Venezuela congress declares 'state of alarm' over
blackout
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[March 12, 2019]
By Shaylim Valderrama and Anggy Polanco
CARACAS/SAN CRISTOBAL, Venezuela (Reuters)
- Venezuela's opposition-run congress on Monday declared a "state of
alarm" over a five-day power blackout that has crippled the OPEC member
country's oil exports and left millions of citizens scrambling to find
food and water.
Much of Venezuela remained without power on Monday, although electricity
had largely returned to the capital of Caracas following an outage that
began on Thursday and which President Nicolas Maduro has called an act
of U.S.-backed sabotage.
The outage has added to discontent in a country already suffering from
hyperinflation and a political crisis after opposition leader Juan
Guaido assumed the interim presidency in January after declaring
Maduro's 2018 re-election a fraud.
"Nothing is normal in Venezuela, and we will not allow this tragedy to
be considered normal, which is why we need this decree of a state of
alarm," said Guaido, who heads the legislature, during the session on
Monday.
The constitution allows the president to declare states of alarm amid
catastrophes that "seriously compromise the security of the nation," but
does not explicitly say what practical impact such a declaration would
have.
Guaido has been recognized as Venezuela's legitimate leader by the
United States and most Western countries, but Maduro retains control of
the armed forces and state institutions, and the backing of Russia and
China, among others.
Oil industry sources said that exports from the primary port of Jose had
been halted for lack of power, cutting off Venezuela's primary source of
revenue.
During the legislative session, Guaido called for a halt in shipments of
oil to Maduro's political ally Cuba, which has received discounted crude
from Venezuela for nearly two decades. The deals have drawn scrutiny
from the opposition and its allies abroad as Venezuela's economic crisis
worsened.
"We ask for the international community's cooperation to make this
measure effective, so that the oil the Venezuelan people urgently need
to attend to this national emergency is not given away," Guaido said.
U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton backed the measure, writing
on Twitter that, "insurance companies and flag carriers that facilitate
these give-away shipments to Cuba are now on notice." He did not specify
any measures the U.S. government may take.
Earlier on Monday, the U.S. Treasury imposed sanctions on a Russian bank
over its dealings with Venezuela's state-owned oil company PDVSA and
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticized Russia's Rosneft for buying
PDVSA oil.
RESTORATION 'COMPLEX'
The blackout has left food rotting in refrigerators, hospitals have
struggled to keep equipment operating, and people have clustered on the
streets of Caracas to pick up patchy telephone signals to reach
relatives abroad.
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People collect water released through a sewage drain that feeds into
the Guaire River, which carries most of the city's wastewater, in
Caracas, Venezuela March 11, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
On Monday, Venezuelans seeking water formed lines to fill containers from a
sewage pipe.
"This is driving me crazy," said Naile Gonzalez in Chacaito, a commercial
neighborhood of Caracas. "The government doesn't want to accept that this is
their fault because they haven't carried out any maintenance in years."
Venezuela's electrical grid has suffered from years of underinvestment.
Restrictions on imports have affected the provision of spare parts, while many
skilled technical personnel have fled the country amid an exodus of more than 3
million Venezuelans in recent years.
Winston Cabas, the president of an electrical engineers' professional
association, told reporters that several of the country's thermoelectric plants
were operating at just 20 percent of capacity, in part due to lack of fuel. He
said the government was rationing electricity.
The process of restoring service was "complex" and could take between five and
six days, he said.
"We once had the best electricity system in the world - the most vigorous, the
most robust, the most powerful - and those who now administer the system have
destroyed it," he said.
A source at PDVSA also said the government had decided to ration electricity, in
part to supply power to the Jose oil export terminal.
The Information Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.
Experts consulted by Reuters believe the nationwide blackout originated in
transmission lines that transport energy from the Guri hydroelectric plant to
the Venezuelan south.
The lack of electricity has aggravated a crisis in Venezuelan hospitals, already
lacking investment and maintenance in addition to a shortage of medicines.
School and work activities are set to be suspended on Tuesday, the third working
day in a row.
(Reporting by Shaylim Valderrama, Vivian Sequera, Anggy Polanco, and Deisy
Buitrago; additional reporting by Sarah Marsh in Havana; writing by Daniel
Flynn, Brian Ellsworth and Luc Cohen; editing by Grant McCool and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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