Leopoldo López

For the Chilean geochemist, see Leopoldo López Escobar.
This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is López and the second or maternal family name is Mendoza.
Leopoldo López

Leopoldo López
National Coordinator of Voluntad Popular
Assumed office
5 December 2009
Mayor of Chacao
In office
30 July 2000  9 December 2008
Preceded by Cornelio Popesco
Succeeded by Emilio Graterón
Personal details
Born Leopoldo Eduardo López Mendoza
(1971-04-29) 29 April 1971
Caracas, Venezuela
Political party Voluntad Popular
Spouse(s) Lilian Tintori
Children Manuela Rafaela López, Leopoldo Santiago López
Residence Caracas
Alma mater Kenyon College
Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government
Occupation Economist[1]
Religion Roman Catholicism
Website leopoldolopez.com

Leopoldo Eduardo López Mendoza (born 29 April 1971, Caracas) is a Venezuelan politician, and political prisoner, according to various governments and human rights groups. In 2000, López ventured into politics when he co-founded the political party Primero Justicia alongside Henrique Capriles Radonski and Julio Borges, and ran successfully for the mayorship of the Chacao Municipality of Caracas in the regional elections held in July 2000.

In 2004,[2][3] Lopez was disqualified from holding public office for 6 years (beginning in 2008, at the completion of his term as mayor), as a result of administrative sanctions imposed by Venezuela's Comptroller's Office following an investigation into two corruption scandals involving alleged nepotism and misappropriation of funds. Opposition groups in Venezuela criticized these charges as fabricated.[4][5][6][7] Lopez was never charged with a crime, tried, or allowed to rebut the allegations; Lopez sued Venezuela and his case was reviewed by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which issued a unanimous ruling in his favor, though the verdict was ignored by Venezuelan officials.[8][9][10] López served as National Coordinator of Venezuelan political party Voluntad Popular, which he founded in 2009, until his imprisonment in 2014.

López called for peaceful protests in February 2014.[11] He was arrested on 18 February 2014 and charged with arson and conspiracy; murder and terrorism charges were dropped. Human rights groups expressed concern that the charges may have been politically motivated.[12][13] Opinion polls in late 2014 showed that López was among the most popular politicians in Venezuela.[14] On September 10, 2015, he was found guilty of public incitement to violence through supposed subliminal messages, being involved with criminal association, and was sentenced to 13 years and 9 months in prison.[15][16][17][18] His imprisonment was seen as controversial, and in October 2014 the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called for the release of those arrested in connection with the protests.[19][20]

Lopez has received multiple awards from various NGOs and other groups over the course of his political career for his activism.[21][22][23][24][25][26]

Early life

López was born in Caracas on 29 April 1971, into a prominent family of media moguls, of whom his mother Antonieta Mendoza de López is vice president of corporate affairs at media conglomerate Cisneros Group,[27] while his father holds an executive editorial position at El Nacional.[28][29] He has two sisters, Diana and Adriana López.

The Guardian noted that López is descended from several Venezuelan figures from history, including a former president.[30] López' mother, Antonieta Mendoza, is the daughter of Eduardo Mendoza Goiticoa, who was Secretary of Agriculture for two years during the Rómulo Betancourt years that lasted from 1945 to 1948. Through her, López is the great-great-great-grandson of the country's first president, Cristóbal Mendoza. López is also the great-great-grand nephew of Simón Bolívar. Bolivar's sister, Juana Bolivar, is López's great-great-great-great-grandmother, making him one of Bolívar's few living relatives.[31] His great-uncle Rafael Ernesto López Ortega was Minister of Education during the presidency of López Contreras. His grandfather Leopoldo López Ortega and great-uncle Rafael Ernesto López Ortega were both doctors, founders of the Centro Medico of San Bernardino in Caracas.[32]

López is also cousin to the American filmmaker and political activist Thor Halvorssen, president of the Human Rights Foundation.[33]

