logo
The Open star who learned to play golf with a broom handle can't go back to his homeland over threats to his life

The Open star who learned to play golf with a broom handle can't go back to his homeland over threats to his life

The Sun6 days ago
JHONATTAN VEGAS revealed 'it is not safe for me and my family' to go back to his homeland… because of the country's dictator.
Vegas, 40, was born in Venezuela where he learnt to play golf with a broom handle.
1
But when his father Carlos signed a petition against former president Hugo Chavez, who incidentally hated golf, the Vegas family faced persecution.
And with the help of two-time Masters champion Ben Crenshaw, Jhonattan made his escape to the USA in 2002 when he turned 18.
Now, with Nicolas Maduro running Venezuela since Chavez's death in 2013, the country has been deemed guilty of systematic attacks on objectors by Amnesty International, with some 'disappearing'.
So as much as Vegas wants his kids, nine and six, to see where he grew up in Maturin, he realises it is not worth the risk of kidnapping - or worse.
The world No55 told The Times ahead of The Open at Royal Portrush: 'I had to get on a bus and ride ten hours to get to Caracas for my appointment.
'I think I'm the only person in Venezuela to get a visa in 24 hours, and part of it was down to the connection between Ben Crenshaw and President George W Bush.
'It's not safe politically, and not safe for me and my family.
'The country is run by a dictator government and I just read a case of an actor getting his passport cancelled and not being able to leave the country.
'Even though it's my country and I love it more than anything in the world, it's just a risk I'm not willing to take.
'My immediate family is in the US with me. A couple of things happened where their life was threatened.
'We just made a decision that it was time to leave everything behind because being safe is more important than all the material stuff.
'I'm not an activist but I've always been very outspoken and clear that what's happening is not right for people.'
Vegas now lives in Houston, Texas.
But Donald Trump has cracked down on Venezuelans travelling to the US as part of his new travel restrictions and immigration policies.
Vegas added: 'I just feel sad for all those people who came into the US with a dream to succeed in life, like I did, and have everything taken away in the blink of an eye just because the president decided to go after them for no reason.
'The US is a country that was built by immigrants. I was welcomed and I'm thankful.
'I know there has to be order but at the same time, create a path for people who want to make the US better.
'That's why I haven't agreed with what the president has done.
'Immigrants don't deserve that type of treatment anywhere in the world.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

El Salvador torture claims emerge as Farage eyes prisoner deal
El Salvador torture claims emerge as Farage eyes prisoner deal

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

El Salvador torture claims emerge as Farage eyes prisoner deal

El Salvador has been accused of torturing prisoners after Reform pledged to send Britain's worst offenders to the central American country. Venezuela announced last night that it had launched a probe into torture claims by 252 prisoners that they were beaten, sexually abused and fed rotten food. Tarek William Saab, Venezuela's attorney general, said he had spoken to some prisoners who feared they may not make it out of the prison alive. He presented photos of bruised detainees, some of whom had missing teeth. It comes after Nigel Farage said he saw 'no reason' why El Salvador would not take Britain's worst offenders as part of a five-year plan to halve crime rates. The policy is modelled on a similar idea by Donald Trump, who has paid El Salvador billions of dollars to house offenders. The Reform UK leader told a press conference on Monday: 'I haven't spoken to El Salvador yet, but we do know they're quite happy to take American violent offenders, so I don't see any reason why [not]. They want the money, they want the income.' El Salvador has not commented on Reform's plans. The country's prisons are renowned for their strict measures, which includes lining up hundreds of gang members and packing them into crowded jail cells. In some cases, prisoners have reportedly only been allowed to leave their prison cells for 30 minutes a day. Speaking at a press conference on Monday, Mr Saab said Venezuela's prosecutor's office had interviewed returning migrants, many of whom had spoken about being held in 'inhumane cells'. Others said they have been deprived of sunlight and ventilation, and given rotten food and unsafe drinking water. The men also claimed that they were given no access to lawyers or their relatives, and the last time many of them were seen was when Nayib Bukele's government issued photos of them arriving at the prison shackled and with their heads shorn. Many of the prisoners had been accused by the US of being gang members before they were flown to El Salvador in March under a wartime law invoked by Mr Trump, allowing him to deport them without court hearings. Mr Saab said the Venezuelan investigation would target Bukele and other Salvadoran officials for alleged crimes against humanity. Venezuela has faced its own criticism over its treatment of prisoners, with similar allegations of torturing prisoners and denying them access to legal representation. Reform's plan, which involves buying 10,000 foreign prison places over five years, would require the UK to leave the European Convention on Human Rights. Asked about the human rights records of El Salvador prisons, Mr Farage said: 'We are not going to send people for trial in El Salvador. Let's make that absolutely clear. 'People will be tried in this country, and El Salvador might be quite an extreme example, but the idea that we could send prisoners to Kosovo, to Estonia and everything else is a very, very serious proposal.' Reforms proposed plans come after the Government released thousands of criminals early because of overcrowding in UK jails.

