ReportWire

Tag: John Parker

  • ‘I waited for this moment for so long.’ Many U.S. Venezuelans praise Maduro capture

    [ad_1]

    Maria Eugenia Torres Ramirez was having dinner with her family in Los Angeles on Friday night when the flood of messages began. Word had begun to circulate that the U.S. was invading Venezuela and would seize its president, Nicolás Maduro.

    Torres Ramirez, 38, fled her native country in 2021, settled in L.A. and has a pending application for asylum. Her family is scattered throughout the world — Colombia, Chile and France. Since her parents died, none of her loved ones remain in Venezuela.

    Still, news that the autocrat who separated them had been captured delivered a sense of long-awaited elation and united the siblings and cousins across continents for a rare four-hour phone call as the night unfolded.

    “I waited for this moment for so long from within Venezuela, and now that I’m out, it’s like watching a movie,” said Torres Ramirez, a former political activist who opposed Maduro. “It’s like a jolt of relief.”

    Many Venezuelans across the U.S. celebrated the military action that resulted in Maduro’s arrest. Economic collapse and political repression led roughly 8 million Venezuelans to emigrate since 2014, making it one of the world’s largest displacement crises.

    About 770,000 live in the U.S. as of 2023, concentrated mainly in the regions of Miami, Orlando, Houston and New York. Just over 9,500 live in L.A., according to a 2024 U.S. Census estimate.

    In the South Florida city of Doral, home to the largest Venezuelan American community, residents poured into the streets Saturday morning, carrying the Venezuelan flag, singing together and praising the military action as an act of freedom.

    In Los Angeles, a different picture emerged as groups opposed to Maduro’s arrest took to the streets, though none identified themselves as being of Venezuelan descent. At a rally of about 40 people south of downtown Los Angeles, John Parker, a representative of the Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice, called the raid a “brutal assault and kidnapping” that amounted to a war crime.

    The United States’ intervention in Venezuela had nothing to do with stopping the flow of drugs, he said, and everything to do with undermining a legitimate socialist government. Parker called for Maduro to be set free as a few dozen protesters behind him chanted, “Hands off Venezuela.”

    Parker said when he visited Venezuela a few weeks ago as part of a U.S. peacemaking delegation, he saw “the love people had for Maduro.”

    A later demonstration in Pershing Square drew hundreds out in the rain to protest the U.S intervention. But when a speaker led chants of “No war in Venezuela,” a woman draped in a Venezuelan flag attempted to approach him and speak into the microphone. A phalanx of demonstrators circled her and shuttled her away.

    At Mi Venezuela, a restaurant in Vernon, 16-year-old Paola Moleiro and her family ordered empanadas Saturday morning.

    A portion of one of the restaurant’s walls was covered in Venezuelan bank notes scrawled with messages. One read: “3 de enero del 2026. Venezuela quedo libre.

    Venezuela is free.

    Around midnight the night before, Paola started getting messages on WhatsApp from her relatives in Venezuela. The power was out, they said, and they forwarded videos of what sounded like bomb blasts.

    Paola was terrified. She’d left Venezuela at age 7 with her parents and siblings, first for Panama and later the U.S., in 2023. But the rest of her family remained in Venezuela, and she had no idea what was going on.

    Paola and her family stayed up scanning television channels for some idea of what was happening. Around 1:30 a.m., President Trump announced that U.S. forces had captured Maduro.

    “The first thing I did, I called my aunt and said, ‘We are going to see each other again,’” she said.

    Because of the Venezuelan state’s control over media, her relatives had no idea their leader had been seized by U.S. forces. “Are you telling me the truth?” Paola said her aunt asked.

    Paola hasn’t been home in nine years. She misses her grandmother and her grandmother’s cooking, especially her caraotas negras, or black beans. As a child, she said, certain foods were so scarce that she had an apple for the first time only after moving to Panama.

    Paola said she was grateful to Trump for ending decades of authoritarian rule that had reduced her home country to a shell of what it once was.

    “Venezuela has always prayed for this,” she said. “It’s been 30 years. I feel it was in God’s hands last night.”

    For Torres Ramirez, it was difficult to square her appreciation for Trump’s accomplishment in Venezuela with the fear she has felt as an immigrant under his presidency.

    “It’s like a double-edged sword,” she said. “Throughout the course of this whole year, I have felt persecuted. I had to face ICE — I had to go to my appointment with the fear that I could lose it all because the immigration policies had changed and there was complete uncertainty. For a moment, I felt as if I was in Venezuela. I felt persecuted right here.”

    During a news conference Saturday morning, Trump said Maduro was responsible for trafficking illicit drugs into the U.S. and the deaths of thousands of Americans. He repeated a baseless claim that the Maduro government had emptied Venezuela’s prisons and mental institutions and “sent their worst and most violent monsters into the United States to steal American lives.”

