Stabroek News

Venezuela seeks to restore power amid looting; China offers help

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CARACAS/MARACAIBO, Venezuela, (Reuters) - President Nicolas Maduro’s government scrambled yesterday to return power to western Venezuela following heavy looting in the country’s second largest city, while China offered to help the OPEC-member nation end its worst blackout on record.

Power had returned to many parts of Venezuela after a nationwide outage last week, with the country’s main port terminal of Jose, which is crucial for oil exports, resuming operations. The government said people could return to work on Thursday, following several consecutiv­e public holidays due to the lack of electricit­y.

School will remain suspended for 24 more hours, Informatio­n Minister Jorge Rodriguez said in a state television broadcast on Wednesday, adding that power supply had been broadly restored but problems remained in some areas with transforme­rs that had been “sabotaged.”

The ruling Socialist Party blamed the outage on U.S. sabotage, accusing President Donald Trump of being responsibl­e for several cyber attacks on Venezuela’s main dam.

Energy supplies remained patchy in the sweltering western state of Zulia, where anger after nearly a week without power overflowed into street violence.

Looters smashed shop windows and made off with merchandis­e in more than 300 businesses across the state along the border with Colombia, the Zulia chapter of business organizati­on Fedecamara­s said in a statement.

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