The Manila Times

VENEZUELAN­S DIE OF HUNGER, DESPAIR

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CARACAS: Sunlight cannot penetrate, the air is fetid and fellow residents include rats and cockroache­s — but that’s how 14 families are “dying slowly” in government accommodat­ion in Venezuela’s capital Caracas.

They live on the ground floor of a ministry building a stone’s throw from the Miraflores presidenti­al palace.

“Here, we’re dying slowly. It’s shameful that humans” have to live this way, resident Johan Medina told Agence France-Presse (AFP), as his skinny arms rested on the wheelchair he’s used since an accident seven years ago damaged his spine.

There are hundreds of families living in state-supplied shelters in crisis- wracked Venezuela. Many lost their homes to flood damage, although six years of economic meltdown under President Nicolas Maduro has also left millions in abject poverty, while basic services have been paralyzed.

They’re hoping for state aid from the socialist government that boasts of having delivered 3 million homes since launching a massive housing plan in 2011 under the late president Hugo Chavez — figures disputed by the opposition.

At the entrance to the building that houses the women’s ministry, among other state institutio­ns, there are pictures of Chavez and his successor Maduro. Signs on the walls read: “No more Trump,” and “Vote Chavez.”

With no services such as running water, residents like Medina are particular­ly vulnerable to the coronaviru­s pandemic — but that’s the least of the 31-year-old’s worries.

“Why bother using a mask?” he said bitterly, pointing to filth and stagnant water around him. It’s mandatory to wear face masks in the country of 30 million that has registered 86,000 cases and 736 deaths, according to official figures.

The first residents were brought to the ministry building by a socialist organizati­on called the Popular Organized Anti-Corruption Interpella­tion that has an agreement allowing it to use state facilities for free.

The group, which did not reply to AFP requests for comment, organizes assemblies and then puts up participan­ts that have come from afar for the night on mats.

At some point, “people started living” there after being told they would be rehoused, said Norelis, a 40-yearold teacher living with her daughter.

Conditions worsened, and now “it’s like a sewer.”

But Norelis, who declined to give her surname, still hopes to be moved to “a dignified site.” Government officials come and go in the 11-story building constructe­d in 1956.

“They pass in front of your face all day long,” said Medina, who arrived five years ago after a friend told him he could get help there. He was run over by a motorcycle in April 2013 just hours after voting in Maduro’s first presidenti­al election.

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