Education

He studied at the Colegio Santiago de León de Caracas and graduated from the Hun School of Princeton. In 1989, López told the student newspaper at the Hun School, The Mall, that “Being away from home created an awakening of the responsibility I have towards the people of my country. I belong to one percent of the privileged people, and achieving a good education will hopefully enable me to do something to help my country.” A fellow student described him as being “very good at getting people psyched” on the swimming and crew teams, and added: “I am sure these qualities will help him lead Venezuela out of the third world some day.” The article noted that López, after graduating from Kenyon, hoped to attend graduate school, and then return to his country “where he hopes to go into politics and improve Venezuela.”[34]

He graduated from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio in 1993,[35] where he received a degree in Economics and Sociology. A college friend, Rob Gluck, said in 2014 that during their student days López had founded a student group called Active Students Helping the Earth Survive.[36] He subsequently attended Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government where he obtained a Master of Public Policy in 1996.[26]

In 2007, he received an honorary Doctor of Laws Degree from Kenyon.[37]

Business and academic career

López worked first as an analyst and consultant, and then eventually as an analyst for the chief economist to the Planning Vice-President in Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) between 1996 and 1999, and has served as a professor of Institutional Economy in the Economics Department at Universidad Católica Andrés Bello.[26]

Political life

López cofounded the political party Primero Justicia in 1992.[38][39] López has since moved away from Justice First[38] and according to The Los Angeles Times, the Venezuelan government has seemed to have "a full-out campaign" against López throughout his political career in Venezuela.[40]

Mayor of Chacao (2000-2008)

López was elected mayor of Chacao in 2000 with 51% of the vote, and re-elected in 2004 with 81%.[41] He was praised by constituents “for revamping the public health system and building new public spaces”. During his mayoralty, he introduced TransChacao, a public-transport system.[42] His term of office also saw the opening of the Juan de Dios Guanche school.[43] and the Centro Deportivo Eugenio Mendoza,[44] a sports center Under López, work began on several major construction projects, including the Palos Grandes plaza, the new seat of the Mercado Libre, a new headquarters for the Andrés Bello Education Unit, and a massive underground parking facility.[45] According to a 2010 article in Businessweek magazine, Lopez tried to reorganize the Chacao police force around a new CompStat policing model, implemented with apparent success in a neighboring city of Catia, Caracas, but says that, although "we could do the police management [and] get accurate measurements" in his district, he lacked the support of the attorney general to implement these reforms.[46]

During his mayoralty, López won first-prize awards from Transparency International in both 2007 and 2008 for running the country’s most honest and efficient municipal administration.[22] In 2008, he won third place in the World Mayors contest which nominates the "world's most outstanding mayors".[21] The City Mayors Foundation, which sponsors the contest, wrote that “It would be easy to caricature him as the scion of the country’s wealthy elite, standing in the way of Chávez’ social justice crusade. But López’ record on activism has shown a commitment to promoting legal equality and his constituents speak passionately about a mayor who has delivered on public services and funding new infrastructure.”[47]

2002 coup d'état attempt

Lopez led demonstrations against President Hugo Chávez in the days before the coup d'état, according to the Los Angeles Times,[40] While the coup was taking place, he took part in the controversial detention of Chávez's interior minister Ramón Rodríguez Chacín.[48][49] Although López has distanced himself from the attempted coup,[50][51][52] he maintains that his actions were "only protecting Chacin from an angry mob".[29][53]

Target of violence

López has been affected by violent confrontations multiple times in his political career with various incidents involving gunfire targeting him.[40] In one attack, López's car was fired upon and was left full of bullet holes.[54] In February 2006, a group of armed individuals stormed a university that López was speaking at which created a hostage situation for about six hours.[40] A month later in March 2006, López's bodyguard who was sitting in López's regular seat was shot several times and was killed.[40] In June 2008, after López returned from a visit to Washington, D.C., he was allegedly detained and assaulted by the state intelligence service.[55][56] though the Venezuelan government disputes this account, stating that a member of the Venezuelan National Guard reported López as being responsible for the aggression and presented a video as evidence.[56]

