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Deported by US, arrested in Venezuela

One family’s saga highlights Biden’s migration challenge

Published:Thursday | December 28, 2023 | 12:06 AM
Lt Pedro Naranjo appears with his father, retired Gen Pedro Naranjo, in Colombia. The son of a prominent opponent of Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro has been arrested after being deported by the US in what migration experts say was a perfectly foreseeable out
Lt Pedro Naranjo appears with his father, retired Gen Pedro Naranjo, in Colombia. The son of a prominent opponent of Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro has been arrested after being deported by the US in what migration experts say was a perfectly foreseeable outcome of the Biden administration’s push to discourage asylum-seekers from the turbulent South American nation.

MIAMI (AP):

Pedro Naranjo idolised his father growing up and followed him into the Venezuelan air force to fly helicopters. So deep was their bond that when the older Naranjo feared being jailed for plotting against Nicolás Maduro’s socialist government, father and son fled to the United States together.

Now the two have been separated by an overstretched US immigration system that has left the retired Gen Pedro Naranjo in legal limbo in the US. His loyal son, a Venezuelan air force lieutenant, sits in a Venezuelan military prison after he was deported by the Biden administration as part of an attempt to discourage asylum-seekers from the turbulent South American country.

“We never had a plan B,” the older Naranjo said in a phone interview from Houston. He was released after 10 days in US custody and is now awaiting the outcome of his own asylum request. “It never crossed our mind that the US, as an ally of the Venezuelan opposition and democracies over the world, a defender of human rights and freedom, would do what it did to my son.”

The Venezuelan diaspora is one of the most vexing migration challenges that awaited Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas when they arrived in Mexico City on Wednesday to discuss unprecedented arrivals at the US border with President Andres Manuel López Obrador.

Last year, Mexico ended visa-free travel for Venezuelans, which had been a ticket to those seeking asylum in the United States. Once arriving at a Mexican border city, Venezuelans could walk across the border in broad daylight and surrender to US agents, avoiding the dangers of traversing Mexico and other countries over land.

Restricting flights to Mexico encouraged walking through the perilous Darién Gap. More than a half-million migrants, predominantly Venezuelan, have traversed the jungle at the border of Colombia and Panama this year.

The resumption for the first time in years of US deportation flights to Venezuela – 10 since October, according to Witness at the Border, an advocacy group that tracks flight data – have failed to stem the surge. Venezuelans were arrested more than 85,000 times crossing the border illegally in October and November, the second-highest nationality after Mexicans.

Little is known about how those deported fare once they are returned home. However, critics and members of south Florida’s close-knit community of Venezuelan exiles have blasted the Biden administration for overlooking the grave dangers faced by deportees like Naranjo.

Last week, a group calling itself Independent Venezuelan American Citizens joined Miami Republican Carlos Jimenez to denounce the younger Naranjo’s deportation and subsequent arrest at the hands of Maduro. It said it sent a request to the White House on December 12 seeking to block the deportation but received no response. On December 14, after failing to reverse a deportation order by an asylum officer, the younger Naranjo was deported, according to his father.

Ernesto Ackerman, a member of the group, said the deportation was akin to sending a US drug agent into the hands of a drug cartel.

“It’s like taking a DEA agent and sending him to Chapo Guzmán,” Ackerman said, referring to the Mexican drug lord Joaquín ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán. “I don’t see any difference.”

Naranjo’s deportation comes against the backdrop of US attempts to improve relations with Caracas after the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign failed to topple Maduro. In November, the White House eased oil sanctions on the OPEC nation to support fledgling negotiations between Maduro and his opponents over guarantees for next year’s presidential elections. And last week, Biden announced a presidential pardon releasing from prison of a key Maduro ally held for more than three years on US money-laundering charges.

Neither the White House nor US Immigration and Customs Enforcement commented on the Naranjos’ situation.

The father-son saga began in 2018, when Gen Naranjo was arrested with a handful of other officers for allegedly plotting to assassinate Maduro, sow chaos and disrupt Venezuela’s presidential election that year. Naranjo denies his involvement in a barracks uprising dubbed ‘Operation Armageddon’ by Maduro but nonetheless he was court-martialed, along with other alleged plotters, on charges including rebellion and treason.

In 2021, in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, Naranjo was hospitalised after suffering a stroke in prison. Under international pressure from Maduro’s opponents, including the head of the Organization of American States, he was allowed to complete his sentence at home.

When the government decided to extend the sentence of his co-defendants, he feared the house arrest order would be reversed and he’d be thrown back into prison. He decided to flee at the end of 2022 and his son, who he says never conspired against the Maduro government, joined him to make sure he arrived safely.

It’s not clear why Naranjo’s asylum request was rejected. His father said he appealed the asylum officer’s initial determination that he wouldn’t face retaliation if returned to Venezuela to a federal immigration judge in Pearsall, Texas, but lost.

Upon his arrival to Venezuela, the younger Naranjo was detained again on charges of desertion. He’s now being held at the military prison outside Caracas alongside several opponents of the government.