Bangkok Post

Strike deepens Maduro challenge

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CARACAS: A nationwide strike brought parts of Venezuela to a halt on Thursday as the opposition ramped up its challenge to President Nicolas Maduro that has already seen four months of deadly street protests and threats of US economic sanctions.

Two young men were killed in separate demonstrat­ions, according to prosecutor­s: a 24-year-old on the outskirts of Caracas and a 23-year-old in the city of Valencia. That brought the death toll since April to 99.

Thursday’s 24-hour stoppage affected areas of the capital and other regions, including the country’s second-biggest city of Maracaibo, with businesses shuttered, public transport stalled and streets often deserted.

Opposition demonstrat­ors clashed with riot police in parts of Caracas, and set a police booth on fire. There were several arrests.

“It doesn’t matter losing a day’s work if we’re losing the country,” said one striker, a 34-year-old owner of a small Caracas constructi­on firm who only gave his first name, Omar.

“I’m joining the strike to rescue the little remaining for us, to increase pressure” on Mr Maduro, he said.

By backing the opposition’s “final offensive” against the president, company owners taking part risked government reprisals.

In pro-government parts of the capital, however, life went on as normal.

Some workers in public offices were reluctant to take part, scared it would cost them their jobs. “If I don’t go to work, they’ll fire me,” a 39-year-old public worker who gave her name as Carolina said.

Mr Maduro seized on the areas of normality to claim victory over the strikers, saying key sectors were unaffected by the strike.

“The only ones who can bring this country to a halt are the Chavistas,” he said, referring to pro-government supporters named after late president Hugo Chavez.

Maria Francis, a 53-year-old worker in the Caracas metro system, called it an “absurd strike.” The opposition, she said, “wants the United States to come in and take over the country”.

Mr Maduro is under fire domestical­ly and internatio­nally over plans for a July 30 election of a citizens’ body — a “Constituen­t Assembly” — to rewrite the constituti­on. Critics see it as a power grab.

US President Donald Trump has warned of unspecifie­d “swift economic actions” against Venezuela if the vote goes ahead.

Mr Maduro has defiantly said the threat made him determined “more than ever” to see through the election.

Venezuela’s economy is dependent on its oil exports. Around a third of its crude production goes to the US.

The head of the state-run oil company PDVSA on Thursday told state television that the 24-hour strike had not affected its operations.

The opposition is feeling invigorate­d in its campaign against Mr Maduro by an unofficial plebiscite it held last weekend in which 7.6 million Venezuelan­s — more than a third of the electorate — overwhelmi­ngly cast ballots against the Constituen­t Assembly.

It is also buoyed by implicit support from abroad, including from Mr Trump, the European Union, the Organisati­on of American States and major Latin American nations.

Many of Venezuela’s suffering businesses backed the strike. More than two-thirds have closed in the past decade, according to the Fedecamara­s employers’ associatio­n.

“This strike is an impulse shared by business owners and a famished population against a government that is also broken but which controls the few resources of an oil country,” said Luis Vicente Leon of the Datanalisi­s polling firm.

Datanalisi­s surveys have shown more than 70% of Venezuelan­s reject Mr Maduro’s leadership. But the president has brushed aside moves to force him out. He can count on a loyal military, which has been given control of swaths of the economy.

With past efforts at dialogue failed, the opposition has turned to sustained street protests.

 ?? AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors clash with riot police during an anti-government protest in Caracas as a 24-hour nationwide strike got underway in Venezuela on Thursday.
AFP Demonstrat­ors clash with riot police during an anti-government protest in Caracas as a 24-hour nationwide strike got underway in Venezuela on Thursday.

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