• العربية
  • 简体中文
  • Nederlands
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Русский
  • Español
  • العربية
  • 简体中文
  • Nederlands
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Русский
  • Español

M!chel

  • Home
  • About me
  • My Account
  • Home
  • About me
  • My Account

Add

'My cousin is dying'

October 14, 2018

As soon as I walk through the gate of her home in Cabimas, I get a hug that doesn't seem to stop. These have been difficult days for her. Last week she received her first cancer treatment. She was lucky; the drugs needed for treatment were crowdfunded by her daughter who lives in Europe. The cost for 10 treatments? Converted to 820 monthly wages. A week earlier, one of my team members brought the medicine from Caracas to Cabimas, 700 km away. Lying in her hammock, she recounts the events of the past few weeks, how she dropped some eggs earlier today and could cry, and especially how she was shocked afterwards that she has to cry over something as simple as broken eggs - because of hyperinflation, a box of eggs now costs one month's wages. My cousin is dying Something extraordinary happened. I posted on facebook a picture of the bizarrely high bill for her medicine, 2.1 billion. Another facebook friend responded. Lilia: "My cousin is dying, no medicine, a tumor in his head. I contact Lilia a learn that her cousin Julian (24) is in a public hospital in Caracas. We decide to look for

Read More "

Opinion: the Netherlands fatally irresponsible

October 6, 2018

While all of Venezuela's neighbors are doing everything they can to control the flow of refugees and increase pressure on Maduro's dictatorial regime, refugees must be deported from the Dutch Kingdom at any cost, with all the consequences that entails. Even making deals with internationally wanted criminals is not avoided. Over the past few months, I was investigating this humanitarian crisis and the dubious role of the Netherlands in all of this in both Venezuela and Curaçao. Given the acute importance, here is a brief account. Fleeing for survival Millions of Venezuelans are fleeing their dictatorship in search of a better life. Hundreds of thousands are fleeing because there is simply no food or they need medical attention. Others flee, fearing arrest or worse. Thousands cross the borders of Brazil and Colombia every day, some taking the risk of reaching the islands of the Dutch Kingdom in rickety boats. Those who are lucky can live there in the shadow of tourists in illegality with the daily fear of being arrested, those who are less lucky are arrested even before arrival, imprisoned under inhumane conditions, only to be sent back with all the risks that entails

Read More "

In conversation with Jan Roos at Cafe Weltschmerz

October 3, 2018

Cafe Weltschmerz: Venezuela is one of the most dangerous countries in the world with 27,000 murders annually. 96% of those go unsolved. Journalist Michel Baljet needs a team of locals to feel somewhat protected to walk through Caracas. A report on developments in a neighboring country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Read More "

How one of the richest countries in the world can be poor - Part 1

April 19, 2018

Yesterday in Venezuela, following an investigation into "illegal exchange rates," 86 people were arrested, 112 arrest warrants were issued, 596 raids were conducted and 1133 bank accounts were frozen. Maduro calls it the outcome of one of the largest criminal investigations in history. But really, it is nothing more than a distraction from the real problem. No exchange offices Unlike many other countries, there are no official exchange offices for foreign currency in Venezuela. Exchanges can only be made at the government, but they are out of money. Exchanging foreign currency such as Dollars is therefore prohibited. However, the black market trade is gróót, and the price has skyrocketed. In 2014, it was 80 bolivars per dollar. Today more than 550,000 bolivars. The food trade The government, on the other hand, has kept the rate of the Dollar artificially low for decades. 1 dollar was 10 bolivars, but only obtainable by companies that were friends of the government. Since 85% of products are imported into Venezuela -and there was almost no production at home- the government managed to keep power over the food trade this way. In recent years, the government did move somewhat away from the one rate policy. Now they operate several. All still

Read More "

One thought: The life of a freelance journalist

March 11, 2018

To begin with. I am aware that I have the choice to do what I do. I see it as a privilege. In many countries, people don't have a choice. I could have done something else. I also know that I don't exactly have the greatest resume right now. Those who know me a little know that I have a big backpack. And from a homeless situation a few years ago, I am trying to find my niche. That said; so like many freelancers, I am trying to find a place in journalism. It's a conscious decision not to review movies or write about the latest soccer games. We unfortunately live in a world where not everyone has equal opportunities. A world where innocents become victims of oppression, corruption or a war they did not ask for. Let me say up front that I did not start doing what I do to get rich. I place little value on material things, but I do want to be able to pay my rent at the end of the month. I take the risk of working in crisis areas, and of course no media house is mandatory

Read More "

Oscar Perez. Public enemy No. 1, or an invention of Maduro?

January 16, 2018

After a seven-month manhunt, a standoff took place yesterday in a suburb of Caracas (El Junquito) between security forces and several people from Oscar Perez's group. This standoff could be followed minutely via social media until 16:11, the moment when another part of his group indicated they had lost communication with him. In his latest Instagram video a few minutes before, Oscar Perez shouts with a bloodied face "We have wounded, we have wounded, and they keep shooting at us. We're going to surrender! Stop shooting!". The story begins June 27, 2017 when former CICPC agent Oscar Perez appeared over Caracas in a stolen police helicopter and launched an apparent attack on President Maduro's government. Who is Oscar Perez. Oscar Alberto Pérez (36) was born on 07-05-1981, was an inspector of the CICPC (investigative police) for the past 15 years, also a member of the Special Actions Brigade (BAE) and Chief of Air Operations. Oscar Perez is also known as an actor in an action film called Muerte Suspendida (Suspended Death) . Oscar Perez was a father and describes himself as "I am a man who goes out without knowing if he will return home. He was very active on

