July 13, 2026

15 thoughts on “Venezuelan makeup artist who was deported to El Salvador seeks asylum in Spain: ‘I feel safe here’

  1. Basically however, after a few weeks he began fearing for his life once more after a knock on his family’s door in Táchira. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  2. Considering hernández received a jubilant reception. He began trying to rebuild his life, and he told the Guardian he initially promised his family he would never leave Venezuela again, it raises some real questions about what happens next.

  3. When you look at however, after a few weeks he began fearing for his life once more after a knock on his family’s door in Táchira, the implications are hard to ignore.

  4. So the bottom line is speaking in a video call fromsouthern Spain, Hernández is still recovering from the trauma of his experiences in Venezuela, the US and El Salvador, but expressed optimism about his new surroundings. Wonder how this will land.

  5. The detail about he was back home, surrounded by his family, feeling protected during a time that he had expected to be a rough transition into society, back at work and even making new friends is something people should sit with.

  6. Considering he explained that before the vice-president’s office could even specify the kind of job it wanted him to do, he refused it, it raises some real questions about what happens next.

  7. The fact that however, after a few weeks he began fearing for his life once more after a knock on his family’s door in Táchira really puts things into perspective.

  8. The fact that hernández received a jubilant reception. He began trying to rebuild his life, and he told the Guardian he initially promised his family he would never leave Venezuela again really puts things into perspective.

  9. He explained that before the vice-president’s office could even specify the kind of job it wanted him to do, he refused it. Meanwhile he was back home, surrounded by his family, feeling protected during a time that he had expected to be a rough transition into society, back at work and even making new friends.

  10. However, after a few weeks he began fearing for his life once more after a knock on his family’s door in Táchira. Meanwhile he explained that before the vice-president’s office could even specify the kind of job it wanted him to do, he refused it.

  11. The bigger issue here is he was back home, surrounded by his family, feeling protected during a time that he had expected to be a rough transition into society, back at work and even making new friends. That changes the calculation.

  12. What stands out is he was back home, surrounded by his family, feeling protected during a time that he had expected to be a rough transition into society, back at work and even making new friends. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  13. The fact that he explained that before the vice-president’s office could even specify the kind of job it wanted him to do, he refused it really puts things into perspective.

  14. Think about it: speaking in a video call fromsouthern Spain, Hernández is still recovering from the trauma of his experiences in Venezuela, the US and El Salvador, but expressed optimism about his new surroundings. That speaks volumes.

  15. Reading that he explained that before the vice-president’s office could even specify the kind of job it wanted him to do, he refused it — hard to argue with the logic there.

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