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Venezuela

Venezuela's Repression Is Modeled on Horror Movies

The Maduro regime is broadcasting disturbing videos of its crackdown on dissent, featuring clips from Saw and music from A Nightmare on Elm Street.

César Báez | 8.9.2024 2:25 PM

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Nicolás Maduro in front of dissenters and images from horror movies | Illustration: Lex Villena; Mubarak ALThani, TovMauzer, Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom/ABr/midjourney
(Illustration: Lex Villena; Mubarak ALThani, TovMauzer, Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom/ABr/midjourney)

Nicolás Maduro claimed victory in the presidential race in Venezuela once again, but voting tally receipts collected and published online by his opposition reveal a very different outcome. In response, Maduro's regime has unleashed a brutal crackdown on dissent throughout the country. 

As part of "Operación Tun Tun" (Operation Knock Knock), the regime is showcasing its crusade against dissent on social media and national television. Videos typically begin with footage of a protester, followed by music from A Nightmare on Elm Street and scenes of heavily armed officers detaining the individual. Reports indicate that detainees have been subjected to torture, cruel treatment, and drugs to extract false confessions.

The head of the Special Affairs Division of the Directorate-General of Military Counter-Intelligence (DGCIM), Alexander Granko Arteaga, routinely posted such videos, often featuring clips from the horror movie Saw, until his Instagram account was taken down. Maduro even mocked the situation on TV, singing, "Knock knock, who is it? Peaceful people. Don't be a crybaby, you're going to Tocorón," referring to a Venezuelan prison.

Venezuelans who dare to speak out face immediate persecution. María Oropeza, a libertarian activist with the Ladies of Liberty Alliance (LOLA) and campaign coordinator for the opposition, became a victim of Operation Knock Knock. "The same day that Maria posted the video complaining about the government persecution, she herself became another victim," Ana Rizo, a LOLA activist in Canada told Reason.

URGENTE ????

Funcionarios de la DGCIM acaban de secuestrar a @mariaoropeza94 en su residencia en Guanare, Portuguesa.

El momento donde ingresan forzosamente a su vivienda quedó grabado en un Instagram Live.

Le dijeron que la llevarían a Acarigua-Araure. pic.twitter.com/gchZgOl55q

— César Báez ???????? (@cesarbaezc) August 7, 2024

On August 6, Oropeza released a video condemning Operation Knock Knock as "a witch hunt conducted by a regime that lost the elections." Later that day, she live-streamed armed men surrounding her house and attempting to force their way in. A female officer, identified as Daisy Zambrano, instructed her to come out "to talk," but Oropeza refused and requested a warrant. Moments later, the officers forced their entry with a crowbar and removed Oropeza from her property.

"It's distressing to see someone you know become a victim of such a situation," says Rizo. After more than 48 hours with no information about her whereabouts, the regime released a video showing the DGCIM entering Oropeza's home, then taking her off a plane at an undisclosed location and pushing her into an armored vehicle.

Oropeza's mother, Flor Oropeza, claimed police officers denied any information on her daughter's whereabouts.

The government reported over 2,000 arrests in less than a week, targeting both opposition street protesters and individuals discovered with messages supporting the opposition on their phones. Foro Penal, an organization that provides legal assistance to victims of Venezuela's political persecution, has confirmed 1,263 detentions, including 114 minors. And Provea, a human rights organization, reported over 24 deaths in the post-electoral protests. Many victims, like María Oropeza, remain unaccounted for. 

Despite the extreme repression, the Venezuelan opposition continues to demand that Maduro acknowledge the true results of the July 28 election. Meanwhile, Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico—countries with leftist governments that have ties to Maduro—are leading high-level international negotiations to persuade Maduro to accept his defeat. 

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César Báez is a producer at Reason.

VenezuelaNicolas MaduroSocialismAuthoritarianismElectionsMilitarization of PolicePolice Abuse
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  1. Longtobefree   12 months ago

    Well, as long as there are no film clips from 1984 - - - - - - - -

    1. prfd1   12 months ago

      Democrats in Europe...

      https://www.foxnews.com/media/uk-police-commissioner-threatens-extradite-jail-us-citizens-over-social-media-posts-we-come-afte

  2. Moonrocks   12 months ago

    Horror Movies

    Not exactly the words I'd use to describe the Biden regime, but I feel you.

