DORAL, Fla. — Revelers chanted ''liberty'' and draped Venezuelan flags over their shoulders in South Florida on Saturday to celebrate the U.S. military operation to capture Nicolás Maduro and remove him from the country — a stunning outcome they had longed for but left them wondering what comes next in their troubled homeland.
For some Venezuelan natives, the military action — culminating months of stepped-up U.S. pressure — brought their dreams of reuniting with loved ones closer to reality after years of heartbreaking separations.
People gathered for a rally in Doral — the Miami suburb where President Donald Trump has a golf resort and where roughly half the population is of Venezuelan descent — as word spread that Venezuela's now-deposed president had been captured and flown out of the country.
Outside El Arepazo restaurant, a hub of the Venezuelan culture of Doral, one man held a piece of cardboard with ''Libertad'' scrawled with a black marker. It was a sentiment expressed by other native Venezuelans hoping for a new beginning for their home country as they chanted ''Liberty! Liberty! Liberty!"
"We're like everybody — it's a combination of feelings, of course," said Alejandra Arrieta, who came to the U.S. in 1997. "There's fears. There's excitement. There's so many years that we've been waiting for this. Something had to happen in Venezuela. We all need the freedom.''
Some Venezuelan exiles feel hopeful after US actions
For David Nuñez, the regime change offered hope for a long-awaited reunion with loved ones.
Nuñez said he fled to the United States six years ago after being persecuted in Venezuela for his political activism and has not seen his daughters — ages 8 and 17 — since then.