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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Venezuela returns to ‘Middle Ages’ during power outages

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Maria Lorente -


Walking for hours, making oil lamps, bearing water. For Venezuelans today, suffering under a new nationwide blackout that has lasted days, it’s like being thrown back to life centuries ago.


El Avila, a mountain that towers over Caracas, has become a place where families gather with buckets and jugs to fill up with water, wash dishes and scrub clothes. The taps in their homes are dry from lack of electricity to the city’s water pumps.


“We’re forced to get water from sources that obviously aren’t completely hygienic. But it’s enough for washing or doing the dishes,” said one resident, Manuel Almeida.


Because of the long lines of people, the activity can take hours of waiting. Elsewhere, locals make use of cracked water pipes. But they still need to boil the water, or otherwise purify it.


“We’re going to bed without washing ourselves,” said one man, Pedro Jose, a 30-year-old living in a poorer neighbourhood in the west of the capital. Some shops seeing an opportunity have hiked the prices of bottles of water and bags of ice to between $3 and $5 — a fortune in a country where the monthly minimum salary is the equivalent of $5.50.


Better-off Venezuelans, those with access to US dollars, have rushed to fill hotels that have giant generators and working restaurants. For others, preserving fresh food is a challenge. Finding it is even more difficult. The blackout has forced most shops to close. “We share food” among family members and friends, explained Coral Munoz, 61, who counts herself lucky to have dollars. “You have to keep a level head to put up with all this, and try to have people around because being alone make it even harder.”


For Kelvin Donaire, who lives in the poor Petare district, survival is complicated. He walks for more than an hour to the bakery where he works in the upmarket Los Palos Grandes area. “At least I’m able to take a loaf back home,” Donaire said.


Many inhabitants have taken to salting meat to preserve it without working refrigerators. Others, more desperate, scour trash cans for food scraps. They are hurt most by having to live in a country where basic food and medicine has become scarce and out of reach because of rocketing hyperinflation. — AFP


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