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Deaths, arrests as looting erupts in Venezuela

Deaths, arrests as looting erupts in Venezuela thumbnail

Venezuelan police have arrested hundreds of people as the country’s food crisis erupted into deadly looting this week, heightening hardship and political uncertainty in the impoverished oil-producing nation.

Dozens of bakeries, supermarkets and hardware shops were looted on Tuesday in the eastern city of Cumana, the latest flashpoint in a crisis that has killed at least four people so far.

“It ended in total ruin because the businesses had not only their stock pillaged but also their furniture. It was total destruction,” said Ruben Saud, president of the Cumana Chamber of Commerce.

The chaos started when gangs of looters on motorcycles raided trucks transporting food, witnesses said.

The governor of Sucre state, where Cumana is located, told state television channel VTV that “more than 400 people” were arrested, including three suspected gang leaders involved in the looting.

Arrests have also been reported in other towns.

– Blaming the opposition –

The opposition blames President Nicolas Maduro for an economic crisis in which Venezuelans are suffering shortages of basic foods and goods.

Maduro in turn blames the crisis on an “economic war” allegedly waged against his leftist government by the business elite.

He accuses the opposition of fomenting unrest to spark a foreign intervention to unseat him.

Maduro is resisting efforts from his center-right opponents to remove him from office through a referendum, and warned he will not tolerate violence.

Late Thursday he announced his latest challenge to the opposition-controlled National Assembly.

He called on the Supreme Court to launch proceedings against the legislature for abusing its powers.

Maduro’s ally in Sucre, Acuna, on Thursday accused the opposition of “sowing paramilitary values, such as hate and crime, in some citizens.”

The army was sent in to keep order in Cumana after Tuesday’s outbreak of looting, which erupted during a protest against food shortages.

Acuna said Cumana “has been returning to normal” since.

Elsewhere, a 17-year-old boy died after being wounded at a similar protest Wednesday in the western town of Lagunilla, authorities said.

– Motorcycle raiders –

Venezuela is suffering an economic crisis brought on by the plunge in global crude prices over the past two years. The country is heavily dependant on its oil exports.

At least four people have died in disturbances in recent days, according to the state prosecution service.

A soldier and a police officer were detained over two of the deaths, authorities said.

Human rights groups put the death toll from the latest wave of unrest at five, including a 42-year-old man they say died during the disturbances in Cumana.

There “most of the looting was organized by motorcycle gangs. Then the local people followed,” said Estelin Kristen, leader of rights group Incide.

The Venezuelan Social Conflict Observatory recorded more than 250 looting incidents across the country in the first five months of the year. The number peaked in May.

– Food deliveries –

Under emergency measures already in place, civilian groups have been assigned to hand out food rations door to door.

The opposition however says that the system favors Maduro’s supporters.

The president has warned that he may decree emergency measures if confronted with actions amounting to a “violent coup.”

Such measures would likely prevent the recall referendum taking place.

Rafael Uzcategui of human rights group Provea warned that the president’s inflexibility could result in even worse tensions if he blocks the recall vote.

“What is currently preventing a general explosion of social unrest is the possibility that people can make their voices heard by means such as a referendum,” he told AFP.

“Not allowing a referendum would unleash a very serious situation.”

yahoo



53 Comments on "Deaths, arrests as looting erupts in Venezuela"

  1. shortonoil on Sat, 18th Jun 2016 1:43 pm 

    “Really? And how does the US print even more money every year but there is no inflation according to the US government? Yet, about 1/3 of US government bills are paid with printed money every year. Every year. Interesting. “

    The US is not the only one printing – as a matter of fact compared to the Japanese, and Chinese the US FED has been very conservative. Every other central bank in the world is also playing the QE game in some form or another.

    The reason that inflation has not appeared as a result is because we are presently in a massive deflationary spiral. Currency is being destroyed as quickly as the CBs can print it. This is not exclusively a US problem, it is a world wide problem. It ends when the velocity of money has gone to zero, which it is quickly approaching.

    It is an effect that we expected to see as we near the end of the oil age.

  2. efarmer on Sun, 19th Jun 2016 10:08 am 

    I spoke to a friend who is from Venezuela and she described her impression as follows: Chavez did the full Bernie Sanders, he turned out government subsidy funded by high priced petroleum to simply fund the impoverished in stasis. Most specialized Doctors and technical workers left the county, Cuban Doctors who are adequate for General Practice flooded in and basic health care was achieved with a corresponding loss of advanced health care. A sustainable system to boost the poor toward a middle class with an intact core of elite performers to maintain a real economic system was gutted. Oil price fell and the entire country is collapsing like a house of cards. If the majority of the fish are inside the safety net, you don’t have an ecosystem you have an aquarium you can’t afford to keep the bubblers on and the food supplied to. Looting is a sign that the people do not feel ownership in the community they live in and therefore have no reason to preserve it, some say they feel this way from repression, and that is true, but many others have just been on the government dole and when it snaps off they loot and riot. Chavez bought his political base by selling the soul of his nation for short term popularity, an old story on this planet.

  3. Northwest Resident on Sun, 19th Jun 2016 10:45 am 

    Electing a new president won’t solve any of Venezuela’s problems. A new president would be taking the helm of a doomed nation. Who in their right mind would want that position unless the intent was to use the position to quickly siphon off a little nest egg from what little national treasure remains and then just as quickly disappear. There is no “solution” for Venezuela, just like there is no solution for Syria, Iraq, Greece and many other “periphery” EMs that are leading the way into global social and economic collapse. When the energy source that your life depends on has diminished beyond a certain point, all that’s left is wheezing, gasping, flailing desperately and ultimately dying. Venezuela is in its death throws, it’s ugly, and it is going to get a lot worse before the vicious unwinding has exhausted itself. Coming soon to a theatre near you.

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