Sun.Star Cebu

Venezuela prexy: Cash crackdown victory over foes

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Among other things, President Maduro says the scrapping of most-used currency bill destroys the Colombian-border currency traders he blames for the bolivar’s precipitou­s plunge in value against the ‘criminal dollar’

CARACAS, Venezuela—Venezuela’s President said on Sunday that the sudden decision to scrap the country’s most-used currency bill was an economic triumph over the country’s enemies even as the government sent troops and police to cities where riots and looting broke out over the measure.

In a national radio broadcast, Nicolas Maduro said his abrupt action had flooded the country’s banks with currency deposited by Venezuelan­s racing to get rid of the paper bills while also devastatin­g Colombian-border currency traders he blames for the bolivar’s precipitou­s plunge in value against “the criminal dollar.”

Last week’s sudden announce- ment annulling all 100-bolivar notes led to massive lines at banks, a dramatic spurt in electronic payment and widespread fear by poorer people with no bank accounts and all their savings in the doomed bills, whose value had already plunged to a few US cents.

Extremely difficult

Cash transactio­ns, such as buying food or gasoline became extremely difficult.

Maduro suddenly changed course late Saturday, announcing the 100-bolivar notes could be used until Jan. 2.

Before that announceme­nt riots and looting broke out in several cities and Maduro said on Sunday more than 300 people had been detained, including several members of opposition parties.

He said the violence resulted from “a macabre” plan promoted by US President Barack Obama to extract massive quantities of 100-bolivar notes from the country and stockpile them abroad.

He said it was meant to be “the final blow of Obama, a final blow to create chaos, violence, division.”

Most economists blame the country’s economic woes on price controls and falling prices for the country’s oil exports, as well as heavy government spending and production-crippling policies that gave Venezuelan­s lots of 100-bolivar notes but not enough to buy with them.

Saboteurs

Maduro said he’d had to extend the life of the old currency notes because saboteurs had prevented the arrival of three airplanes carrying newly printed, larger-denominati­on bills from abroad.

He didn’t give details about the plot. Disturbanc­es continued into Saturday evening in places, such as Ciudad Bolívar, where officials banned motorcycle­s for 48 hours and restricted overnight car and pedestrian traffic.

Bolivar Gov. Francisco Rangel Gomez said 3,200 police were sent into the streets to ensure order and he said 262 people had been arrested in the state.

Rangel Gomez, a retired general, urged people to stay in their homes until the vandalism is quelled.

Eight hundred police and troops were sent to the town of El Callao, where Mayor Coromoto Lugo said a youth was killed, 25 businesses were looted and 40 people were injured in the disturbanc­es.

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