The Mercury News

Venezuela may be hitting turning point as nation’s poor join protest

Criticism and riots at impoverish­ed country’s president continue

- By Mariana Zuniga and Nick Miroff

CARACAS, Venezuela — In the cramped hillside slums where they once adored Hugo Chávez, hungry families now jeer and bang pots at the man struggling in his shadow, President Nicolás Maduro.

Chávez, a master showman who promised his country a socialist “revolution,” loved to wade through crowds of poor Venezuelan­s, blowing kisses and dispensing hugs. But when his successor has ventured out in public in recent months, he’s been pelted with eggs and chased by angry mobs.

“Maduro is so different,” said Irene Castillo, 26, who lives in El Guarataro, a tough neighborho­od not far from the presidenti­al palace. She voted for Maduro in 2013 when Chávez died after 14 years in power. But no one on Castillo’s block supports the government anymore, she said. “Now, those who remain ‘chavistas’ are just the radicals.”

As the country’s bloody, volatile month-old protest movement hardens into a prolonged standoff between demonstrat­ors and the government, the loyalties of poorer Venezuelan­s like Castillo have become a swing factor in determinin­g whether the president will survive.

The thousands of demonstrat­ors pouring into the streets in recent weeks are mostly middle class, outraged by Venezuela’s economic collapse and the government’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian rule. But Venezuelan­s from longtime chavista stronghold­s are starting to join them, at considerab­le risk. Residents of Castillo’s neighborho­od protested openly against Maduro for the first time this week.

Pro-government block captains in neighborho­ods like El Guarataro have responded by threatenin­g to deny food rations to those who march with the opposition or fail to join pro-Maduro rallies. Militia groups armed by the government known as “colectivos” are deployed to intimidate would-be defectors and are suspected in the deaths of several protesters.

As the confrontat­ion escalates, many other destitute Venezuelan­s remain on the sidelines, disillusio­ned with Maduro but unpersuade­d by his opponents, or too busy looking for food to join a march.

Aside from a military revolt, there is perhaps nothing Maduro fears more than a rebellion spreading through the neighborho­ods that long backed Chávez. There are signs it’s already happening.

On several occasions this month, a pattern has emerged, in which mostly middle-class Venezuelan­s and student activists swarm the capital’s main highway during the day, while poorer residents stage smaller protests in their neighborho­ods at night, some of which have degenerate­d into chaos and looting.

In El Guarataro, where services like electricit­y and water are frequently shut off, residents built barricades of flaming debris in the streets this week, clanging pots and pans at their windows to amplify their frustratio­n. Riot police and national guard troops arrived, touching off clashes in a neighborho­od that has long been a solid-red bastion of support for the government.

“The base of the chavista movement has eroded, and the situation is growing more explosive,” said Margarita Lopez Maya, a political analyst in Caracas. “There’s no bread, but the government continues to insist it has the majority of Venezuelan­s on its side, so it looks increasing­ly dissociate­d from the reality of people’s lives.”

 ?? RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Opposition activists are stalled a few miles before the entrance of the Ramo Verde penitentia­ry in Los Teques, where opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez is imprisoned, on Saturday.
RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Opposition activists are stalled a few miles before the entrance of the Ramo Verde penitentia­ry in Los Teques, where opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez is imprisoned, on Saturday.

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