The Citizen (KZN)

Venezuela violence claims 3 more lives

THOUSANDS POUR ON TO STREETS Populace rises against unpopular left-wing leader Nicolas Maduro.

- Caracas

Three people were killed in Venezuela on Monday in renewed violence, raising the death toll in three weeks of massive demonstrat­ions against left-wing President Nicolas Maduro to 24, officials said.

Several others were seriously injured and “between life and death,” said public defender Tarek William Saab. The latest casualties come on a day anti-Maduro demonstrat­ors blocked roads in the South American nation.

Two government trucks in eastern Caracas were set alight on a freeway by masked protesters who poured oil on the road. Police nearby did not immediatel­y intervene, AFP journalist­s said.

Elsewhere in the capital, riot police fired tear gas at another group of protesters who threw stones at them.

However, the majority of demonstrat­ors, who numbered in the thousands, rallied peacefully.

The return to violence in the streets of Venezuela after a weekend lull was certain to further stoke internatio­nal concern over the country, whose economy is imploding despite vast oil reserves.

Latin American countries and the United States have voiced concern at the unrest.

The population is suffering shortages of food, medicine and basic supplies. Riots and looting have occurred in several places.

The conservati­ve-led opposition says government incompeten­ce is to blame and calls the elected president a dictator. It wants early elections.

But Maduro, who has the backing of the armed forces, says Venezuela is the victim of a US-led capitalist plot.

He has stepped up a nationalis­ation drive started by his late Socialist predecesso­r Hugo Chavez that has swept up plants and assets of foreign companies, including American ones.

Authoritie­s have also curbed the power of the National Assembly, which is dominated by opposition lawmakers.

The three deaths on Monday happened in western Venezuela.

Saab said one man in the city of Merida, a university city in the Andes, “was demonstrat­ing peacefully when he apparently received a gunshot”.

He said in a television interview that the slain man was a pro-government demonstrat­or and added that five other people were also badly wounded in clashes.

Later, a second man was killed, also in Merida. It was not clear if the victim was a protester or a pro-government marcher.

The third man killed was in the nearby town of Barinas, a source in the prosecutor’s office told AFP.

The source did not specify whether he was an anti-Maduro protester or a pro-government activist. – AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Kashmiri Muslims pray as a custodian displays a holy relic, believed to be a hair from the Prophet Muhammad’s beard, during celebratio­ns for Miraj-Ul-Alam at Kashmir’s Hazratbal Shrine in Srinagar yesterday.
Picture: AFP Kashmiri Muslims pray as a custodian displays a holy relic, believed to be a hair from the Prophet Muhammad’s beard, during celebratio­ns for Miraj-Ul-Alam at Kashmir’s Hazratbal Shrine in Srinagar yesterday.

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