    “They sent everybody bad into the United States, but no longer, and we have now a border where nobody gets through,” he said.

    Trump also announced that the U.S. will “run” Venezuela and its vast oil reserves.

    “We’ll run it professionally,” he said. “We’ll have the greatest oil companies in the world go in and invest billions and billions of dollars and take that money, use that money in Venezuela, and the biggest beneficiary are going to be the people of Venezuela.”

    Torres Ramirez said that while she’s happy about Maduro’s ouster, she’s unsure how to feel about Trump’s announcement saying the U.S. will take over Venezuela’s oil industry. Perhaps it won’t be favorable in the long term for Venezuela’s economy, she said, but the U.S. intervention is a win for the country’s political future if it means people can return home.

    Patricia Andrade, 63, who runs Raíces Venezolanas, a volunteer program in Miami that distributes donations to Venezuelan immigrants, said she believes the Trump administration is making the right move by remaining involved until there is a transition of power.

    Andrade, a longtime U.S. citizen, said she hasn’t been to Venezuela in 25 years — even missing the deaths of both parents. She said she was accused of treason for denouncing the imprisonment of political opponents and the degradation of Venezuela’s democracy under Maduro’s predecessor Hugo Chavez. She said she worries that Venezuela’s remaining political prisoners could be killed as payback for Maduro’s arrest.

    “We tried everything — elections, marches, more elections … and it couldn’t be done,” she said. “Maduro was getting worse and worse, there was more repression. If they hadn’t removed him, we were never going to recover Venezuela.”

    While she doesn’t want the U.S. to fix the problems of other countries, she thanked Trump for U.S. involvement in Venezuela.

    She said she can’t wait to visit her remaining family members there.

    [ad_2]

    Andrea Castillo, Matthew Ormseth

    Source link

  • Solemn tradition at risk as wreath donations lag at Fort Logan

    [ad_1]

    DENVER — Every December, volunteers place wreaths on the graves of veterans at Fort Logan National Cemetery — a solemn tradition that honors their service and sacrifice. But this year, many graves may go without one.

    Only about 14,000 wreaths have been donated for the more than 140,000 service members laid to rest at the cemetery, according to the nonprofit ColoradoHonor. That’s enough to cover just 10 percent of the graves, and there are thousands fewer donations than last year.

    Denver7

    John Parker served in both the Army and Air Force during Vietnam and the Gulf War. He was buried at Fort Logan National Cemetery in 2021.

    Barbara Schneider said she’s been participating in wreath donations ever since her brother, John Parker, died in 2021.

    “John had always wanted to be in a veterans cemetery,” she said. “John was very much into the military, and that was, you know, very touching to him.”

    Parker served in both the Army and the Air Force. He was drafted out of college during the Vietnam War — “the last group out of our county, Sedgwick County in Julesburg, Colorado,” Schneider said — and spent two years in Okinawa. He later joined the Air Force and flew missions during the Gulf War.

    “He was very outgoing, loyal to a fault, with his friends that he’d had like, I say, since they were born,” Schneider said. “He liked the structure, I think, and especially the higher up he got.”

    Schneider said her pride in her brother drives her to give to the wreath program.

    “Every year, you know, they take care of putting one on his grave, but I give so that many others can have them too,” she said. “Knowing that they have a physical remembrance that somebody has remembered them.”

    ColoradoHonor founder David Bolser said the idea for the nonprofit came when he and other volunteers noticed how many graves lacked wreaths.

    VETERAN-WREATHS-NEEDED coloradohonor

    ColoradoHonor

    “We were walking through the cemetery after we donated these wreaths, and our board chairman, Craig Butterfield, said, Look, 95% of these graves don’t have a wreath,” Bolser said. “The rest of them don’t. And that’s what it was, bare gravestones, you know, on Christmas morning — just that image. That’s what did it.”

    Bolser said that each grave represents more than just a name.

    “On the front of all of these 220-pound white marble gravestones, there’s a name, and that name carries an extended family with it,” he said. Volunteers are instructed to “place the wreath, read the name out loud, and then salute.”

    He added that his ultimate goal is to place a wreath on every grave.

    “I think that number is almost irrelevant when you consider that there are 140,000 that are there, and so that’s the ultimate goal,” Bolser said.

    For Schneider, that mission is personal.

    “As time goes by, sometimes the real hard pain of losing a loved one ebbs, but around the holidays, you know you still have their spirit and their memories,” she said.

    Colorado Honor is continuing its donation drive in hopes of reaching more families and supporters before the wreaths are placed later this season. You can donate at the ColoradoHonor website. Donations are accepted until midnight on Thanksgiving Day.

    Solemn tradition at risk as wreath donations lag at Fort Logan

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

    [ad_2]

    Colin Riley

    Source link