I tried to make Venezuela stay engraved on my retina, because I didn’t know if it was the last time I was going to see it.
Hasler Iglesias (full name Hasler Iván Iglesias Yañez) was born on December 18, 1991 in Caracas, Venezuela. His father was of Spanish descent, his mother Colombian, and from both he inherited their nationality, which later allowed him to flee Venezuela. When Hugo Chávez was elected president in 1998, developed Venezuela gradually turned into a country in crisis, culminating in 2002 with several attempts at an opposition coup, high crime rates, and general unrest. In February 2002, a group of armed thieves broke into the market where Hasler’s mother had her own shop and his father helped her in it, and Hasler’s father died from a gunshot wound. Pained by the loss of his father, Hasler turned to Catholic youth movements, where he realized his desire for a political career to change the situation in Venezuela. In 2009, he graduated from the prestigious private high school La Salle and then went on to study chemical engineering at the public Central University of Caracas, which has always been a melting pot of ideas and movements. In the very first year of his studies, he became the student secretary and the second year the President of the Student Center of the Faculty of Engineering, which he remained for the next election period in 2011. In 2015-2017, he was elected president of the Federation of Univerity Centers of the Central University of Venezuela, the highest position he could achieve. He graduated in December 2018 due to frequent strikes by professors and university administrative staff. Even before completing his university studies, in 2016 he took part in a meeting on human rights in Venezuela at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, and a year later he joined the opposition political party Voluntad Popular. In 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, he dedicated his efforts to the Agua Segura drinking water project. One day, a member of the Venezuelan National Assembly called him and informed him that he had just been accused of arms smuggling on live television. Hasler immediately went into hiding and remained in it for the next six months before realizing that exile was inevitable. He crossed the border to Colombia and from there flew to Switzerland thanks to a scholarship. He later moved to Spain, where he currently resides. He is the leader of the youth movement of the Voluntad Popular (Will of the People) political party, a member of the Latin American Network Youth for Democracy (JuventudLAC) and the executive director of the Venezuelan Permanent Youth Forum (Foro Permanente de Juventudes).