2008 election controversy

In an April 2008 ruling announced by the nation’s comptroller general and then upheld by a court decision,[57] López and several hundred other Venezuelans were barred from running in the November 2008 elections, for reasons of alleged corruption;[58] 80 percent of those barred belonged to the opposition.[59] The Venezuelan government's ruling found that in 1998, López, while working for Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) and his mother, who was the company's manager of public affairs, awarded a grant to the Primero Justicia Civil Association, an organization of which López was a member.[60][61][62] As the best-known banned politician, López contested the sanction, arguing that the right to hold elected office could only be rescinded in the wake of a civil or criminal trial.[59] He claimed the government banned opposition candidates ahead of the November 2008 regional elections because it knew they could win.[59] An April 2008 poll found that 52% of adults in Venezuela opposed the ban, and 51% thought it was politically motivated.[63]

In June 2008, López brought his case to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) in Washington, D.C. with López challenging the claims by stating that none of those punished had been charged, prosecuted and found guilty through due process of law, in direct violation of treatises signed by the Venezuelan government[64] and the Venezuelan constitution.[65] In July, the Commission agreed to hear his case[66] and noted that the two years that had elapsed since López had filed a motion asking the Court to annul the ban constituted an "undue delay."[67] The IACHR ruled unanimously that Lopez "should be allowed to run for office".[10] Venezuela's Supreme Court (TSJ) declared the ruling 'unenforceable', stating that the disqualification from holding public office was a legal sanction, not a political one, and that Lopez was still able to register as a candidate for office and participate in elections.[68][69][70] Interestingly, this ruling barred López from running against Chavez for the following election, when polls indicated López would win.[71]

Although López and other opponents who had been accused of corruption were never tried or convicted,[58] the Venezuelan government maintained that the administrative disqualification from holding public office is grounded in Article 289 of the Venezuelan Constitution—which grants the comptroller general authority to oversee and regulate public offices, investigate irregularities and apply administrative penalties to persons holding those offices—and Article 105 of the Organic Law of the Office of the Comptroller General of the Republic.[72][73][74][75][76][77] The Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Tribunal ruled in August 2008 that the sanction against López and others was constitutional.[78]

Following the decision by the Venezuelan government, multiple organizations criticized the government's ruling as a symptom of its judicial system's lack of independence. The Wall Street Journal stated that six of the seven Supreme Court justices were "sympathetic to the president".[58] The Wall Street Journal also noted that the ban "has elicited comparisons to moves by Iran's government preventing opposition politicians from running in elections in that country" and singled López out as "a popular opposition politician who polls say would have a good chance at becoming the mayor of Caracas, one of the most important posts in the country".[58] BBC News called the list of individuals barred from office a "blacklist," noting that there was "little that Mr López and others" could do to participate in the November 2008 elections.[79] The Economist observed that López was the "main apparent target" of the "decision by the auditor-general to ban hundreds of candidates from standing in the state and municipal elections for alleged corruption, even though none has been convicted by the courts".[80] The Carter Center expressed regret that the Venezuelan Supreme Court did not find it feasible to comply with the IACHR's decision.[81] The Human Rights Watch "described political discrimination as a defining feature of Mr. Chávez's presidency," singling out López and the "measure that disqualifies candidates from running for public office because of legal claims against them".[82] The Organization of American States cited the case against López as one of the "factors that contribute to the weakening of the rule of law and democracy in Venezuela."[83] The Associated Press reported that the use of the charges to disqualify López "is a tactic critics say Chavez uses to put his opponents' political ambitions on indefinite hold."[84]

The next day, López and others protested the ruling in a demonstration,[63] until they were blocked in front of a government building.[85]

López again filed a complaint, this time with the Human Rights Commission of the international Mercosur Parliament, on which Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay are represented, and on which Venezuela has observer status.[86] Two members of the commission traveled to Caracas to investigate,[87] but were unable to come to any conclusion because Venezuelan officials refused to meet with them.[82]

Three years after the controversy began, López was cleared of all of the charges of corruption.[88]

Voluntad Popular

On 5 December 2009, in the Valencia forum in Carabobo, López launched Voluntad Popular, saying "What we want is to build a new majority from the bottom up - not just through negotiations and agreements between elites. It's a longer road, but for us, it's the only road that gives us possibilities of winning."[89] López described Voluntad Popular as “a social and political, pluralistic and democratic movement” that stood for “the rights of all Venezuelans.”[89]

2014 protests in Venezuela

A protest in Las Mercedes, Caracas shortly after López was arrested.
Detention order against Leopoldo López.

