The Star Malaysia

San Juan: The city where nothing works

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SAN JUAN DE LOS MORROS ( Venezuela): Power blackouts are daily fare, running water comes only once a month, cash machines are empty and waiting for a bus can take hours. Welcome to San Juan de los Morros in Venezuela, where nothing works.

“They send (running) water once a month. The rest of the time we have to buy it,” moaned Florimar Nieves, a 39-year-old primary school teacher.

“There have been times where we’ve had no electricit­y for 24 hours.”

This is not some sort of remote village outpost but a city of 160,000 inhabitant­s, 150km southwest of the capital Caracas.

Yet, every corner reeks of the stench of Venezuela’s acute economic and political crises.

Nieves lives with her two daughters and a granddaugh­ter on the outskirts of San Juan, in a neighbourh­ood of small, unfinished houses, dirt roads and skinny dogs.

She spends a quarter of her income buying water while her medical student daughter has to go to a neighbour’s house to use the Internet.

Yet, protests in San Juan are as scarce as food, medicines and sanitary products.

Many residents seem resigned to their fate.

Some collect rain water while others pray that frequent power cuts won’t damage their electrical appliances.

Venezuela’s economic crisis that saw the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund predict inflation would reach one million per cent this year, has hit San Juan hard.

And this in the country that was once one of the top 10 oil producers in the world.

Adults and children alike, dressed in shabby, ill-fitting clothes, walk long distances to get to work or school, tired of waiting hours for one of the few buses still running.

Those who cannot buy water and haven’t received any for weeks face trips to the “tap” in the centre of town, supplied by a system of pipes leading from a well.

“We come here two or three times a week. We haven’t had water for 12 days,” said Arelis Oliveros as she filled up several containers.

The problem has reached such desperate levels that 17-year-old Alejandro often washes in rain water because his grandfathe­r’s house, where he lives, regularly goes days without receiving water.

“Sometimes I get fed up with washing this way because I smell bad, so I treat myself, blowing 10,000 bolivars (RM0.26) on the bus to go and wash at my mother’s house,” he said.

It’s luxury in a country where the currency is losing value at such an alarming rate that the largest denominati­on bank note, 100,000 bolivars (RM2.60), which once would buy 5kg of rice, is barely enough for a single cigarette.

Cash has practicall­y vanished from circulatio­n throughout the country, but in San Juan the cash machines don’t work anyway and residents have to queue for hours at banks to withdraw money.

In any case, they are only allowed to withdraw a maximum of 100,000 bolivars, half the price of a single egg.

President Nicolas Maduro’s government has announced it will try to ward off economic collapse by stripping five zeros off the currency, but a similar move by his predecesso­r Hugo Chavez 10 years ago – he knocked off three – didn’t stop the country descending into today’s crisis.

 ?? — AFP ?? Tight squeeze: Students getting on to a full bus outside the Romulo Gallegos University in San Juan de los Morros, Guarico state.
— AFP Tight squeeze: Students getting on to a full bus outside the Romulo Gallegos University in San Juan de los Morros, Guarico state.

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