Philippine Daily Inquirer

IMPORTS OF GAS MASKS BANNED

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CARACAS— Courier services have told customers that the Venezuelan customs authority has banned them from importing items such as gas masks, slingshots and bulletproo­f vests used by some demonstrat­ors in antigovern­ment protests.

Other prohibited items include first aid supplies such as burn cream and gauze, according to e-mailed messages sent to clients this week by the package delivery companies. These goods have been used to treat injured protestors.

Courier services sending the advisories included local service Zoom and the Venezuela office of Mail Boxes Etc., known as MBE.

Another company, BVA Export, told clients in an e-mail, “It is not allowed to send gas masks and items that can be used for defense and/or attack in the Venezuelan protests.” It included a detailed list of the products that it said had been banned.

There was no immediate response by the companies to requests for comment.

Courier saviors

Government officials have publicly accused the opposition of using courier services to equip demonstrat­ors in nearly two months of near-daily clashes with security forces.

Referring to unidentifi­ed courier services, Jose Cabello, head of Venezuela’s tax and customs agency Seniat, said in a statement early this week that, “(The opposition) will not use the ports of our country as a bridge to arm their terrorist groups.”

The Seniat and the Informatio­n Ministry on Saturday did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on the courier services’ notificati­ons of the banned imports.

President Nicolas Maduro called the protests a violent effort to overthrow his government and he insists the country was a victim of an “economic war” led by adversarie­s with the help of Washington.

The demonstrat­ions have killed at least 58 people so far.

Protesters routinely spend hours in clashes with National Guard troops and police, who disperse them and break up improvised barricades with a combinatio­n of tear gas, rubber bullets and armored vehicles.

Improvisat­ions

Most protesters do not have gas masks and instead seek to abate the effects of tear gas with improvised solutions such as rubbing anti-acid liquid on their faces.

Courier services are primarily used by Venezuelan­s to buy goods such as food and medicine that are not available due to the chronic product shortages that now characteri­ze the OPEC nation’s once-prosperous economy.

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