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Venezuela’s President Elect Force to Exile, and Hopes for Democracy Dim

The president elect’s decision to seek asylum in Spain and the autocratic leader’s antagonism toward regional powers lessen the chances of a political transition.

Supporters of the Venezuela’s president elect, Edmundo González Urrutia, at the gate of the Torrejón air base (Madrid).

Genevieve Glatsky, NYTimes

BOGOTA
EnergiesNet.com 09 09 2024

The news that Edmundo González, Venezuela’s opposition candidate, had fled the country on a Spanish Air Force plane this weekend took the country, and the world, by surprise.

The past year has been marked by months of repression leading up to a disputed presidential election. The vote was followed by a brutal crackdown by the authoritarian government of President Nicolás Maduro.

Still, many Venezuelans held out hope that through a negotiated exit the socialist-inspired administration might step aside and let Mr. González, a soft-spoken former diplomat, assume power.

His departure on Saturday narrowed that slim possibility even further. And it came as Venezuelan security forces surrounded the Argentine diplomatic residence in Caracas where six top opposition leaders have been taking shelter since March.

Mr. Maduro has solidified his hold on power, some analysts say, even if many Venezuelans and governments around the world have not recognized his claim that he was re-elected to the presidency in the July 28 election.

Efforts by countries in the region, including Brazil, Mexico and Colombia, to broker a resolution to the conflict have gone nowhere, and the opposition, which has called on the global community to rally behind it, has seemingly few options.

Mr. González, a 75-year-old grandfather of four, was thrown into the race in March as a stand-in for the popular opposition leader María Corina Machado after the country’s top court barred her from the presidential ballot.

Ms. Machado, who won a primary election last year organized by the opposition, has inspired a nearly religious fervor among her supporters, but for the government, her decades-long record as an unwavering opponent of the 25-year-old socialist system made her a threat.

Many analysts saw Mr. González’s candidacy as a hopeful if unexpected turn of events, and polls indicated that the opposition candidate was likely to win — if the vote was free and fair.

On election day, however, Mr. Maduro claimed victory without releasing a breakdown of results; he has yet to do so. The opposition has published thousands of receipts from voting machines showing that Mr. González won decisively.

Mr. González and María Corina Machado, wearing white and raising their clasped hands.
Mr. González and María Corina Machado, the leader of the opposition, at a rally in Maracaibo, Venezuela, in July. Marian Carrasquero for The New York Times

Mr. Maduro has faced widespread domestic and international criticism over his victory claim.

His security forces have detained around 2,000 people, from opposition activists to ordinary citizens, over even small signs of dissent. Two dozen Venezuelans died in protests in the days right after the election. Last Monday, a Venezuelan court that focuses on crimes related to terrorism issued an arrest warrant for Mr. González, accusing him of electoral sabotage.

On Sunday, the opposition released an audio recording of the candidate explaining his decision to flee the country.

“I wanted to inform you that this morning, I arrived in Madrid,” Mr. González said. “My departure from Caracas was surrounded by episodes of pressure, coercion and threats of not allowing my departure. I trust that soon we will continue the struggle to achieve freedom and the recovery of democracy in Venezuela.”

A day earlier, Venezuela’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, said that the government had granted him permission to leave the country “for the sake of tranquility and political peace.”

The plans of Ms. Machado, the candidate kicked off the ballot, were unclear. She has been in hiding since the election, though she has made a handful of public appearances.

In a statement on Sunday, she said that Mr. González had left because his life was in danger, but that she would keep fighting “until the end,” as her campaign slogan put it.

In an interview last month, a top opposition leader, Perkins Rocha, said, “My knowledge of María Corina Machado is to have the certainty that she would never abandon the country.” He was later arrested by men wearing hoods and taken to an unknown location.

Ms. Machado now finds herself in the position of being the most prominent opposition figure in a country where all of her recent predecessors have been imprisoned or forced into exile, said Francisco Rodríguez, a Venezuelan professor of international affairs at the University of Denver.

The Maduro government’s strategy, he said, is to force out the loudest voices of dissent, then portray them as weak and illegitimate.

“It makes it easier for Maduro to write the narrative about the opposition,” Mr. Rodríguez said. “They want to paint them as not being willing to fight, not being brave, not being strong.”

The standoff at the Argentine residence highlighted the diminishing chances that the opposition might compel the Maduro government to negotiate a resolution to the political crisis.

Nicolás Maduro has faced widespread domestic and international criticism over his claim that he won.
An empty highway displaying billboards from President Nicolás Maduro’s campaign in July, two days after the presidential elections. Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times

Brazil assumed custody of the residence last month after Mr. Maduro ordered diplomats from Argentina and other countries that disputed his election victory claim to leave the country. Many had placed their hopes for a negotiated transition in regional powers like Brazil with leftist leaders who have been friendly toward Mr. Maduro.

But on Saturday Venezuela’s foreign ministry announced that it was revoking Brazil’s custody of the Argentine residence because, the ministry said, it was being used to plan “terrorist activities” and to plot the assassination of Mr. Maduro.

The standoff, combined with the news of Mr. González’s exit, left some Venezuelans who voted for the opposition feeling dejected and fearful. They asked that their last names not be used for fear of retaliation.

Chiquinquirá, 60, a secretary, said she nearly fainted when she learned the news of Mr. González’s departure. “What is going to happen to us?” she said. “I feel like a ship adrift.”

Lucía, 28, an administrator, said she felt saddened, hurt and demoralized.

“I feel that he is forsaking all of us who decided to stay and give a last chance for elections in Venezuela.” she said. “How do you ensure that this struggle continues if the president-elect abandons the country?”

Now that Mr. González has left Venezuela, she, too, has also decided to leave.

“I do not want to continue spending my youth waiting for something to be decided,” she said.

Jorge Valencia contributed reporting from Bogotá. Mike Ives and Orlando Mayorquín also contributed reporting.

nytimes.com 09 08 2024

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