Venezuelans Take to the Streets Again as Country Endures Nationwide Blackouts

Luke Taylor
By Luke Taylor
March 10, 2019World News
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Venezuelans Take to the Streets Again as Country Endures Nationwide Blackouts
Venezuelans take part in a protest against the Maduro regime in Caracas, Venezuela, on March 9, 2019. (Edilzon Gamez/Getty Images)

BOGOTA, Colombia—Thousands once again took to the streets of Caracas on March 9 to protest against Venezuelan regime leader Nicolas Maduro, while nationwide power cuts plunged the country into darkness.

Protesters have repeatedly denounced widespread food and medicine shortages, rampant hyperinflation of over ten million percent, and brutal human rights abuses committed by the security forces, but by Thursday evening, they had yet another reason to raise their voices as the country experienced the worst blackouts in decades.

“We are completely tired of this,” said Mariana López, 25, in San Fernando de Apure, the capital city of the southern Apure region. “There are a lot of electrical faults, but we have never seen entire days without electric throughout the whole country before.”

While López was fortunate enough to save food—an increasingly precious commodity in the OPEC nation—others didn’t have such privileges as the worst power shortages dragged into their third day.

“We have no internet, no water, no telephone and all of our food has gone bad,” said a resident in the city of Valencia who wished to remain anonymous to avoid potential repercussions from the state. “It’s a war but without opponents—everyone is fighting to survive. I have two young babies, I don’t know if we can take much more.”

Aside from protesters the streets were largely empty and the few shops that were open were charging dollars and euros because credit card machines were down, they said.

Power was temporarily restored on the evening of Friday March 8, but was out once again by Saturday morning as poorly maintained electrical substations failed, affecting 22 of 23 states.

Juan Guaido, Venezuela’s interim president, speaks
Juan Guaido, recognized by over 50 nations as Venezuela’s interim president, speaks during a demonstration in Caracas on March 9, 2019. (Federico Fede/AFP/Getty Images)

Juan Guaidó, recognized by Washington and over 50 other nations as Venezuela’s legitimate interim president, slammed Maduro’s government for causing a “tragedy without precedent” to excitable and impassioned crowds who filled Avenida Victoria in central Caracas. Some frustrated protesters clashed with a heightened police presence which tried to quash the demonstrations.

“The road has been very long, it has worn us out, but we’re not going to stop,” the fresh-faced opposition-leader said defiantly, struggling to reach the crowds through a megaphone as his usual stage had been disassembled by security forces the night before.

Maduro, who still has the support of the military, emerged after two days without a public sighting to his supporters who were in the hundreds rather than in the thousands. “Here I am, facing my responsibilities,” Maduro told them, before blaming foreign powers for violating the country’s sovereignty.

Power Outages

As well as food spoiling as refrigerators stood idle, essential medicine for cancer treatment began to go bad and patients went days without dialysis treatment. A video posted in social networks depicted doctors battling to keep a newborn baby alive manually pumping air into the baby’s lungs as ventilators in an intensive care unit were left redundant due to the failure of backup generators.

People use their mobile phones at the Francisco Fajardo highway
People use their mobile phones at the Francisco Fajardo highway—where they can get telephone service—during a partial power outage in Caracas, Venezuela, on March 9, 2019. (Matias Delacroix/AFP/Getty Images)

Seventeen individuals died in hospitals due to the outages, said opposition Congressman Jose Manuel Olivares.

Venezuela’s Minister for Communication and Information Jorge Rodríguez blamed the latest crisis on the United States for “attacking” the hydroelectric grid’s control system which provides 70 percent of the country’s energy.

Rodriguez singled out Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla), Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,  and Vice President Mike Pence, all of whom rejected—and some even mocked—the accusations that a foreign nation could have intervened with the heavily-guarded electrical complex.

“My apologies to people of Venezuela. I must have pressed the wrong thing on the ‘electronic attack’ app I downloaded from Apple. My bad,” Rubio taunted  in a tweet on Thursday evening.

For those on the ground the cuts were no laughing matter. The metro system ground to a halt, most flights were grounded, and 96 percent of the population was left without internet access.

Many who make up the now three-million-strong Venezuelan diaspora who have fled the crisis in recent years desperately sought communication with their loved ones who they feared were in danger.

“I’m incredibly worried as my mother and daughter are there and they are the only thing I have,” said Alessandra Páez in Bogotá, Colombia, who has not checked in with her family since 6 p.m. on March 6 and usually sends money home to support them every week. “If they are sick there is no way for a hospital to see to them, if they are hungry there is no way to buy food, and if there is an emergency there is nothing I can do.”

From The Epoch Times

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