Venezuelans deported from the US 'tortured' in El Salvador prison
Venezuelans deported from the US 'tortured' in El Salvador prison

BBC News

time10 hours ago

  • BBC News

Venezuelans deported from the US 'tortured' in El Salvador prison

Venezuela has announced an investigation into claims migrants sent to an El Salvador prison from the US suffered human rights than 250 Venezuelans were repatriated to near Caracas on Friday. They had been detained in El Salvador since March following their deportation from the United Attorney General Tarek William Saab said there had been "systemic torture" inside the prison, which included sexual abuse, daily beatings and rotten prison Salvador is yet to respond to the claims. During a press conference, Saab presented testimonies and images appearing to show detainees with injuries including bruising and missing teeth. These claims have not been independently verified by the BBC. Venezuela will investigate El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele, Justice Minister Gustavo Villatoro and Head of Prisons Osiris Luna attorney general urged the International Criminal Court (ICC), the UN Human Rights Council and relevant bodies in the Americas to "do the same". Venezuela is currently facing an investigation by the ICC in The Hague for allegations similar to those the country is levelling at El Salvador, including torturing prisoners and denying them access to legal representation. The Venezuelans were deported in March under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which gives a US president power to detain and deport natives or citizens of "enemy" nations without usual processes. They were accused of belonging to a gang, something many of the men's relatives and lawyers were held in the notorious Terrorism Confinement Center, known as CECOT, which was originally built to hold accused gang group did not have access to lawyers or their relatives, and were last seen in photos issued by Bukele's government which pictured them arriving in handcuffs with their heads shaved, which sparked international were released mid-July by El Salvador in exchange for US nationals held in Venezuela, with a senior Trump administration official telling reporters that they extended their "deep,deep gratitude" to Bukele for facilitating the deal. The US has imposed heavy sanctions on Venezuela, and in May the Supreme Court ruled that the Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelan nationals could be revoked, affecting about 350,000 people.

Venezuela to investigate alleged torture of its citizens in El Salvador jail
Venezuela to investigate alleged torture of its citizens in El Salvador jail

The Guardian

time11 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Venezuela to investigate alleged torture of its citizens in El Salvador jail

Venezuela's attorney general, Tarek Saab, said on Monday that his office would investigate El Salvador's president, Nayib Bukele, and two other officials for the alleged abuse of Venezuelans detained in the country. More than 250 Venezuelans held in El Salvador's notorious Cecot prison returned to Venezuela on Friday under the terms of a prisoner exchange agreed with the US. Detainees suffered human rights abuses ranging from sexual abuse to beatings, were denied medical care or treated without anaesthesia and given food and water that made them ill, Saab said at a press conference. As well as Bukele, Venezuela would investigate El Salvador's justice minister, Gustavo Villatoro, and its head of prisons, Osiris Luna Meza, Saab said, after showing videos of former detainees recounting torture and showing injuries – including a missing molar, bruising and scars – they said were the result of the abuse. Bukele's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Reuters was not immediately able to confirm the assertions made in the videos, but two of those shown speaking were identifiable as former Cecot detainees. The Venezuelans were sent to El Salvador from the US in March after Donald Trump invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport alleged members of the Tren de Aragua gang without normal immigration procedures. The deportations drew fierce criticism from human rights groups and led to a legal battle with the Trump administration. Family members and lawyers of many of the men deny they had gang ties. The former detainees arrived near Caracas on Friday, where some were reunited with their families, but they have not yet returned to their own homes. Yajaira Fuenmayor, the mother of the returned detainee Alirio Guillermo Belloso, said on Sunday afternoon from her home in Maracaibo that she was preparing him arepas, traditional corn cakes, as a welcome. 'I can't stop thinking of the hunger my son went through. I have a salad ready, some grilled arepas because he loves them, and there is fish in the refrigerator to fry,' she said. The government said the men would be medically evaluated and interviewed before being released. It has always said the El Salvador detentions were illegal and that only seven of the men had serious criminal records. The Venezuelan opposition has regularly criticised the country's president, Nicolás Maduro, and his government for holding activists and others in similar conditions in Venezuela. The US said last week that 80 Venezuelans would be released from Venezuelan jails as part of the deal, under which 10 US citizens held in Venezuela were also to be freed. Forty-eight Venezuelan political prisoners have so far been released, the legal rights advocacy group Foro Penal said earlier on Monday on X. 'We regret the absence of an official list that allows us to verify with more precision,' the group said, adding that some lists in circulation had included people not classed as political detainees, people who had already been released and even prisoners who had died. 'At Foro Penal we remain in coordination with families working to verify other cases.' The communications ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment about who was to be released and whether any of them would be subject to house arrest or other alternatives to detention. The main opposition coalition in Venezuela cheered the release of the prisoners, but said on Sunday that nearly 1,000 people were still in jail in Venezuela for political reasons and that 12 others had been arrested in recent days in what it called a 'revolving door' for political prisoners.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store