Latin America
Related: About this forumIt was once the richest country in Latin America. Now it’s falling apart
In Venezuela the food lines are only the most visible evidence of a nation in free fall. Known as las colas, the lines form before dawn and last until nightfall, several bodies thick and zigzagging for miles in leafy middle-class neighborhoods and ragged slums alike. In a country that sits atop the worlds largest known petroleum reserves, hungry citizens wait on their assigned day for whatever the stores might stock: with luck, corn flour to make arepas, and on a really good day, shampoo.
I never dreamed it would come to this, says Yajaira Gutierrez, a 41-year-old accountant, waiting her turn in downtown Caracas. That in Venezuela, with all our petroleum, we would be struggling to get corn cakes.
In the capitals Dr. José María Vargas hospital, a doctor watched a 73-year-old woman die of kidney failure because the hospital lacked the medicine to perform a routine dialysis. In a Caracas police station, more than 150 prisoners crowded into a cell made for 36, standing shirtless (there was no room to sit) in the stench of sweat and feces. In arid Lara state, an elementary-school teacher told of children fainting in class from hunger. The economy contracted by almost 6% last year, and is expected to shrink by as much as 10% this year.
Venezuela was once Latin Americas exemplar: home to Simón Bolívar, who freed much of the continent from Spanish rule. Now, after years of political mismanagement and months in economic free fall, it is the regions cautionary tale. The bolivar, the currency named for the Liberator himself, is now carried in backpacks instead of wallets; one unit is worth less than a penny. While production plummets, crime soars. Fights frequently break out in food lines. The number of murders last year ranged between 17,000 and 28,000. No one knows the exact tally, but regardless it would put the nations murder ratedriven by a lethal mix of street gangs, drug cartels, leftist guerrillas and right-wing paramilitaries jostling for poweramong the worlds highest. Even animals are dying: some 50 zoo animals have starved to death over the past six months because theres not enough food.
http://time.com/venezuela-brink/
Just another example of the media making something out of nothing.
MichiganVote
(21,086 posts)COLGATE4
(14,732 posts)this country has disintegrated. Chavez and idiot successor couldn't have done much more to screw it up if they had actually tried to do so. A country whose standard of living was admired by most of Latin America is now close to becoming the Latin American Zimbabwe. Pathetic.