Wanted Chávez Foes Flee to South FloridaSouth Florida is quietly emerging as a sanctuary
for foes of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. U.S. officials said their presence hasn't become a policy issue -- yet.BY GERARDO REYES AND ALFONSO CHARDYachardy@herald.com Posted on Tue, Apr. 05, 2005
Johan Peńa and Pedro Lander, former Venezuelan security officers, arrived in Miami
in early December, only days after investigators in Caracas accused them of killing a prominent federal prosecutor.
Carlos
Fernández, former leader of a key Venezuelan opposition business group, arrived in 2003 -- soon after fleeing house arrest,
punishment for his role in efforts to overthrow elected President Hugo Chávez.
Daniel Romero, a Caracas lawyer who
publicly read a decree suspending the National Assembly and other democratic institutions during a brief 2002 coup, also fled
to Miami and asked for asylum.
Immigration court figures show a steady increase in the number of asylum requests by
Venezuelans -- from 47 in 2000 to 659 in 2003. Some of the recent arrivals are either wanted for crimes in Venezuela or under
investigation for allegedly trying to undermine the Chávez government. Some insist that they face persecution back home in
retaliation for their peaceful opposition to Chávez.
ROUTINE CASES While U.S.-Venezuelan
relations have been strained over Chávez's populist rhetoric and his claims that Washington backed the coup, the presence
of Venezuelan asylum seekers has not become a policy issue -- yet -- according to a Bush administration official.
''Until
they give us any specific formal request through the State Department as to why these people should be extradited, the immigration
service will merely view them as visitors or asylum seekers entitled to pursue their cases,'' the official said on condition
of anonymity.
A State Department official, meanwhile, said that his department had no comment on the Venezuelan exiles
and that their asylum petitions were matters for Homeland Security to resolve.
Former Venezuelan national guard Lts.
José Antonio Colina and Germán Rodolfo Varela left Venezuela after being charged with the Feb. 25, 2003 bombings of the Spanish
Embassy and the Colombian Consulate in Caracas. They have been held at the Krome detention center in West Miami-Dade County
since arriving in late 2003.
Bernardo Alvarez, the Venezuelan ambassador to the United States, told The Herald that
his government has asked only for the lieutenants' extradition. But he said authorities in Caracas were investigating other
people implicated in the coup, the bombings and the prosecutor's assassination.
''The majority of Venezuelans in the
United States lead a decent life,'' Alvarez said. ``But there is a small group linked to radical actions.''
He said
those people have fled to avoid prosecution -- not persecution.
''Venezuela is not Cuba, but there are enough disturbing
signs to compel some people to leave,'' said Susan Kaufman Purcell, director of the University of Miami's new Center for Hemispheric
Policy. ``And Miami is the perfect place for them. It's in the United States, but culturally it resembles home, with the things
they like about home and without the things they don't like about home.''
Among the earliest anti-Chávez activists
to arrive in Florida was Romero. The 46-year-old lawyer was jailed briefly when Chávez returned to power after the coup, then
was admitted into Miami as a tourist. In November 2002, Romero applied for asylum. His petition is pending.
Romero
runs a printing business in downtown Miami that makes letterheads, posters of singer Julio Iglesias and other products.
Fernández,
former leader of Venezuela's largest business organization, Fedecamaras, arrived in April 2003. He has applied for asylum
and recently earned his real estate license in South Florida.
''I'm in limbo,'' Fernández told The Herald. ``There
has been no response on the part of immigration.''
BOMBING SUSPECTS Colina and Varela arrived
Dec. 19, 2003, about a month after a Caracas judge ordered their arrest as suspects in the February 2003 bombings.
Immigration
Judge Neale Foster prohibited the U.S. government from deporting Colina and Varela to Venezuela. But he also denied them asylum
Feb. 18, saying, ''there are serious reasons for believing'' they had a role in the bombings. The two deny it and are appealing.
But the Department of Homeland Security has asked an immigration appeals court to overrule Foster and order the lieutenants'
deportation to Venezuela, arguing that they are in the United States to avoid prosecution.
Foster said that the car-bomb
assassination of Caracas prosecutor Danilo Anderson in November 2004 was remarkably similar to the bombings of the diplomatic
missions. Anderson had developed the case against the ex-lieutenants and also was investigating coup supporters.
Venezuelan
investigators blamed Peńa, Lander and Juan Guevara in Anderson's slaying. All three are former members of Venezuela's security
and intelligence services. Guevara was arrested in Caracas.
Peńa and Lander arrived Dec. 4, according to travel records
relayed to The Herald by federal sources. The two requested asylum.
Neither Peńa nor Lander wanted to be quoted for
this report. Wilfredo Allen, their immigration attorney, declined to comment.
Peńa and Lander have told people in
Miami that the charges are false. They claim that the Chávez government wants to frame them because they have evidence linking
government officials, including Anderson, to corruption.
Another Chávez opponent in Miami-Dade is former Venezuelan
army Col. Yucepe Piliery. Judge Foster's ruling says a witness in the Venezuelan investigation saw Piliery meet with Colina,
Varela and former national guard Gen. Felipe Rodríguez just before the bombings.
While Colina, Varela and Rodríguez
were charged, prosecutors in Caracas told The Herald that they were investigating others -- including Piliery. Piliery declined
to comment.
Herald research editor Monika Leal contributed to this report.