In a development that would make PG Wodehouse weep into his soda siphon, a Venezuelan country club has been repurposed as a makeshift hospital, with British medical teams currently assessing the humanitarian need. The transformation is, of course, a tragic indictment of the Maduro regime's collapse, but one cannot help but note the delicious irony: the same courts where oligarchs once debated the correct tennis serve now echo with the groans of the dying. The club's '19th hole' is now a triage unit.
The swimming pool has been drained to sterilise equipment. Even the bar, that holy of holies, has been stripped of its Gordon's to become a pharmacy. British medics, flown in from the NHS (itself a leaking lifeboat), wander the corridors with clipboard and fortitude, counting the number of souls who can be saved before the whisky runs out.
'It's like a terribly exclusive club,' one surgeon muttered, 'but the membership fee is your dignity.' The real scandal, of course, is that this is not an isolated incident. Across Venezuela, country clubs, golf courses, and polo fields are being forcibly converted into centres of last resort.
The rich are fleeing, the poor are dying, and the middle class are left to wonder whether their life insurance covers 'death by irony'. The British team, funded by the Foreign Office (which has budgeted for gin and sympathy), reports that the humanitarian situation is 'dire but manageable', provided no one asks where the next bandage is coming from. Meanwhile, in Caracas, President Maduro has denounced the British mission as a 'colonialist plot to steal our vitamin D'.
The man is a buffoon with a dictatorial haircut. His spokesman, a man who apparently learned PR from a rabid dog, added that 'the club's conversion was voluntary' and that 'members can still enjoy the shaded veranda, provided they bring their own IV drips'. The absurdity of it all would be funny if it weren't for the corpses piling up on the croquet lawn.
But then, that is the state of modern journalism: watching the world burn through a gin and tonic, with a notebook full of bile and a heart full of ash. The British medics will do their best. They always do.
But as I file this report, I can't help but think that the only thing more broken than Venezuela's healthcare system is the global order that allowed this to happen. And that, dear reader, is a tragedy even the darkest satire cannot fully capture.








