Gulf News

Anti-Maduro strike takes a violent turn

Venezuelan riot police and soldiers fire tear gas at protesters

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Two people were killed in clashes on Thursday in Venezuela during a nationwide strike against President Nicolas Maduro’s plans to rewrite the country’s constituti­on.

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.

Riot police and soldiers fired tear gas and buck shot at protesters, who blocked streets with debris in parts of Caracas and set a police booth on fire. Street blockades continued overnight.

Prosecutor­s said a 24-yearold man was killed on the outskirts of Caracas and a 23-year-old man was killed in the city of Valencia. They did not say who was responsibl­e for the deaths.

This brings to 99 the death toll in anti-government protests since April.

“I wish this strike were indefinite until this dictatorsh­ip leaves,” said Coromoto Garcia, 48, who was at a street blocked by protesters in eastern Caracas. Protesters also hurled rocks at workers with VTV state television, who were rescued by riot police.

Nearly 370 protesters were arrested in Caracas and four other states, the NGO Foro Penal reported. “It doesn’t matter losing a day’s work if we’re losing the country,” said one striker, a 34-yearold 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 Maduro, he said.

‘They’ll fire me’

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 told AFP.

Maduro seized on the areas of normality to claim victory over the strikers, saying key sectors were “100 per cent” unaffected by the strike.

Maria Francis, a 53-yearold worker in the Caracas metro system, called it an “absurd strike.”

 ?? AFP ?? Riot police use tear gas to disperse violent demonstrat­ors during an anti-government protest in Caracas on Thursday.
AFP Riot police use tear gas to disperse violent demonstrat­ors during an anti-government protest in Caracas on Thursday.

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