Gulf News

Looting ravages Venezuela, death toll hits

Mass protests erupted on April 1, with demonstrat­ors demanding elections to remove Maduro

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Ayoung man died on Friday after he was injured in violence as looting broke out in impoverish­ed Venezuelan cities, an official said, bringing the toll from unrest in more than a month of antigovern­ment protests to at least 36.

Hecder Lugo Perez, 22, died after he was hit in the head by a projectile in the northweste­rn city of Valencia, sources at the Valles de San Diego medical clinic said. City Mayor Enzo Scarano confirmed his death.

Mass protests erupted on April 1 by demonstrat­ors demanding elections to remove President Nicolas Maduro. They blame him for an economic crisis that has caused shortages of food, medicine and other basics.

Anger boiled over on Friday in the western municipali­ty of Rosario de Perija, where young protesters burnt, pulled down and then smashed a statue of former president Hugo Chavez, Maduro’s late predecesso­r and mentor, according to video posted on social media showing the incident in a public square.

Disaster zone

Looting broke out this week in cities such as Valencia, which looked like a disaster zone with bars on shop windows bent and windows broken.

“There was a crowd of them. They broke through the walls and took everything. They destroyed everything” before police came and fired tear gas to disperse the looters, said Nuvia Torrealba, 42, who worked in a bakery.

“My bosses have lost their home and we are out of a job. It was horrible.”

Residents were stockpilin­g food, water and fuel. At least 70 stores have been raided since Tuesday, the Valencia chamber of commerce said.

“They are taking advantage of the protests to go out and rob,” said Magaly Oliveros, a 64-year-old housewife in Valencia.

“Today we are hungry, and tomorrow we will be hungrier still because there is nothing.”

Maduro is resisting opposition demands for elections.

Pointing fingers

Each side accuses the other of using armed groups to sow violence in the demonstrat­ions.

Maduro has the public backing of the military high command, which analysts say is key to resisting the protests.

However, senior opposition leader Henrique Capriles said on Friday that 85 mid-ranking army officers have been detained for opposing moves to crack down on protesters.

He cited informatio­n he said was given by the officers’ families.

Maduro’s opponents called for women to march yesterday dressed in white, a traditiona­l show of defiance against what they brand a repressive government.

“The regime is falling,” said Lilian Tintori, wife of jailed opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, outside the prison near Caracas where she was demanding to see her husband. “It has no strength and is showing its worst side.”

 ?? AFP ?? Children look at a damaged supermarke­t on Friday, the day after anti-government protesters looted stores in Valencia.
AFP Children look at a damaged supermarke­t on Friday, the day after anti-government protesters looted stores in Valencia.

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