That's a very good question. We have been in this fight 18 years, but for our families, for me, I have been fighting for the release of my husband for the last three years. But I try to help the poor people in Venezuela. We started a campaign called Rescue Venezuela. We go around the world to 11 cities and get food and medicine for our country. When we start sending this food and medicine to our country, the military blocks the food and the medicine at the airport. The army controls the airport, too. It controls everything. So many things have gone to my home, and I've started to go to the hospitals and to different foundations to give people the medicine and food. And do you know what? Maduro asks people with arms to go to the hospitals and take our boxes. All last year I've been travelling around our country helping people, and then Maduro goes and says to kidnap the box of medicine and food. So it's difficult.
In the last donation, I gave 40 big boxes of medical supplies to a very important hospital in the capital, the biggest one, to Dr. Miller. I gave these to Dr. Miller and told him they were from Mexico, from California, from Colombia. Two hours later, armed civil paramilitaries, colectivos, went into the hospital and took Dr. Miller to jail. Dr. Miller is in jail just for receiving our donations.
So we try, but we have a dictatorship. The politicians can't do politics. We don't have debate; we don't have a parliament; we don't have anybody, so it's very difficult for us.
But we have the view, the [Inaudible—Editor] right, a lot of things to rescue the economy, to develop oil, and work in petroleum in Venezuela. This year we're going to publish a book on oil and how we're going to rescue our economy—and we're going to do it. The thing is that today we are in a dictatorship and we want to vote for a new president, a new government, and new mayors.