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Millions heed anti-Maduro shutdown in Venezuela

Millions heed anti-Maduro shutdown in Venezuela
# 21 July 2017 00:29 (UTC +04:00)

Many Venezuelan streets were barricaded and deserted on Thursday for a strike called by foes of President Nicolas Maduro to demand elections and the scrapping of plans for a new congress they fear will consolidate dictatorship in the OPEC country, APA reports quoting Reuters.

 

From the Andes to the Amazon, millions appeared to be participating in the 24-hour shutdown, staying at home and closing businesses in a civil disobedience campaign the opposition hopes will end nearly two decades of socialist rule.

 

"We must all do our best to get rid of this tyrant," said Miguel Lopez, 17, holding a homemade shield emblazoned with "No To Dictatorship!" as he manned a roadblock on a Caracas thoroughfare that was devoid of traffic.

 

Many private transportation groups heeded the strike call, while students, neighbors and activists hauled rubbish and furniture into streets to erect makeshift barriers.

 

In some places, however, such as the poor Catia and January 23rd neighborhoods of Caracas, streets and shops were still buzzing, while motorbike taxis replaced buses.

 

In a speech, Maduro vowed some of the strike leaders would be jailed and insisted the action was minimal, with the 700 leading food businesses, for example, still working.

 

He said opposition supporters attacked the headquarters of state TV and burned a kiosk of the government postal service, but were repelled by workers and soldiers. "I've ordered the capture of all the fascist terrorists," he said, singling out a Caracas district mayor, Carlos Ocariz, for blame.

 

In clashes elsewhere, security forces fired tear gas at protesters manning barricades. Youths shot fireworks at them from homemade mortars.

 

Violence during four months of anti-government unrest has taken about 100 lives, injured thousands, left hundreds in jail and further damaged an economy in its fourth year of a debilitating decline.

 

Clashes have occurred daily since the opposition Democratic Unity coalition and a self-styled youth-led "Resistance" movement took to the streets in April. In the latest fatality, a man confronting protesters was burned to death this week in the northern coastal town of Lecheria, media and authorities said.

 

Oil Sector Uninterrupted

 

Leaders of Venezuela's 2.8 million public employees said state businesses and ministries remained open on Thursday.

 

"I'm on strike 'in my heart' because if we don't turn up, they will fire us," said a 51-year-old engineer heading to work at state steel plant Sidor in southern Bolivar state.

 

Oil company PDVSA, which brings in 95 percent of Venezuela's export revenue, was not affected.

 

In an internal memo seen by Reuters, PDVSA ordered "all workers to strictly comply with working hours" and stressed that failure to show up would lead to "sanctions."

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