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My plan for Venezuela

Wednesday, March 2nd 2016 - 08:35 UTC
Full article 5 comments
The people of Venezuela want this change to be peaceful and swift. The harder and more important question is: what comes next?, says Lopez The people of Venezuela want this change to be peaceful and swift. The harder and more important question is: what comes next?, says Lopez
This government leaves as its legacy a deeply divided country. Its practice has been to encourage Venezuelans to treat other Venezuelans as enemies. This government leaves as its legacy a deeply divided country. Its practice has been to encourage Venezuelans to treat other Venezuelans as enemies.

By Leopoldo López (*) - Two years ago I was imprisoned for calling for a constitutional, democratic and peaceful change in the Venezuelan government. Our plan was called La Salida, “the exit.”

 Not everyone agreed with our approach, and some called it radical. Today, the consensus is much stronger — President Nicolas Maduro must step down to save Venezuela from one of the greatest calamities in our history.

The people of Venezuela want this change to be peaceful and swift. The harder and more important question is: what comes next?

Venezuela faces a long and difficult road to recovery. Things may get worse before they get better. Deep damage has been inflicted on the pillars of our economy, the fabric of our society and the soul of our country. Deciding where to begin will be overwhelming. When everything must be fixed — at once — where does one start?

A hundred things must be done with urgency. I will single out three that rise above the rest.

First, we must restore our democratic and governance institutions. Those who believe that ideology alone caused the crisis in Venezuela are deeply mistaken. It was the systematic dismantling of checks and balances, oversight mechanisms and civil rights protections that led us to this collapse. Without strong institutional protections, no system of government can succeed, and the country will cease to function. Repairing this area cannot wait. It must be our first and highest priority.

Key steps that must be taken include restoring the impartiality and effectiveness of the judicial system — from the criminal courts to the Supreme Tribunal of Justice. We need a return to due process and equal rights under the law so that people can only be charged based on real evidence and judges must rule according to the legal code and not political orders. We must restore the independence of the National Electoral Council as an effective referee of the election process. We must end the practice of arbitrarily disqualifying candidates for political reasons and unwind the myriad ways in which elections are secretly stacked in favour of the ruling party. We must protect and encourage freedom of speech — especially for news organizations, which must be allowed to pursue the truth with freedom and independence.

Second, we must heal the divisions in our society through a concrete program of reconciliation. This government leaves as its legacy a deeply divided country. Its practice has been to encourage Venezuelans to treat other Venezuelans as enemies. The poor are pitted against the wealthy; pro-government against anti-government; capitalist against socialist. Our recovery has no chance as long as we are divided against ourselves.

The formation of the next government provides a perfect starting point to begin this healing process. We need a government that provides all rights for all people — not just those who support one political party or ideology.

While some must be held accountable for serious crimes, we should not be in a rush to punish or exclude all Chavistas, many of whom also are victims. And there can be no more caudillos — we need leaders who can govern responsibly and make decisions for the long-term benefit of everyone. Lastly, we must restore term limits to our top political positions and disavow the concept of life-long rule.

The third area of focus must be to rebuild the trust and confidence of the global community, which has been deeply damaged in recent years. Why is this important? Because we desperately need the world’s help. Extreme shortages of food and medicine, hyperinflation, deteriorating infrastructure and a broken healthcare system are merely symptoms of the humanitarian crisis we face. Addressing this will require one of the greatest reconstruction projects of this century, with investment of all kinds — in capital, expertise and partnerships.

To this end, we must restore global confidence in Venezuela as a nation that respects the law, human rights and its obligations to others. We must rebuild burned bridges with some of the world’s most respected institutions, including the World Bank, the Organization of American States and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights — not to mention dozens of countries in this hemisphere and elsewhere. Our practice of aligning primarily with the pariah states of the world must end.

Furthermore, we must demonstrate that we will stand by our agreements with other nations, foreign investors and anyone else who does business with us. The practices of arbitrarily seizing assets, reneging on agreements and withholding promised payments have turned Venezuela into the world’s most unreliable partner; changing this reality and this perception must be a top priority.

We have great assets to assist us in the many thousands of Venezuela’s best and brightest citizens who now live elsewhere in the world. We must earn their confidence, too, and engage them in the rebuilding project to come.

These three priorities alone will not solve our crisis, but they set a foundation for countless other critical actions and hard choices to put food on shelves, grow the economy, increase exports, reduce crime, improve healthcare and give Venezuelans a chance to build their future.

As I view these challenges from my cell, I know how hard this road will be, but we can reach our destination. The soul of Venezuela is hurting, but it is strong, and it will prevail.

(*) Leopoldo López is the the leader of Venezuela’s Popular Will opposition party and the former mayor of the Chacao district of Caracas. He is currently incarcerated in the Ramo Verde military prison, serving a sentence of 13 years and nine months, after being convicted of public incitement of violence, in a trial his supporters say was politically motivated. @LeopoldoLopez

Categories: Politics, Venezuela.

Top Comments

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  • Troy Tempest

    “Our recovery has no chance as long as we are divided against ourselves”

    “To this end, we must restore global confidence in Venezuela as a nation that respects the law, human rights and its obligations to others”

    “Furthermore, we must demonstrate that we will stand by our agreements with other nations, foreign investors and anyone else who does business with us. The practices of arbitrarily seizing assets, reneging on agreements and withholding promised payments have turned Venezuela into the world’s most unreliable partner; changing this reality and this perception must be a top priority”

    It is amazing that this message got out!

    I am surprised that this man has not been murdered in prison somehow.

    Could it be that the tide is turning in Venzla?

    Is the message that there is only one way out, finally clear.

    I am impressed by his core message - Venezuelans must stop treating each other as enemies and Chavistas are victims as well.

    Best wishes to this man and to the people of Venezuela.

    Mar 02nd, 2016 - 05:50 pm 0
  • Captain Poppy

    The main obstacle remaining for them even with opposition in control of congress is the military. The change change everything including the president but if that military remains, they are salmons swimming upstream on their final run.

    Mar 02nd, 2016 - 07:30 pm 0
  • T_Paine

    There's too much entrenched corruption for this to end without a bloody and violent coup.
    Maybe the military will do it
    Maybe the people will
    Who knows
    Famine is a good motivator.

    Mar 02nd, 2016 - 07:59 pm 0
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