‘I would like to have my family here:’ Venezuelan asylum seekers take refuge in Kent
Jul 30, 2024, 6:04 PM | Updated: 6:16 pm

Over a dozen Venezuelan asylum seekers are taking refuge at a camp in Kent. (Photo: Sam Campbell, ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio)
(Photo: Sam Campbell, ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio)
³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio spoke with Venezuelan asylum seekers on Tuesday as political violence rocks their country.
Over a dozen Venezuelans are seeking refuge at a camp in Kent. Jose has been living at the camp for the past two months. He said he left his home in Venezuela to escape a crackdown on political dissidents. But now, he fears for his family.
“They are scared because they have not left the country yet,” Jose said, translated from Spanish to English. “But if it is God’s will, I can bring them here as well. I would like to have my family here, my daughters. I have a 3-year-old daughter who asks for me.”
While Venezuelan refugees in Kent struggle to stay fed and await rulings on their asylum requests, they tell me they worry for their families enduring political unrest back home.
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He and about 15 other Venezuelans at the camp are desperately hoping immigration officials approve their requests for asylum.
³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio also spoke with a Venezuelan-American with ties to Washington. Former Seattle Univision Anchor Paula Lamas said she doubts the results but she’s hopeful a regime change could be coming soon.
Lamas grew up in Venezuela and came to the United States to escape political violence. However, that was 23 years ago.
Hugo Chávez statues targeted across Venezuela in post-election unrest
Now, anti-government activists across Venezuela are toppling giant statues of Hugo Chávez to express their anger over the alleged stealing of an election by the late president’s handpicked successor, Nicolás Maduro.
In the seaside city of La Guaira, outside the capital Caracas, twisted rebar and chunks of concrete lie below a pedestal where a group of protesters Monday night ripped down one likeness of Chávez that was dedicated by Maduro in 2017.
(AP) from one protester shows the moment when the 3.5 meter (12 feet) statue of the leader known as El Comandante was pulled down to raucous shouts of “this government is going to fall.”
Once removed, the statue was dragged by motorcycles across the plaza, doused in gasoline and set on fire, the protester said.
“This is a powerful symbol to them,” the protester, who asked not to be identified for fear she could be arrested, told The AP. “Every time we tackle one of their symbols, we’re taking away some of their strength.”
This isn’t the first time monuments honoring the creator of the so-called Bolivarian Revolution have been attacked by angry mobs. The same phenomenon occurred during waves of anti-government unrest in 2017 and 2019.
But the simultaneous nature and high number of attacks — five in the last 24 hours — underscores the depth of anger many Venezuelans feel after the National Electoral Council declared Maduro the winner in Sunday’s presidential election. The opposition says its candidate, Edmundo Gonzalez, more than doubled the incumbent’s vote count.
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A plainclothes military intelligence officer stopped journalists trying to take photos of what remains of the destroyed statue in La Guaira. The officer, who didn’t identify himself, said the country is “at war” and that any effort to disrespect Chávez was offensive to millions of Venezuelans who revered the former army paratrooper and anti-imperialist icon.
Maduro said several people had been arrested in the attacks, which he likened to the images from revolutions pushed by the U.S. in post-Soviet states including Ukraine and Georgia.
“What do these people have in their head? In the heart?” Maduro asked in a televised address Monday night in which he broadcast images of some of the attacks. “Just imagine if they one day gain power here, what they would be capable of doing.”
Contributing: Sam Campbell, ³ÉÈËXÕ¾ Newsradio and Joshua Goodman, The Associated Press