Yendris nicolas maduro biography

Chavismo Revisited: Web Exclusive

The April 12, 2002 coup against Hugo Chávez marked a turning point for Venezuela, the Americas, and the larger Left. Twenty years later, Chávez's successor Nicolás Maduro remains in power, but amid harsh U.S. sanctions and a staggering humanitarian crisis, much of the promise of what Chavismo once represented for millions has crumbled. How did we get here? Read the full editor's introduction to our Spring 2022 issue "Chavismo Revisited" and explore our exclusive web content below.

ORIGINAL WEB EXCLUSIVES

Venezuela's Missing Center
Francisco Rodriguez

With the country caught in a pitched winner-take-all contest, it is unsurprising that voters feel apathetic. Solutions must come from the space between the extremes. Read more.


Fact Checking Power, April 11, 2002 and Beyond
David Smilde

In the face of a fraught conflict with missteps and misinformation on both sides, empirically informed analysis offers one tool to cut through the noise. Read more.


Chavismo, the Student Movement, and the Future of the Left
Damian Alifa and Fabr

Yendri Sánchez

Venezuelan known for breaking into public acts of various personalities

Yendri Sánchez

Born1988

Maracaibo, Zulia, Venezuela

Died2 August 2018

Ciudad Ojeda, Venezuela

Known forInterrupting the inauguration of Nicolás Maduro in 2013, among other events.
Parent(s)Tomás Sánchez and Celina Sánchez

Yendri Jesús Sánchez González[1] (Maracaibo, Zulia, 1988–Ciudad Ojeda, Zulia, 2 August 2018[2]) was a Venezuelan known for breaking into public acts of various personalities. His most remembered appearance was on 19 April 2013, when he interrupted the inauguration of Nicolás Maduro in the National Assembly of Venezuela.

Biography

Sánchez had bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, as determined by psychiatric tests he underwent as an adult. His parents divorced when he was four years old. As a child he received numerous citations in many schools; they made fun of him for cheating on exams and for being "insane". In an interview with Carla Angola on the program Buenas Noches, on Globovisión, Sánchez stated tha

CARACAS, VenezuelaCARACAS, Venezuela —  Inauguration day could have gone better for the man picked to lead Venezuela’s socialist revolution for the next six years.

Hours before President Nicolas Maduro’s swearing-in, his government announced it would allow a full audit of the razor-thin vote that the opposition says he won by fraud, which analysts said was likely a bow to both domestic and international pressure.

Then the massive crowds that used to pack the streets for late leader Hugo Chavez failed to appear.

Finally, a spectator rushed the stage and interrupted Maduro’s inaugural speech, shouting into the microphone before he was grabbed by security.

It was an inauspicious start to the first full term of the burly former bus driver laboring in Chavez’s shadow and struggling to inspire the fervor that surrounded the former lieutenant colonel during his 14 years in power. Maduro, who has the support of the Chavista bases, needs all the momentum he can muster to consolidate control of a country struggling with shortages of food and m

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