Read More "

Standing still for a moment

December 24, 2017

Like many people, I often take a moment to reflect on life during the month of December. At the events that have made our world more beautiful and a lot uglier in recent months. With the people I have had the pleasure of meeting, and unfortunately had to lose. I then reflect on friendships that have been formed and think about the wonderful people I have sometimes had to leave behind in a hopeless situation in their homeland. In my work, sometimes you wish you had a little button you could flip so that you no longer feel connected to the things you see, the poverty, the deaths, the sadness. I can tell you that there is no such button. It is nonsense to think that I don't fall asleep with it, wake up in the morning and dream about it in between. And the day it won't affect me anymore is the day I will look for another profession. Today I am dwelling on the people I met in a refugee camp in Bulgaria, where the situation is so degrading that no human being would want to live there. Today I pause to remember the former residents of the Jungle in Calais whose

Read More "

An ordinary day in a bankrupt Venezuela

August 2, 2017

Our fixer Cheo runs back and forth to the gate of the prison while Joris and I sit just down the street waiting anxiously on the hood of our car. A daily market is developing on the street outside the prison; it is a coming and going of visitors and vendors at the gate of Venezuela's most notorious prison. Yesterday, when we visited the prison, not everything went as planned. It was not the first time we visited the Tocoron prison. While we were convinced that everyone was properly bribed before entering the prison, all of our equipment was confiscated by the national guards guarding the outside of the prison. When we left the prison, we did not get our equipment back. Later that night, after some conversations between our fixer and some of the prisoners, we were told that the inmates' boss had taken our gear from the Guardia National and that we could get it back at the prison gate. Tocoron, a prison for 750 prisoners was built in 1982. Today it holds 7,500 prisoners. Guards and government personnel are not welcome in this prison run by prisoners.

Read More "

Opinion: Venezuela, a dictatorship headed for civil war.

August 1, 2017

Those who still had doubts about democracy in Venezuela need fret no longer. The last little bit of democracy was thrown overboard the sinking ship yesterday. While the world watches and slaps Maduro's regime around with sanctions and requests for dialogue, Venezuelans are fleeing the country en masse. Those who remain behind are getting ready for an increasingly violent struggle. Maduro's regime had called an election for last Sunday, the results of which were known in advance. Yesterday Venezuelans were allowed to go to the polls to elect the 545 members for a "Constituent Assembly. The 5,500 candidate members were all affiliated with Maduro's party. The goal of the new parliament is to rewrite the constitution, with Maduro taking even more power to himself. The opposition, which has held two-thirds of parliamentary seats since 2015, denounced the elections from day one and boycotted them. In a self-organized plebiscite earlier this month, it called for new presidential elections. It was not only the opposition in Venezuela that digressed. Countries like America and Colombia saw nothing in this "sham" election. Colombia indicated it did not

Read More "

New Revu | The World of Niño Guerrero

July 11, 2017

While Venezuela lies on its hiatus, in prison life goes on as usual. Journalist Michel Baljet and photographer Joris van Gennip are met at the entrance by two armed prisoners, meant to keep guards out. Welcome to Tocoron, one of Venezuela's most notorious prisons. Next to me walks a young soldier with an oversized machine gun around his shoulder. Joris, the photographer who traveled with me to Venezuela, walks behind me on the right, our fixer on the left. We have been walking for a few hundred meters along an unpaved dirt road, which we feel leads nowhere, when I again ask Joris to be extra vigilant. From the other side a motorcycle arrives with two more soldiers. Forbidden area More than an hour earlier, Joris and I arrived at Tocoron to make a report on life in one of Venezuela's most notorious prisons. What was supposed to be a routine job did not go as planned. While we thought we had bribed all the soldiers guarding the outside gate of the prison, our belongings - some cameras and other equipment - were taken away by a major. After mutual consultation, he sent us with the young soldier

Read More "
Load More

Contact:

baljet.michel@gmail.com
Phone & WhatsApp: +31610314715
Threema: TDA5F56Y



  • Algmene conditions
  • Privacy Statement

michelbaljet.com is part of Valentineble Projects B.V.

New Acres 3
UNIT:10870.
5431 NV Cuijk.
Netherlands.

Chamber of Commerce: 83684514
VAT: NL862957370B01
IBAN: NL27 BUNQ 2064 4438 86

Management permission
To provide the best experience, we use technologies such as cookies to store and/or access information about your device. By consenting to these technologies, we may process data such as browsing habits or unique IDs on this site. If you do not consent or withdraw your consent, certain features and capabilities may be adversely affected.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service expressly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
Technical storage or access used exclusively for statistical purposes. Technical storage or access used solely for anonymous statistical purposes. Without subpoena, voluntary compliance by your Internet Service Provider, or additional data from a third party, information stored or retrieved solely for this purpose typically cannot be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is necessary to establish user profiles for sending advertising, or to track the user on a site or across sites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}
Management permission
To provide the best experience, we use technologies such as cookies to store and/or access information about your device. By consenting to these technologies, we may process data such as browsing habits or unique IDs on this site. If you do not consent or withdraw your consent, certain features and capabilities may be adversely affected.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service expressly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
Technical storage or access used exclusively for statistical purposes. Technical storage or access used solely for anonymous statistical purposes. Without subpoena, voluntary compliance by your Internet Service Provider, or additional data from a third party, information stored or retrieved solely for this purpose typically cannot be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is necessary to establish user profiles for sending advertising, or to track the user on a site or across sites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}
EnglishEnglish
NederlandsNederlands العربيةالعربية EspañolEspañol 简体中文简体中文 DeutschDeutsch РусскийРусский