The Economist noted in February 2014 that while Henrique Capriles headed the moderate wing of Democratic Unity (MUD), the alliance of Venezuelan opposition parties, López headed “the more confrontational wing.” While both wings preached nonviolence, López, unlike Capriles, “believes that demonstrations can prompt a change of government.”[90] On 12 February 2014, López called on Venezuelans to peacefully protest against the Venezuelan government.[11] The same day, Venezuelan prosecutors, after likening López and protesters to "Nazis",[91] issued an arrest warrant for López on charges including instigation of delinquency, public intimidation, arson of a public building, damage to public property, severe injury, "incitement to riot", homicide, and terrorism.[92][93]

The day after the warrant was issued, López addressed Maduro via Twitter, saying, "Don't you have the guts to arrest me? Or are you waiting for orders from Havana? I tell you, the truth is on our side."[94] In a late-night nationally televised broadcast on February 16, according to Reuters, “Maduro told López to hand himself in ‘without a show,’ and said he had rejected pressure from Washington to drop the case against him.” Maduro “said he had ordered three U.S. consular officials to leave the country for conspiring against his government,” and declared: “Venezuela doesn't take orders from anyone!”[95]

On February 18, López turned himself in to the Guardia Nacional (National Guard)[95] in the presence of thousands of cheering supporters, who, like him, wore white as a symbol of nonviolence. He gave a short speech in which he said that he hoped his arrest would awaken Venezuela to the corruption and economic disaster caused by socialist rule. The only alternative to accepting arrest, he said, standing on a statue of Jose Marti, was to “leave the country, and I will never leave Venezuela!”[96][96] Hours after the arrest, Maduro addressed a cheering crowd of supporters in red, saying that he would not tolerate "psychological warfare" by his opponents and that López must be held responsible for his "treasonous acts."[97] López’s wife told CNN that night “that López was in good spirits behind bars” and added: “The last thing he told me was don't forget why this is happening, don't forget why he's going to jail. He's asking for the liberation of political prisoners and students and an end to repression and violence.”[96][97][98]

On February 20, Supervisory Judge Ralenis Tovar Guillén issued a pre-trial detention order against López in response to formal charges of conspiracy, incitement to commit crimes, arson, and damage to public property with the charges ordered by public prosecutor Franklin Nieves.[99] The arraignment hearing at which López was formally charged, and at which it was decided to keep him incarcerated pending trial, took place inside a military bus parked outside the prison, a process described by Gutierrez as “very unorthodox.”[100]

Through the majority of the civil unrest that was seen throughout Venezuela in 2014 and 2015, López was imprisoned in Ramo Verde and was going through his trial.[16]

Imprisonment

Leopoldo López is currently serving a thirteen-year sentence for several crimes including instigation of delinquency, arson, damage to public property, "incitement to riot", and terrorism. The charges have been labeled by organizations or legislative bodies outside of Venezuela as politically motivated. Human rights groups around the globe have called for López' release due to the government's negligent handling of the trial.[101]

Initial detention

López was denied bail and is being held in the Ramo Verde military prison outside of Caracas.[12][102] During a visit by his wife, López gave her a handwritten note that quickly went viral on social networks. “I'm fine,” he wrote to his supporters, whom he urged “not to give up” and “to stay firm against violence, and to stay organised and disciplined. This is everyone's struggle.” While in prison, his family visited him every week, only being allowed to stay for a few hours and deliver lunch. They had to undergo strict searches by guards. López grew a beard and began learning how to play the cuatro. López, a devout Catholic, was not allowed to attend mass or have a priest visit but has been allowed to have an hour of exercise outside each day.[103] In a July 2014 press release, Lopez' wife stated that his visitation rights had been revoked and that he was now subject to psychological tortures including isolation.[104] It was also reported that prison guards would throw feces against López's jail cell.[105] Chilean lawyer and secretary of a mission of Socialist International, José Antonio Viera-Gallo, stated that in the case of López, Socialist International "confirmed human rights violations against a political leader" giving examples of when López and others trying to communicate with their families, authorities sound loud sirens preventing communication.[106]

