Cielo Veizaga
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17 March 2001
Cielo Veizaga | |||||||||||||||||||||
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| Vice Minister of Sports | |||||||||||||||||||||
| In office 17 December 2020 – 14 September 2023 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| President | Luis Arce | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Minister | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Preceded by | Augusto Chávez | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Personal details | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Born | Cielo Jazmín Veizaga Arteaga 17 March 2001 Cochabamba, Bolivia | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Party | Movement for Socialism | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Parent(s) | Víctor Veizaga Roxana Arteaga | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Education | San Antonio de Padua School (BHum) | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Cielo Jazmín Veizaga Arteaga (born 17 March 2001) is a Bolivian footballer and politician serving as vice minister of sports since 2020. Veizaga's swift rise to fame, joining the country's U20 team at age fourteen and becoming the youngest member of President Luis Arce's administration at nineteen, has been met with acclaim despite accusations of inexperience in her State portfolio.
Cielo Veizaga was born on 17 March 2001 in Cochabamba to Víctor Veizaga, a goalkeeper from the city, and Roxana Arteaga, a track and field athlete from Santa Cruz.[2] Early in her childhood, Veizaga's family moved to Montero, where from the age of ten, she began playing pata pila, a name for football played barefoot. When she was eleven, her mother was murdered, with Veizaga claiming that she was "singled out, just for thinking differently". After that, she continued to pursue a football career with her father, who served as her personal trainer, stating that "I learned to turn pain into strength, talent, and love".[3][4]
In 2015, Veizaga and her family moved to Ivirgarzama in the Cochabamba tropics, where she trained continually until joining the San Antonio de Padua School team.[2][3] She gained national recognition as a champion of several Plurinational Student Games and was offered positions among the ranks of Wilstermann, Bolívar, and Mundo Futuro—a component club of Oriente Petrolero—but rejected them in favor of continuing her high school studies. Though not a member of any clubs, in 2015, she was selected to join the women's national under-20 team. Just fourteen years old at the time, she was brought on to gain experience as she was too young to qualify for the team's payroll.[5]
In 2019, U20 manager Napoleón Cardozo selected her to participate in four FIFA friendlies against Puerto Rico in Santa Cruz and Peru in Lima. In August of the same year, she was selected to be captain of the U19 team in the Cotif friendly tournament, which played at L'Alcúdia, Spain. Her performance caught the attention of Valencia CF, which invited her for a one-week tryout, though scheduling problems prevented her from participating.[3] At the end of the year, she graduated with a bachelor's in humanities from the San Antonio de Padua school.[6]
International goals
| No. | Date | Venue | Opponent | Score | Result | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 14 April 2026 | Estadio Municipal de El Alto, El Alto, Bolivia | 1–1 | 1–2 | 2025–26 CONMEBOL Women's Nations League | |