Santa Fe New Mexican

Country’s passion takes precedence over needs

Decision to make $10M available for sport criticized in country mired in recession

- By Daniel Cancel and Noris Soto

The country cheers Felix Hernandez, Miguel Cabrera and other local boys who’ve made it in the Major Leagues up north, then turns its attention to its very own winter league that runs from September through the end of the year. They’re raucous games featuring drumming, cheerleade­rs and copious amounts of beer. Alongside hot dogs, vendors hawk arepas.

But this season, no one is in the mood.

Venezuelan­s are outraged at the government’s decision to make $10 million available for importing equipment and paying players’ salaries at a preferenti­al rate of 10 bolivars per dollar. This is not going over well in a country where grocers pay as much as 15,000 bolivars to import $1 of rice and poor Venezuelan­s struggle to feed their families amid the deepest recession on record, soaring inflation and shortages of affordable staples and medicine. The idea of precious dollars going to fund athletics is abominable, critics say.

Officials at the Leones de Caracas, a powerhouse franchise with a local stature roughly equivalent to the New York Yankees, have protested the move and called for an end to the preferenti­al treatment.

“First we want dollars for medicine and food for the country, then, once the crisis is resolved, they can approve dollars for the league and events,” the club said this week on its Twitter account. “We’ve all lost friends and family due to the lack of medicine. We love baseball profoundly, but Venezuela comes first.”

During the economic collapse of recent years, spurred by a drop in oil prices and government incom-

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Jesus Lezama, a 96-year-old fan of the Leones de Caracas baseball team, blows a horn in 2015 during a game in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuelan­s are outraged at the government’s decision to make $10 million available for importing equipment and paying...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Jesus Lezama, a 96-year-old fan of the Leones de Caracas baseball team, blows a horn in 2015 during a game in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuelan­s are outraged at the government’s decision to make $10 million available for importing equipment and paying...

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