Oman Daily Observer

HOW VENEZUELA TURNS ITS USELESS GOLD BANK NOTES INTO

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To get a glimpse inside, media tracked Venezuela’s gold from steamy jungle mines, through the central bank in the capital of Caracas to gold refineries and food exporters abroad, speaking with more than 30 people with knowledge of the trade. They included miners, intermedia­ries, merchants, academic researcher­s, diplomats and government officials. Almost all requested anonymity because they were not authorised to speak publicly, or because they feared retributio­n from Venezuelan or US authoritie­s.

What emerges is the portrait of a desperate experiment in laissez-faire industrial policy by Venezuela’s socialist leaders. US sanctions have hammered the nation’s oil industry and crippled its ability to borrow.

The formal mining sector has been decimated by nationalis­ation. So Maduro has unleashed freelance prospector­s to extract the nation’s mineral wealth with virtually no regulation or state investment.

The Bolivarian Revolution now leans heavily on ragtag labourers such as Jose Aular, a teenager who says he has contracted malaria five times at a wildcat mine near Venezuela’s border with Brazil. Aular works 12 hours daily lugging sacks of earth to a small mill that uses toxic mercury to extract flecks of precious metal. Mining accidents are common in these ramshackle operations, workers said. So are shootings and robberies.

“The government knows what happens in these mines and it benefits from it,” said Aular, 18. “Our gold goes into their hands.” Maduro has also received a crucial assist from Turkish President Recep Erdogan, a fellow strongman who has likewise sparred with the Trump administra­tion.

Venezuela sells most of its gold to Turkish refineries, then uses some of the proceeds to buy that nation’s consumer goods, according to people with direct knowledge of the trade. Turkish pasta and powdered milk are now staples in Maduro’s subsidised food programme. Trade between the two nations grew eightfold last year.

But scrutiny is intensifyi­ng as Venezuela’s politics reach the boiling point. In recent days, many Western countries have recognised Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaido as the South American nation’s rightful president.

Maduro’s adversarie­s have called on foreign buyers of Venezuela’s precious metal to stop doing business with what they say is an illegitima­te regime.

“We are going to protect our gold,” opposition legislator Carlos Paparoni said. GOLD FEVER The gold road begins in places like La Culebra, an isolated jungle area in southern Venezuela. Here, hundreds of men labour in crude mining operations that would be at home in the 19th century. They excavate mineral-laden dirt with picks in hand-dug tunnels, hauling it out with pulleys and winches.

Their activity is laying waste to fragile forest ecosystems and spreading mosquitobo­rne diseases. Miners complain of shakedowns by military forces sent to guard the region, whose homicide rate is seven times the national average. Venezuela’s ministries of defence and informatio­n did not respond to requests for comment.

Miner Jose Rondon is used to hardship. Now 47, he arrived in 2016 from northeast Venezuela with his two adult sons. His bus driver’s salary could not keep pace with Venezuela’s hyperinfla­tion, which the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projects will hit 10 million per cent this year.

The three men net roughly 10 grams of gold monthly from backbreaki­ng work. Still it is roughly 20 times what they could earn back home. “Here I do much better,” said Rondon, resting in a crude bunkhouse strung with hammocks.

Gold in hand, miners head to the town of El Callao to sell their nuggets. Most buyers are unlicensed, small-scale traders working in cramped shops fitted with alarms and steel doors.

“The state is buying gold, everyone is buying gold, because it’s what is doing well,” said Jhony Diaz, a licensed wholesaler in Puerto Ordaz, 171 kilometres (106 miles) north of El Callao. Diaz says he buys gold from traders and resells every three days to the central bank.

Because Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar, is worth less every hour someone holds it, the state pays a premium over internatio­nal prices to make it worthwhile for those who could smuggle gold out of the country to exchange for dollars.

Traders who sell to Diaz end up with bricks of cash to carry back to El Callao and other gold-rush towns to pay miners, who use it to buy food, supplies and send whatever is left to their families.

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