Marysville Appeal-Democrat

GM quits Venezuela after government seizes factor y

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VALENCIA, Venezuela (AP) – General Motors announced Thursday that it was shuttering its operations in Venezuela after authoritie­s seized its factory in the country, a move that could draw the Trump administra­tion into the escalating chaos engulfing the South American nation amid days of deadly protests.

The plant in the industrial city of Valencia was confiscate­d Wednesday as anti-government protesters clashed with security forces and pro-government groups in a country battered by economic troubles, including food shortages and triple-digit inflation. Three people were killed and hundreds arrested in the deadliest day of protests since the unrest began three weeks ago.

The seizure arose from an almost 20year-old lawsuit brought by a former GM dealership in western Venezuela. The dealership had been seeking damages from GM of 476 million bolivars – about $665 million at the official exchange rate, or $115 million on the black market where many Venezuelan­s are forced to turn to sell their increasing­ly worthless currency. GM said it was notified this week that a low-level court ordered the seizure of its plant, bank accounts and other assets in the country.

Hundreds of workers desperate for informatio­n about their jobs gathered at the plant Thursday to meet with government and military officials, as well as representa­tives of the dealership that brought the lawsuit. The neglected factory hasn’t produced a car since 2015 but GM still has 79 dealers that employ 3,900 people in Venezuela, where for decades it was the market leader.

General Motors’ announceme­nt came as Venezuela’s opposition moved to keep up pressure on President Nicolas Maduro, taking to the streets again Thursday a day after the biggest antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions in years.

It’s not the first time the Venezuelan government has seized a foreign corporatio­n’s facilities. Last July, the government said it would take over a factory belonging to Kimberly-Clark Corp. after the American personal care giant said it was halting manufactur­ing because materials weren’t available in Venezuela.

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