On 13 February 2015, armed masked men believed to be military used blowtorches to cut through the bars of Lopez and former mayor Daniel Ceballos' prison cells.[107] In May 2015 López announced he was beginning a hunger strike to protest his detention and the mismanagement of the Maduro government. He has urged other jailed opposition to join, with Daniel Ceballos also participating in the hunger strike.[108][109] Both López and Ceballos ceased the hunger strike after one of their demands, a date set for the 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary elections, were set to take place on 6 December 2015.[110]

Trial

López was set to be tried alongside four students, Marco Coello, Christian Holdack, Ángel González, and Demian Martin. He petitioned the court to release these students, who had been arrested in February. Judge Susana Barreiros ordered the release of all but Christian Holdack.[111] At the beginning of his trial, Lopez's defence was barred from entering the court to present evidence and witnesses.[112] For López's defense, only 1 of 63 witnesses were allowed to be presented in court while over 100 witnesses were allowed to presented for the prosecution.[14] Since López was detained on 18 February 2014, he was held in Ramo Verde Prison while he was tried. López's court dates were on 23 July, 6 August, 13 August and 28 August. At each of those trials, the prosecution presented evidence against López, yet his defense was allegedly not able to present any information or evidence supporting him.[113] After the court session of 28 August, the case was deferred for a third time to 10 September.[114] The 28 August court session was also under the presence of a delegate of the European Union, allegedly due to concerns about the trial's process.[115] In November 2014, the Venezuelan court rejected the United Nations' request to release López from prison.[116][117] The United Nations, along with several other organizations and institutions, have criticized the trial due to a lack of due process in the court's handling of the case, as well as a lack of fair hearing for the defense, who had under three hours to defend themselves to the government's 600 hours. The government's use of delays to silence witnesses for the defense, as well as their direct barring of fifty-eight of sixty witnesses, was also condemned.[118][119][120]

In March 2015, former socialist Prime Minister of Spain Felipe González agreed to take over the defense of López in his trial after his family requested his assistance.[121] In the roughly 700 hours of court testimonies, López's defense was given less than three hours and was not allotted many resources or due process.[16]

Conclusion and sentencing

If the sentence condemns me you will be more fearful to read it than I will be to hear it, because you know that I'm innocent

— López in pre-sentencing speech, 2015[122]

On 10 September 2015, after spending over a year and a half imprisoned in Ramo Verde, López's trial was set to conclude. According to López's lawyers, Judge Susana Barreiros suddenly finished proceedings the preceding week, with López only permitted to use a few witnesses while the prosecution was granted the use of hundreds of witnesses.[122][123] At the courthouse, about 200 supporters of López gathered while government supporters grouped together with a band singing folk songs supporting a guilty verdict against López.[122][123] The gatherings grew violent after government supporters attacked López supporters and left them with multiple injuries and one death.[110][123] Before the conclusion of the trial, López addressed the courtroom with a three-hour speech.[122] Judge Susana Barreiros then found López guilty and gave him the maximum sentence of 13 years, 9 months, 7 days, and 12 hours in Ramo Verde military prison for public incitement of violence while student movement co-defendants received sentences ranging from 4 and 10 years.[122][123] López was then allowed to spend moments with his family before he was sent back to his isolation cell in Ramo Verde.[122] López's supporters then moved to another part of the city to demonstrate while the banging of pots by other Venezuelans could be heard from their homes.[122]

Controversy

On 23 October 2015, Franklin Nieves, a prosecutor in López's trial who fled to the United States, stated that the trial was a "farce" and that he was pressured by high officials in the Venezuelan government.[124] On 27 October 2015 while speaking on CNN en Español, stated that in February 2014, Brigadier General Manuel Gregorio Bernal Martinez, then head of SEBIN, was directly order by President Maduro to arrest López and others.[124] When Nieves asked for documentation of any crimes, Bernal did not have any but a SEBIN officer created the documents needed to persecute López, with Nieves stating, "They made up those facts in the moment".[124] Nieves also accused Diosdado Cabello, leader of the National Assembly, of directing the López trial as well.[124] Luisa Ortega Díaz, the Attorney General of Venezuela who reportedly asked prosecutors to build evidence against López, denied Nieves' allegations, saying that "If he was pressured, it was undoubtedly by foreign elements".[124]

