The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Despair and anger as Venezuelan­s endure third day of near-nationwide blackout

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CARACAS: Venezuelan­s wavered between despair and rage Wednesday as they endured a third day of a near-nationwide blackout that has paralyzed their country — the second such outage this month.

“Food stocks are starting to rot. There’s no water. The transport virtually doesn’t work. There’s no means of communicat­ion,” said Nestor Carreno, who was forced to shutter his pizzeria in a formerly upscale district of Caracas.

“I don’t know how my family is doing. Insecurity is growing.”

A cacophony of saucepans being banged out of windows and car horns in the street has filled the capital since the start of the vast outage.

Memories of the first, which began March 7 and lasted a week — forcing citizens to seek water from rivers and sewage outflows as pumps came to a halt — fed the anguish. Many residents stocked up on food and water.

The government of President Nicolas Maduro, which blamed the blackouts on US ‘cybernetic’ attacks and opposition ‘sabotage’ and ‘terrorism,’ ordered the closure of public offices and schools, which was extended to Thursday.

Communicat­ions Minister Jorge Rodriguez said a new power cut had plunged some parts of Caracas and other regions into the darkness once again, shortly after electricit­y had been restored.

He said work was continuing to fix “equipment damaged by terrorism.”

The outage was affecting 21 of Venezuela’s 23 states, according to social media users.

The government has given no official informatio­n on its scale.

Juan Guaido, the opposition leader whom the US and many of its allies recognize as the country’s interim president over Maduro, called for a national protest on Saturday over “the lack of public services.”

“The light has gone, we can’t remain passive actors,” Guaido told supporters.

He has rejected the government’s allegation­s that the opposition was behind the latest blackout as ‘lies.’

Maduro responded to Guaido’s planned national protest by calling for a “large mobilizati­on” in defense of his government on Saturday.

Caracas resident Mildred Tejeras, 48, explained the daily hardships.

“You don’t know if you’ll be able to get back home if you’ve gone out to look for something to eat or, now, power or water. We are living through the worst that you can live through in Venezuela,” she said.

Power cuts have become frequent in Venezuela over the past few years, underlinin­g the long slide into crisis that the country, once South America’s wealthiest, has experience­d.

But this month’s blackouts were unpreceden­ted in scale. Experts calculate they cost Venezuela’s economy US$200 million per day.

In both cases, the government said they were caused by disruption­s at the country’s main power plant, the Guri hydroelect­ric dam on the Orinoco River in the south that supplies 80 per cent of Venezuelan­s’ power. — AFP

 ??  ?? Soldiers block a road during a wildfire near the Boyaca power substation of state-owned electricty company Corpoelec at the Waraira Repano mountain, also know as ‘Avila’, during a power outage in Caracas. — AFP photo
Soldiers block a road during a wildfire near the Boyaca power substation of state-owned electricty company Corpoelec at the Waraira Repano mountain, also know as ‘Avila’, during a power outage in Caracas. — AFP photo

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