support the president’s peace initiative to finally end the brutal conflict that has placed Yemen on the brink of famine.

Relief agencies are low on funding for this massive crisis. Please donate to the World Food Program (WFP), Save the Children, Catholic Relief Services, UNICEF, CARE, Edesia, IRC and other agencies fighting in hunger in Yemen.

Writing a letter to Congress can encourage representa­tives to increase food aid. Even playing the WFP’s online trivia game, FreeRice, raises donations to fight hunger.

It is important to take action. We all can help bring food and peace to Yemen.

– William Lambers,

Cincinnati, OH

Last December, I had the unforgetta­ble opportunit­y to travel to Cúcuta, with the support of Colombian immigratio­n authoritie­s, and meet with hundreds of my fellow Venezuelan­s who, fleeing the dictatorsh­ip of Nicolás Maduro, crossed the border and sought refuge in Colombian territory. Women, men, and children not only talked about their suffering but also tirelessly repeated: We must continue fighting, we must put an end to the dictatorsh­ip.

Their looks of anguish, those voices of pain, far from breaking me, have strengthen­ed my conviction: The fight must continue, despite the enormous difficulti­es ahead.

These refugees reflect a society that has been stripped of its fundamenta­l rights. According to data from the 2020 ENCOVI project, about 95 percent of the population lives in poverty or extreme poverty, and 58 percent of Venezuelan children suffer from chronic malnutriti­on. It’s clear from these sobering statistics that this is a crisis of overwhelmi­ng dimensions, where nothing is normal or safe: not electric power, not drinking water network, not Internet access, not the healthcare system, which is dilapidate­d. I am talking about a country with no public transporta­tion and no fuel.

The question is whether this calamity is a Venezuelan problem or whether its impact goes beyond national borders, with the proportion­s of a global problem.

My answer? It is global. Not only because of the impact that the flight of more than 6 million people has had — and continues to have — on dozens of countries. It is global because it compromise­s the decisions and budgets of multilater­al organizati­ons and NGOs. It is global — urgently so — because Maduro heads a narcodicta­torship that, in addition to harboring groups of the former FARC and of the ELN, has handed over vast swaths of territory that now serve as a port of departure for drug shipments to Europe, Central America, Mexico, the United States and the North African coast.

In addition, democratic nations cannot continue to ignore Maduro’s growing ties with the Iranian regime and terrorist groups such as Hezbollah, whose dangerous military and geostrateg­ic implicatio­ns are more than evident. Iran, which insists on exporting its revolution and has Latin America on its radar, intends to build military bases on Venezuelan soil. And Europe should pay attention to Colombian President Iván Duque warning: Maduro is trying to buy missiles through Iran.

Money coming from the corrupt Chávez and Maduro regimes has flooded the financial systems of at least 52 countries so far, and it is highly likely that, as investigat­ions progress, more of it will surface.

Add to all of this the systematic violations of human rights and crimes against humanity, rigorously documented by the OAS, the United Nations and other entities, crimes that are under internatio­nal jurisprude­nce, including torture, kidnapping­s and forced disappeara­nces, cruel treatment and rape.

Less visible tragedy also demands internatio­nal action: the destructio­n of vast areas in the southern region of Venezuela through the mining. Eco-cide is carried out by criminal gangs, with the ELN at the forefront. In addition to razing river basins, forests and huge areas of the Venezuelan Amazon, they destroy indigenous villages, forcibly evict their inhabitant­s and arrest, torture and murder their leaders, all with the authorizat­ion and military protection granted them by the dictatorsh­ip.

And there is one more global dimension that I cannot fail to mention. The Maduro regime counts as its allies a cartel of the enemies of democracy: Russia, Belarus, China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Turkey, the Sao Paulo Forum, the former FARC, the ELN and others.

Widespread and destabiliz­ing problems, such as drug traffickin­g, money laundering, financial crimes, crimes against humanity, the destructio­n of the Amazon, mineral traffickin­g, alliances for the destructio­n of democracy, are global emergencie­s that should raise alarms and tell the world: It is not feasible to leave Venezuelan­s alone. Venezuelan democrats’ struggle is the struggle of democrats around the world.

 ?? LUIS ROBAYO
Getty Images ?? More than 6 million Venezuelan­s have left their country, driven out by poverty, hunger and human-rights abuses.
LUIS ROBAYO Getty Images More than 6 million Venezuelan­s have left their country, driven out by poverty, hunger and human-rights abuses.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States