Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

More blackouts hit Venezuela as rallies continue

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CARACAS, Venezuela — The Venezuelan opposition and government loyalists held rival demonstrat­ions in Caracas on Saturday, as both sides prepared for what some fear could be a protracted power struggle.

The rallies unfolded as power and communicat­ions outages continued to hit Venezuela, intensifyi­ng the hardship of a country paralyzed by economic and political crisis. The blackouts heightened tension between the bitterly divided factions, which accused each other of being responsibl­e for the collapse of the power grid.

“Hard times are ahead,” said opposition leader Juan Guaido, who addressed crowds with a loudspeake­r after security forces earlier dismantled a speakers’ stage that the opposition had erected. He said he planned to tour Venezuela to seek support and lay the groundwork for a massive rally in Caracas.

The 35-year-old leader of the National Assembly said he anticipate­d more government efforts to sideline and intimidate the opposition. However, President Nicolas Maduro’s government has not moved directly against Guaido since he returned to Venezuela from a Latin American tour Monday.

Guaido earlier speculated that Maduro was effectivel­y ignoring him in an attempt to sap the energy of the opposition, whose hopes of ousting the government have so far been stymied.

But on Saturday, Maduro stepped up verbal attacks on Guaido, calling him “a clown and puppet” in a speech to supporters outside Miraflores, the presidenti­al palace. He scoffed at Guaido’s claim in late January to be interim president of Venezuela, a declaratio­n supported by the United States and about 50 other countries.

“Not a president, not anything,” said Maduro, who accused Guaido and his U.S. allies of sabotaging Venezuela’s Guri Dam, one of the world’s largest hydroelect­ric stations and the cornerston­e of Venezuela’s electrical grid.

He said authoritie­s had restored 70 percent of power in Venezuela since what he called an “internatio­nal cyberattac­k” late Thursday, but progress was lost on Saturday when “infiltrato­rs” allegedly struck again.

In another blow to Venezuela’s infrastruc­ture, an explosion occurred at a power station in the country’s Bolivar state on Saturday, according to local media. Video posted on social media showed fire and smoke billowing from the site. Venezuelan authoritie­s have not commented.

Managers of the Caracas subway said they were waiting for the electricit­y supply to stabilize before resuming service, and the power grid problems quickly became only another issue that galvanized Venezuelan­s to take to the streets.

Opposition protesters who converged on Avenida Victoria in Caracas vented anger over the country’s problems, including hyperinfla­tion and shortages of basic necessitie­s. They pushed against the shields of riot police who avoided a clash by withdrawin­g from the area.

At the pro-government rally, people danced and waved flags on what organizers labeled a “day of anti-imperialis­m” in a show of defiance toward the United States, which has imposed oil sanctions on Venezuela in an attempt to oust Maduro. Many showed up wearing red caps and shirts in support of the self-proclaimed “socialist revolution” of Hugo Chavez, who died six years ago and was succeeded by Maduro.

 ?? Yuri Cortez / AFP / Getty Images ?? A supporters of Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro holds a banner that reads “Out of Venezuela Woody Woodpecker Trump” during a rally at the Miraflores Presidenti­al Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Saturday.
Yuri Cortez / AFP / Getty Images A supporters of Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro holds a banner that reads “Out of Venezuela Woody Woodpecker Trump” during a rally at the Miraflores Presidenti­al Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Saturday.

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