Post-trial detention

Days after López was formally sentenced and imprisoned, he wrote an op-ed for The New York Times titled Even in Jail, I Will Fight for a Free Venezuela in which he describes how he was twice visited by then President of the National Assembly and PSUV official, Diosdado Cabello, shortly after the Venezuelan government called for his arrest with Cabello telling López that he should seek refuge at a foreign embassy; with López saying that he later decided to turn himself in on 18 February 2014. He also called for international attention on the state of Venezuela's economy, corruption and crime, sharing his beliefs on how to help improve Venezuela.[125]

López also describes his jail cell in Ramo Verde, saying:[125]

I am now in solitary confinement in a 7-by-10-foot cell that has nothing more than a single bed, a toilet and a small shelf for my few changes of clothes. I am not allowed writing materials, and the only book permitted is the Bible. I don’t even have a light or candle for when it gets dark outside. While this has all been hard for my family, they understand that great causes require great sacrifices.

International response

Human rights groups consider López as "Latin America's most prominent political prisoner".[14] Multiple organizations denounced López's detention and published discussions about it in order to bring attention to his arrest.[88] Human Rights Watch said: "The Venezuelan government has openly embraced the classic tactics of an authoritarian regime, jailing its opponents, muzzling the media, and intimidating civil society."[100] HRW further accused the Maduro government of blaming opposition leaders, including López, for violence. The Human Rights Foundation, founded and run by López's first cousin, Thor Halvorssen Mendoza,[126][127] declared López a prisoner of conscience and joined other international organizations in calling for his immediate release. “With López’s imprisonment and the brutally repressive tactics that police, armed forces, and paramilitary groups are using against his supporters, the Venezuelan state has lost any democratic façade it may have had,” said HRF chairman Garry Kasparov.[128] Former students from Kenyon College put forth an effort to support López since he was detained and helped create freeleopoldo.com.[88] Editorial columns from The New York Times and The Washington Post have also called for his release.[88] Since out of nearly 700 total hours of court testimonies the defense spoke for less than three, the trial has been called a farce.[129] With polls indicating López would have won a presidential election,[130] his incarceration has been called the mark of a dictatorship.[131]

On 23 September 2014 at the 2014 Clinton Global Initiative meeting, U.S. President Barack Obama called for the release of López saying, "We stand in solidarity with those who are detained at this very moment".[132] On 8 October 2014, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention ruled that López was detained arbitrarily and that the Venezuelan government "violated several of their civil, political and constitutional rights" while demanding his immediate release.[13] The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, called for the immediate release of López and all Venezuelans arrested during the 2014 protests.[133] In November 2014, Socialist International agreed with the UN's ruling, calling López's arrest arbitrary.[106] On 19 December 2014, the chief diplomat of the European Union, Federica Mogherini, said that she was "seriously concerned" about "continuous arbitrary arrests" in Venezuela, with the EU resolution noting that Leopoldo Lopez "suffered physical and psychological torture" and also denounced the situations of opposition mayors Daniel Ceballos and Vicencio Scarano.[134]

The Venezuelan government condemned the statements by the United States and the United Nations demanding them to not interfere in Venezuelan affairs.[135] The Venezuelan government replied to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights with a letter directed to him stating that it was "senseless" to release López and claimed that Prince Zeid bin Ra'ad's statements were "undoubtedly part of the international media manipulation that has been denounced by the top leadership of the Bolivarian Government".[136]

Prisoner of conscience

Immediately after his arrest Amnesty International said in a February 19 statement, “The charges brought against Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López”, was a “smack of a politically motivated attempt to silence dissent in the country.” Guadalupe Marengo, Amnesty International Americas Programme Deputy Director, called on Venezuelan authorities to “either present solid evidence to substantiate the charges against López or release him immediately and unconditionally ... Amnesty International has not seen evidence to substantiate these charges. This is an affront to justice and free assembly.”[137]

After López was ultimately sentenced to 13 years in prison, Amnesty International declared that, "Leopoldo López is a prisoner of conscience and should be immediately released without conditions".[19]

Political platform

Education

López made repeated statements similar to, "We here do not talk about infrastructure, quality of training, staffing of schools; we Venezuelans want to send our children to quality schools, where they can not only learn Spanish or math, but also acquire values and be formed as wholly complete beings".[138]

