In the US, Venezuelans await Chavez’s fate
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2013 photo, Tahiz Gonzalez dines in a Venezuelan cafe, while talking about President Hugo Chavez. Venezuelans who left their country for Miami after Chavez took power are watching the news about his cancer treatment with cautious optimism that political change could be on the horizon. But while many say they will be relieved if and when he does die, most do not plan to go back. In this city where the largest number of Venezuelans outside that country live, there are now enclaves of restaurants, schools and neighborhoods catering to the growing community. One Miami-Dade County city even just elected its first Venezuelan mayor. Like the Cubans before them, most Venezuelans are now here to stay. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)(Credit: AP)MIAMI (AP) — Gilda Sollami left Venezuela five years ago, but her ties to the South American country remain so strong she traveled there in October to vote in the presidential elections.
The candidate she voted for lost. Resigned to seeing President Hugo Chavez in power another six years, she and countless other Venezuelan immigrants settled back into their lives in the United States, convinced change was still far away.
Now with Chavez’s health on the line, the future of the country is again awash in uncertainty. For the thousands of Venezuelans who live in Miami, many of them with a foot in two different countries, their future is also in limbo: They are cautiously optimistic new elections will be held in Venezuela but also skeptical change will occur soon.
“It’s traumatic to all Venezuelans,” said Sollami, 22, whose father still lives in the country.
Chavez is due to be sworn into office for a new term in less than a week but he has not been seen or heard from since his Dec. 11 cancer surgery. Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s chosen successor and vice president, has said Chavez suffered complications due to a respiratory infection and was in a “delicate” condition.
If he is not able to take the presidential oath Jan. 10 before the National Assembly, the constitution states presidential powers should be held by the president of the National Assembly temporarily and a new vote held within 30 days.
Like Cuban exiles who celebrated when Fidel Castro fell ill nearly five years ago, Venezuelans in Miami are hoping the decline in Chavez’s health will mean a change in leadership is on the horizon. Yet in the 14 years that Chavez has been in power, the Venezuelans who left have become increasingly rooted in their adopted home.
Most would not go back, at least immediately, even if he Chavez does die.
“I think 70 percent will stay here,” said Ernesto Ackerman, president of the Independent Venezuelan-American Citizens, a nonprofit group. “They are already too well established.”
An estimated 189,219 Venezuelan immigrants live in the United States, with 91,091 in the state of Florida, according to U.S. Census figures. The largest concentration is in South Florida, in communities like Doral and Weston that are now affectionately known as “Doralzuela” and “Westonzuela” because of their plethora of Venezuelan businesses catering to the community with authentic foods such as arepas and capachas.




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