  3. Rick James   12 months ago

    On August 6, Oropeza released a video condemning Operation Knock Knock as "a witch hunt conducted by a regime that lost the elections."

    You know who else?

    1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   12 months ago

      Condemned the actions of an administration and had a goon squad sent to arrest him? Craig Robertson.

  4. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   12 months ago

    At least Meduro can say, "you were warned what would happen."

    1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   12 months ago

      He should be overthrown and his entire regime executed.

      1. Social Justice is neither   12 months ago

        We still luding to Biden?

  5. MWAocdoc   12 months ago

    Although I feel badly for the Venezuelan people, I'm still not volunteering to go to Venezuela to oppose the Maduro regime. I am, however, volunteering to stop the United States government from interfering in the internal affairs of any foreign nation, no matter what "vital national interest" or "humanitarian emergency" they try to float. To quote Rocket J. Squirrel: "That trick NEVER works!"

    1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   12 months ago

      Sure it does. With proper restraint and selectivity. It just doesn’t work in most cases. I would definitely be on board for encouraging the Venezuelan people to overthrow and slaughter their Marxists. That should happen everywhere.

    2. Roberta   12 months ago

      Why? I'd rather they be used to kill oppressors somewhere else than to defend oppressors here.

  6. VULGAR MADMAN   12 months ago

    The opposition should show videos of the Ceausescu’s being executed.

    1. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   12 months ago

      *applause*

  7. Earth-based Human Skeptic   12 months ago

    This is what late stage totalitarianism looks like. When the ruling class not only does not bother to pretend, but actually deliberately looks insane.

    1. Roberta   12 months ago

      No, not insane. Do what we want or we'll torture you while cackling gleefully. Very sane when you see it's the only way to retain power, as long as no greater power exists to do the same to you.

  8. Jerry B.   12 months ago

    Do the arrest clips have background sound of a crazy woman cackling?

    1. Longtobefree   12 months ago

      Only before the 'approved' edits are made

    2. CE   12 months ago

      Harris doesn't do press conferences.

  9. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   12 months ago

    They made a movie out of The Communist Manifesto? And I thought video game movies were scraping the bottom of the barrel...

    1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   12 months ago

      Their should be a Call of Duty expansion pack where players hunt Marxists like Maduro and his regime.

  10. CE   12 months ago

    Meanwhile in the USA, the Biden/Harris/Walz/Newsom/Whitmer repression is modeled on the Joker from the first Batman movie -- a big parade, a candidate with a happy face, and random crime everywhere...

    1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   12 months ago

      It will get worse. Maybe like The Joker from the last few episodes of Harley Quinn Season 1.

  11. Iwanna Newname   12 months ago

    To any Venezuelan who understands English, from History.com, "On the night of April 18, 1775, hundreds of British troops marched from Boston to nearby Concord in order to seize an arms cache. Paul Revere and other riders sounded the alarm, and colonial militiamen began mobilizing to intercept the Redcoat column. A confrontation on the Lexington town green started off the fighting, and soon the British were hastily retreating under intense fire. Many more battles followed, and in 1783 the colonists formally won their independence."
    Remember, leftists don't give up their power willingly. It has to be wrested from them.

    1. Vernon Depner   12 months ago

      You're calling George III a leftist?

      1. CLM1227   12 months ago

        What’s the modern corollary to over taxation of a subset of citizens, imperialism, and no hunting on King’s land?

  12. Roberta   12 months ago

    How hard would it be to knock them off militarily?

    1. Jerry B.   12 months ago

      You mean become colonizers again?

  13. Uncle Jay   12 months ago

    "Venezuela's Repression Is Modeled on Horror Movies."

    No, Venezuela's repression is modeled on old Stalinist doctrines of oppression, terror, mass murder and torture.
    Get a clue.

  14. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   12 months ago

    Where's Sean Penn to help Maduro?

  15. JohnZ   12 months ago

    Harris and Wolz are taking careful notes.
    Here in Michigan, Nessel is planning her next move based on whatever Maduro does.

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