The Asian Age

Baby deaths soar in Venezuela crisis

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Caracas, May 11: Thousands of babies died in Venezuela last year, new official data show, highlighti­ng the tragic impact of the country’s economic crisis as political tension heightened with deadly street clashes.

The health ministry said that deaths of infants under the age of one soared by 30 per cent in 2016, a year when hospitals and protesters complained of severe shortages of medical supplies.

Deaths of mothers linked to childbirth soared by twothirds meanwhile, according to the data published by the ministry, the latest such figures since 2015. It said 11,466 babies died in 2016, up from 8,812 the year before. The report gave no comparativ­e rate in relation to the number of births. Cases of malaria rose by 76 per cent to more than 240,000.

The collapse in prices for Venezuela’s crucial oil exports has left it short of cash to import medicine and basic goods.

The Venezuelan Medical Federation says hospitals have only three per cent of the medicines and supplies that they need to function normally. The Opposition blames President Nicolas Maduro for the crisis.

Deadly unrest broke out on April 1, as his opponents protested, demanding elections. In fresh troubles on Wednesday, the police fired tear gas and water cannon at protesters who tried to march to the Supreme Court in Caracas. Protesters with shields and masks responded by hurling Molotov cocktails, paint bombs and stones.

A 27-year-old man died in the protest in Caracas and another aged 38 died two days after being shot in the head in a protest in the western city of Merida, the state prosecutio­n service said.

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