- Rich kids of Venezuela's socialist elite flash their money and pose with pop-stars
- Hugo Chavez's daughter is rumoured to have a personal fortune of $4billion
- Maria Gabriela, 38, earned her fortune while acting as first lady to her father
- Gabriela – and other children of Venezuela’s socialist elite - appear to have forgotten Hugo Chavez’s galvanizing motto ‘to be rich is bad’
Flashing a fist-full of dollars, posing with pop-stars or living it up in at world’s most lavish hotels – the rich kids of Venezuela’s socialist elite know nothing of the misery their parents have wreaked on their country.
Socialist revolution leader Hugo Chavez’s oldest daughter Maria Gabriela is rumoured to be Venezuela’s richest woman, with a personal fortune of more than 4 billion dollars, hidden in bank accounts Europe.
The 38-year-old earned her vast fortune while acting as first lady to her socialist President father, former Lieutenant-Colonel Hugo Chavez, after he divorced his second wife.
Chavez proclaimed Maria Gabriela ‘my hero’ when she appealed to Cuban leader Fidel Castro for help following the failed 2002 coup-attempt to get rid of his socialist regime.
However, Gabriela – and other children of Venezuela’s socialist elite - appear to have forgotten Chavez’s galvanizing motto ‘to be rich is bad’.
While she hides behind diplomatic immunity from her regime-appointed role of ‘alternative ambassador of Venezuela to the United Nations’, her younger sister fled the country in shame, following a public backlash at her flaunting her wealth.
Rosines Chavez jumped on a plane to Paris within hours of posting a picture holding up a fist full of dollar bills on social media in 2016.
Now as the 21-year-old is enjoying a care-free student life at the Sorbonne – Venezuela’s teachers are practically working for free their wages are so poor due to hyper-inflation and university fees are going through the roof.
Meanwhile her revolutionary father’s successor and his off-spring are behaving even worse.
President Nicolas Maduro was castigated for his largess after a film went viral of the socialist leader enjoying a huge banquet hosted by celebrity-chef Salt Bae in Istanbul, in September last year. At home most Venezuelans cannot afford fresh meat.
A few months earlier his two stepsons Yoswal Gavidia Flores and Walter Gavidia Flores had managed to blow some $45,000 on an extravagant 18-night stay at the Ritz hotel in Paris – where rooms cost $591 a night. Breakfast is an extra $40.
Their hotel bill is the equivalent of the monthly wages of 2,000 Venezuelans. A basic basket of shopping costs 16 times the minimum wage. Six out of ten Venezuelans have a relative who goes without to feed their family and one in 12 families are forced to scavenge out of the bins for food.
These rich Chavista kids have also been spotted in the best restaurants and clothes and jewelry shops in Madrid – as part of the lavish lifestyle they have become accustomed to, while their step-father drags their country its knees.
Together with brother Yosser, they have been accused of involvement in a multi-million-dollar money laundering scheme by US Senator Marco Rubio in September last year.
Rosines jumped on a plane to Paris within hours of posting a picture holding up a fist full of dollar bills on social media in 2016
The stepsons of President Nicolas Maduro, Yoswal Gavidia Flores and Walter Gavidia Flores, have been known to blow thousands on hotel stays - the equivalent of the monthly wages of 2,000 Venezuelans
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