Monday, April 21, 2014

Venezuela's Queen of - Maria Corina Machado

The people have awakened!" shouts a somber woman in a blue blazer and white blouse. She goes on to enumerate, in a voice fraught with measured emotion, the facts of daily life in Venezuela that have finally driven its opposition into the streets. Among them are inflation, the destruction of state institutions, unemployment, corruption, and an epidemic of crime that is "killing our children." With its harsh response to mass demonstrations, she says, "the regime has taken off its mask and shown its totalitarian nature, its weakness, and its desperation." She calls on her citizens to act "calmly, with firmness, and above all, confidence" in the face of even violent repression. "We will remain in the streets until we achieve our goal" -- a free, sovereign, and democratic Venezuela.
There is little reason to doubt her. María Corina Machado, 46, is a woman who knows the true nature of the Venezuelan regime founded by Hugo Chávez (and continued today by his chosen successor Nicolás Maduro). What's more, she has every reason to fight it. 
A recognized politician and orator in her own right, she has often occupied the podium alongside Leopoldo López -- or at least she did until last week, when he was arrested. Like López, she has suffered violence from chavista supporters. 
She has been physically attacked on several occasions -- once even on the floor of the National Assembly, when members of Chávez's socialist party tried to beat her up. Also like López, she is fit, attractive, and exudes competence. In a country where women have made advances in recent years, but which remains deeply patriarchal, Machado has stood out among both sexes -- and has been recognized for it, now more than ever. 
As one of the opposition's key leaders, she has been organizing demonstrations, addressing crowds, and posing a direct challenge to President Maduro, who was elected in April 2013 with only 50.6 percent of the vote.
Since López's incarceration on Feb. 18 -- he faces trumped-up charges of murder and terrorism for deaths that occurred in recent opposition protests -- Machado has traveled Venezuela, comforting the mothers of the opposition's fallen and urging Venezuelans to stand up for their rights. On Saturday's march in Caracas, apparently one of the largest ever, she tightly embraced López's wife, Lilian Tintori, on the podium, and expressed the country's solidarity with her. She thundered against a regime that has robbed Venezuela of its future and reduced it to ruins, and warned the government that Venezuelan mothers are willing to sacrifice their lives for their children: "It is time to reconquer our future! Venezuela is determined to struggle peacefully until it achieves victory!" In contrast to the deliberately earthy Chávez, Machado, dressed as if for the country club, conveys outrage, but with style.
Opposition to chavismo has always been strongest among Venezuela's middle and upper classes. An industrial engineer by training, Machado was born into a professional, upper-class family. She speaks English fluently. She cut her teeth in politics as a founder of Súmate (Join Up), a civil rights organization that aims to reverse the rollback of freedoms Chávez began imposing soon after taking office in 1999. In 2004, Súmate welcomed a national referendum to remove the increasingly radical Chávez from the Miraflores Palace, contesting, ultimately to no effect, the validity of the results, which gave his opponents only 39 percent of the vote.
In 2002, during an abortive attempt to overthrow Chávez in a coup, she was among the signatories of a decree -- perhaps less than convincingly, she says she signed it by mistake -- that prematurely declared a transitional government. This act landed her on Chávez's enemies list. She soon became one of the Comandante's most reviled bêtes noires. In fact, the New York Times called her the Venezuelan government's "most detested adversary," and her 2005 visit to George W. Bush in the Oval Office only hardened negative sentiments in the chavista camp. She faced charges of conspiracy for Súmate's acceptance of a modest grant from the National Endowment for Democracy, and went on to become an independent National Assembly deputy for the prosperous, heavily populated state of Miranda, an opposition stronghold bordering Caracas.
As discontent with Chávez grew, Machado, in 2012, sensed that her time had come. She vied with Leopoldo López for the then-fractured opposition's blessing to face the cancer-stricken president in national elections scheduled for later in the year. She and López both lost out to Miranda Governor Henrique Capriles, who went on to suffer defeat. (Capriles, once the leader of the opposition, has lost credibility with his increasingly angry constituents by advocating compromise. He is now calling on regime opponents to continue their street protests.) In the fight against the Maduro regime, López gained the upper hand, which now, by default, has largely fallen to Machado.
Yet despite previous rivalries, she has stood beside López as resistance to Maduro has mounted, along with the opposition's chance to gain power. López is in jail, but Machado is not to be counted out.
Jeffrey Tayler is a contributing editor at The Atlantic Monthly 

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Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Ros-Lehtinen on the Unjust Removal of Maria Corina from the Venezuelan Lider

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Maria Corina Machado arriving to Miami airport in her way to Venezuela

Brave Maria Corina Machado coming into Miami and leaving to Venezuela, March 21st, 2014

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Machado exposes the Venezuelan Dictatorship

Taken from La Patilla
Despite having the right to speak, blocked and banned from the Organization of American States, and singing the National Anthem, Maria Corina Machado exposed the realities of having "petroamigos" at the highest levels, by not allowing her to speak for more than half of people in her country,  Machado exposes the Venezuelan dictatorship.


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Thursday, March 20, 2014

Maria Corina Machado in Miami, going to Washington to talk in the OAS

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Maria Corina Machado responds to Unasur

María Corina Machado responds to Unasur

Is my duty as parliamentary react to Resolution No. 2014, issued by UNASUR foreign ministers in Santiago meeting in Santiago, Chile, this March 12. Finally UNASUR decided to issue a statement to, after more than thirty long days of serious conflict in Venezuela, to protect the regime, not the Venezuelans. In over a month of peaceful democratic protest there are 25 dead, over 300 injured, over 1,300 arrested and 40 documented cases of torture.
I consider extremely seriously that UNASUR has not made any reference to the brutal repression by the Venezuelan regime. Not a word to the murdered of citizens by death squads paid and supported by the government, or the students massacred by paramilitary groups, arrests without warrants, torture, although everything is fully recorded and disseminated through social networks and international media.
We are still waiting in that the UNASUR Parliament fulfill the commitment made on 19 April 2013, to promote a review of our presidential elections, then denounced as fraudulent. Nicolas Maduro has violated each of its commitments, and UNASUR with its silence and inaction has validated all his actions.
The resolution UNASUR / RSMC No. 2014, is a disgrace and contrasts with the announcement made yesterday by a large group of Latin American parliamentarians, which will accuse Nicolas Maduro for crimes against humanity before the International Criminal Court in The Hague, for the cruel and inhuman repression exercised since 12 February.
Chancellors of UNASUR, is obligatory to think before endorse a regime that massively and systematically has violated human rights and has made the repression and torture a state policy . We agree with UNASUR, his concern for the independence and sovereignty of Venezuela, for that reason we repudiate the Cuban interference in our security agencies, intelligence and identification and demand the immediate expulsion of the Cuban military in our national armed forces.

(Translated by Rosalba G.)

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Attack to Maria Corina

This is the video of the aggression against Maria Corina Machado yesterday November 12, in Caracas. It seems that the attacker is a follower of Hugo Chavez, who hasn't said anything related to this aggression. Hugo Chavez doesn't represent the Venezuelans; we want a president that is against crime and not in favor of crime. He had talked of favor of Gadaffi and now on favor of Carlos "The Jackal", but he can't say anything related to the Maria Corina attack?

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