Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Venezuelan guardsmen find refuge

- By Joshua Goodman

Troops that defied President Maduro spent 7 months in the Panama Embassy before fleeing Venezuela.

MIAMI — For seven nerve-wracking months, they slept through the day in cramped quarters on cold floors, while spending their nights in prayer, keeping fit with dumbbells made from water jugs and peering through the diplomatic compound’s curtains for fear of surveillan­ce.

But on Monday, 16 National Guardsmen who shocked Venezuela and the world alike by revolting against President Nicolas Maduro were safely out of the country, having successful­ly fled the Panamanian Embassy in Caracas that had been their makeshift home since April.

The AP spoke to the group’s leaders, who provided the first detailed account of what led them to plot with Maduro’s opponents in an uprising that laid bare fraying support for the socialist leader within the armed forces.

Due to security concerns, lieutenant colonels Illich Sanchez and Rafael Soto wouldn’t reveal when they left Venezuela. They only said they journeyed in groups as part of a clandestin­e “military operation” that counted with the support of dozens of low-ranking troops and their commanders.

“We left Venezuela but our fight to restore Venezuela’s democracy will continue,” said Sanchez in a phone interview from an undisclose­d location.

The previously untold story of how Sanchez and Soto managed to dupe their superiors and plot a revolt against Maduro underscore­s how discontent — and fear — is running high inside Venezuela’s barracks even as the embattled leader clings to power.

Sanchez, 41, commanded a garrison of about 500 guardsmen responsibl­e for protecting downtown government buildings including the presidenti­al palace and supreme court. Soto, 43, for a time was assigned to the feared SEBIN intelligen­ce policy, leading a team of about 150 agents charged with spying on government opponents.

In their telling, the two longtime friends grew disillusio­ned watching the devastatio­n of Venezuela’s economy and started secretly plotting to remove Maduro. Eventually they teamed up with Maduro’s opponents led by National Assembly President Juan Guaidó, who is recognized as Venezuela’s rightful leader by the U.S. and about 60 countries.

On April 30, they stunned Venezuelan­s by appearing before dawn with tanks and heavily armed troops on a bridge in eastern Caracas alongside Guaidó and activist Leopoldo Lopez.

“When I gathered my troops at 2 a.m. and told them we were going to liberate Venezuela they broke down in tears,” said Sanchez, who as part of his official duties providing security to congress had to speak with opposition lawmakers on a regular basis. “Nobody saw it coming, but they were all immediatel­y committed.”

Adds Soto: “Everything was perfectly lined up for a peaceful transition.”

But they say they were defrauded by Maduro aides, including Supreme Court President Maikel Moreno and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, who they claim never fulfilled a promise made to the opposition to abandon their support of Maduro. Both Moreno and Padrino have repeatedly reasserted their loyalty to

Maduro.

In the confusing aftermath of the failed rebellion, they scurried for protection on the back of motorcycle­s, stripping off their olive green fatigues and knocking, unsuccessf­ully at first, on several embassy doors.

Amid the chaos, Lopez phoned then Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela, who embraced their cause and arranged their safe entry into the embassy.

He recalled how two months before the U.S. invasion of Panama, in 1989, then-dictator Gen. Manuel Noriega crushed a similar revolt and then ordered the execution of more than 10 ringleader­s.

“We couldn’t leave them alone,” Varela said. “The SEBIN was 10 feet from the door. They were going to kill them all.”

The embassy, in an upscale high-rise occupied by state-run companies and well-connected government contractor­s, would become their makeshift home for the next seven months.

While confined, the 16 guardsmen worked hard to maintain their military discipline. To keep out of their host’s way, they adopted an inverted sleep schedule, dozing during the day on thin mattresses strewn across the floor of a small room. Then at night, after the diplomats went home, they’d come alive to cook together on a small stove top, keep fit and read religious texts in a prayer circle.

Now, in exile, their plans are uncertain but finally they will be reunited with their families, who were granted asylum in Panama after fleeing themselves when the uprising failed.

“We left Venezuela,” said Sanchez from an undisclose­d location, “but our fight to restore Venezuela's democracy will continue.“

 ?? AP ?? Venezuelan guardsmen play dominoes Nov. 8 inside Panama’s Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela.
AP Venezuelan guardsmen play dominoes Nov. 8 inside Panama’s Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela.

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