Venezuelans build new life in Spain, fret for homeland

Venezuelans build new life in Spain, fret for homeland

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Until January, Jose Martinez and his wife Arelis Morales were in the eye of Venezuela's political storm: he worked for an opposition leader, she advised human rights groups.

But after years of opposing President Nicolas Maduro's increasingly repressive leftist government - including 2017 protests that ended with 125 deaths - they decided to put family life first.

. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Martinez and Morales read about the situation in Venezuela in Spanish newspapers at a bar called Caracas in Xinzo de Limia, Spain.

"The main reason for leaving was that we want to have children," Martinez, 31, told Reuters, from the rural town of Xinzo de Limia in Spain's Galicia region where they left to live with relatives.

"It hurts, but we have to move on. How could we expose a child to everything that goes on in Venezuela?"

. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Martinez and Morales are helped by Morales' mother, aunt and friend, to pack their bags and help to seal everything they are not taking to Spain, in Caracas.

The exodus of more than 3 million Venezuelans from an imploding economy, crime-ridden streets and constant political violence, is a well-known phenomenon, especially the flood of lower-income migrants around Latin America.

There has been less attention paid to middle-class professionals who, though enjoying more resources, also face agonising dilemmas, often giving up years of training and work.

Martinez, a coordinator in the party of opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, suffered depression last year. But he is recovering in Xinzo de Limia and reinventing himself as a photographer, doing documentary and wedding work.

. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Morales and Martinez attend a goodbye gathering with Morales' family at her grandmother's house in Cotiza, Caracas.

His wife Morales, 30, wants to stay working in human rights, while seeking to have a baby. "We gave everything we could for the country until my body literally said: 'I cannot take this anymore'," she said, saying stress stopped her getting pregnant.

Both are encouraged by recent events in Venezuela, where congress leader Juan Guaido invoked the constitution to assume the interim presidency after declaring Maduro's 2018 reelection illegitimate, galvanising the opposition and earning Western recognition.

The couple hope to move back if Maduro loses power.

. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Martinez, Morales and Martinez's uncles look at the view during a hike in the mountains in Castelaus, Spain.

Thousands of Venezuelans have moved to Spain in recent years, many reconnecting with roots after waves of immigration in the opposite direction following the 20th century World Wars.

According to official data, Venezuelans living in Spain rose to 109,880 by mid-2018, up nearly 19,000 in the previous six months. Those figures probably do not include many dual nationality citizens who also moved, people like Mariana Elias.

. Barcelona, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Elias talks about her day with her older sister in Barcelona.

Before moving to Barcelona in January, Elias spent years in Caracas doing two degrees in chemical and production engineering, helping to pay her way with work as a teacher.

She protested on the streets against Maduro, was faculty student council president at Simon Bolivar university, and felt the chaos of Caracas close up when robbed on three occasions.

. Barcelona, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Elias shops for red wine and other goods at the supermarket near her apartment in Barcelona.

Her reason for moving to Barcelona was straightforward: "My job ambitions. As I really prepared myself academically, I wanted to have the opportunity in the long-term to progress and upgrade. I wasn't able to see that in Venezuela right now."

Elias, 27, wants to find a job in engineering, but for now has started at a British company organising conferences. In Spain she enjoys basic services such as public transport that her compatriots can no longer take for granted.

. Barcelona, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Elias waits for a train to go home at a station in Barcelona.

"In Venezuela I would never take public transport unless I had no other choice. I would pray and ask all the deities to make me invisible so I wouldn't get robbed," said the bubbly, bilingual Elias, adding she had no plans to return home any time soon.

She enjoys Venezuelan traditions with compatriots in Spain.

. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen
Elias and her friends gather for a goodbye party at her house in Caracas.

"The Venezuelans I know are all trying to work and make ends meet. But we meet up to talk about our country and to eat 'arepas'," she said, referring to the cornmeal flatbread staple.

"I am not able to leave Venezuela out of my mind, never."

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Slideshow

Caracas at night.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Caracas at night.

Elias poses for a portrait at her home in las Mercedes, a neighbourhood in Caracas.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Elias poses for a portrait at her home in las Mercedes, a neighbourhood in Caracas.

Elias looks out the airport window before her flight to Spain at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.
. La Guaira, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Elias looks out the airport window before her flight to Spain at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.

An advert promoting tourism in Barinas, a city in Venezuela, is displayed at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.
La Guaira, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

An advert promoting tourism in Barinas, a city in Venezuela, is displayed at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.

Elias shows her Venezuelan and Spanish passports at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.
. La Guaira, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Elias shows her Venezuelan and Spanish passports at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.

A group of passengers wait to board at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.
. La Guaira, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

A group of passengers wait to board at the Simon Bolivar International Airport.

Elias looks out from the balcony of her new house in Barcelona.
. Barcelona, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Elias looks out from the balcony of her new house in Barcelona.

Morales and Martinez spend time with Morales' family during a goodbye gathering at her grandmother's house in Cotiza, Caracas.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Morales and Martinez spend time with Morales' family during a goodbye gathering at her grandmother's house in Cotiza, Caracas.

Clothes and shoes belonging to Morales are packed into a suitcase for her move to Spain.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Clothes and shoes belonging to Morales are packed into a suitcase for her move to Spain.

Martinez meets with friends from his photography course to say goodbye at a bar in el Hatillo in Caracas.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Martinez meets with friends from his photography course to say goodbye at a bar in el Hatillo in Caracas.

A group of people looking for goods in garbage are seen through a car window in Caracas.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

A group of people looking for goods in garbage are seen through a car window in Caracas.

Morales drives past Mision Vivienda, a housing project in the center of Caracas, after a goodbye gathering at her grandmother's house.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Morales drives past Mision Vivienda, a housing project in the center of Caracas, after a goodbye gathering at her grandmother's house.

The mountains of la Union, the neighbourhood where Martinez and Morales lived in Caracas.
. Caracas, Venezuela. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

The mountains of la Union, the neighbourhood where Martinez and Morales lived in Caracas.

Morales drinks red wine from a wineskin after a two-hour hike.
. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Morales drinks red wine from a wineskin after a two-hour hike.

Martinez carries wood for the fire to warm up his new home in Xinzo de Limia, Spain.
. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Martinez carries wood for the fire to warm up his new home in Xinzo de Limia, Spain.

Martinez and his uncle enjoy a break before lunch.
. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Martinez and his uncle enjoy a break before lunch.

Martinez and Morales wait to order at the counter of the bar Caracas in Xinzo de Limia, Spain.
. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Martinez and Morales wait to order at the counter of the bar Caracas in Xinzo de Limia, Spain.

Morales walks to the 'fiesta de la matanza' (butchering fiesta).
. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

Morales walks to the 'fiesta de la matanza' (butchering fiesta).

A billboard-sized figure of a bull, known as an Osborne Bull.
. Xinzo De Limia, Spain. Reuters/Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen

A billboard-sized figure of a bull, known as an Osborne Bull.