He made a call to create grassroots groups, similar to a PTA, or a popular net (red popular), in every school to ensure the quality of schools and the education received by children and youth. "A people's net in every school."[139]

Community development

López said, "... part of the solution is to have community organization and we can fix the situation of Venezuela only by promoting culture, sport and employment".[140]

New York Times op-ed

On March 26, 2014, the New York Times published an op-ed by López under the headline "Venezuela’s Failing State". Writing from prison, López lamented that for the past fifteen years, "the definition of 'intolerable' in this country has declined by degrees until, to our dismay, we found ourselves with one of the highest murder rates in the Western Hemisphere, a 57 percent inflation rate and a scarcity of basic goods unprecedented outside of wartime." This "is matched by an equally oppressive political climate. Since student protests began on Feb. 4, more than 1,500 protesters have been detained, more than 30 have been killed, and more than 50 people have reported that they were tortured while in police custody," thus exposing "the depth of this government's criminalization of dissent".

Addressing his incarceration, López recounted that on February 12, he had “urged Venezuelans to exercise their legal rights to protest and free speech – but to do so peacefully and without violence. Three people were shot and killed that day. An analysis of video by the news organization Últimas Noticias determined that shots were fired from the direction of plainclothes military troops.” Yet after the protest, “President Nicolás Maduro personally ordered my arrest on charges of murder, arson and terrorism….To this day, no evidence of any kind has been presented.”

López explained that he was not alone in being imprisoned for political reasons. The previous week, the government had arrested the mayors of both San Cristóbal and San Diego. While some observers “believe that speaking out only antagonizes the ruling party -- inviting Mr. Maduro to move more quickly to strip away rights -- and provides a convenient distraction from the economic and social ruin that is taking place,” López argued that “this path is akin to a victim of abuse remaining silent for fear of inviting more punishment.” Moreover, “millions of Venezuelans do not have the luxury of playing the ‘long game,’ of waiting for change that never comes.” Therefore, it is important “to speak, act and protest,” and not “to become deadened to the steady abuse of rights that is taking place.” López called for justice for Maduro’s victims, for the disarming of paramilitary groups, for “an investigation into fraud committed through our commission for currency exchange,” and for “real engagement from the international community, particularly in Latin America.” He charged that while international human- rights organizations had been outspoken in condemning Maduro, many of Venezuela’s neighbors had responded to his actions with “shameful silence,” as had the Organization of American States., which represents nations in the Western Hemisphere.[141]

Awards and honors

Controversy

Ideological conflict

According to leaked US diplomatic cables, one titled "The López Problem" revealed criticism of López by members of the opposition.[36][148] His determination and different approaches created conflict among the opposition and a lack of trustworthiness.[148] López desired a "different vision" for the opposition that would combat Chavismo which included the idea to create "social networks", such as community councils or "consejos comunales" that participate in small projects in neighborhoods and have community leaders that would not politically discriminated.[148] The "social network" idea caused conflict among the opposition with one senior Justice First politician, Juan Carlos Caldera, characterizing "López's 'social networks' as 'political proselytizing' and 'his projects as no different than those often carried out by opposition parties trying to build public support'."[148]

Personal life

A high-school friend of López’s, HLN anchor Susan Hendricks, described him as having a winning personality during his student years.[96]

In May 2007 he married Lilian Tintori,[26][149] with whom he had a daughter, Manuela Rafaela, in 2009 and a son, Leopoldo Santiago, in 2013.[150] "The couple are sometimes mocked as Barbie and Ken for their perfect looks," reported the Guardian in 2014, "but their tearful public parting before López handed himself over to the national guard" in February of that year "proved a powerful image on social networks." The photograph, according to NPR, "cemented his place as the face of the opposition to the government of Nicolás Maduro", indicating that López had taken Capriles' place "as the symbolic head of the opposition".[29][32][36]

López is also cousin to the American filmmaker and political activist Thor Halvorssen, president of the Human Rights Foundation.[151]

Notes

  1. Vinogradoff, Ludmila. "Leopoldo López y los otros dos líderes emergentes de la oposición en Venezuela". ABC (19 March 2014). Retrieved 10 December 2015.
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