Venezuela’s next generation of opposition plays a long game
CARACAS, Venezuela — Roberto Patino, a rising star in Venezuela’s unravelling opposition movement, pushes through a crowd of children clutching spoons and waiting to eat.
The 30-year-old organizes a crew that hands out hundreds of meals each day in slums throughout the capital. It’s the only solid nourishment of the day for many of the children in La Vega neighbourhood of western Caracas. And while it doesn’t come with a serving of explicit political indoctrination, there’s no doubt it’s a sharp rebuke to the government’s narrative that it alone can feed the poor.
“We’ve found fertile ground in these slums,” Patino said of the lunches financed by Venezuelan donors at home and abroad, “for the message of change and creating a new Venezuela.”
As President Nicolas Maduro cracks down on opponents amid an unprecedented economic crisis, desperation has driven some critics, especially those in exile, to openly support violent shortcuts to removing him from power. There was an apparent attempt on Maduro’s life in August with explosives-laden drones and some critics have welcomed recent suggestions by the Trump administration favouring a military coup.