Sunday 23 April 2017

VENEZUELA PROTESTS CONTINUE



23.04.2017 12:15:50 - Venezuela's opposition has held a march to honor the people who died in three weeks of protests against the government. The economic crisis is worsen 

(live-PR.com) - At least 22 people have been killed in the recent anti-government protests "We want free elections, we want to get rid of this corrupt government," said Iomira Barrios, an environmental consultant who says she can no longer find work. "Right now people are willing to fight, because they have declared a dictatorship and we cannot allow it."
Opposition to the government
of President Nicolas Maduro has been growing, even among the poor who were the strongest supporters of his predecessor and mentor Hugo Chavez.
Dozen killed in Caracas following two days of mass street protests against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s beleaguered government. Venezuelan in economic crisis’s deepens.

Six people were also injured in the escalating violence, the public ministry said in a statement on Friday. The latest figures raised the total number of deaths during growing protests to 20 over the past three weeks.
Venezuela's opposition has held a march to honor the people who died in three weeks of protests against the government. The economic crisis is worsening.
Venezuelan Vice President Tareck El Aissami said on Friday the country is facing what he calls an “unconventional war” led by opposition groups working in concert with criminal gangs.

Riot police firing tear gas fought running street battles in the east, west, and south of Caracas with demonstrators demanding the removal of Maduro.

World Economic Outlook, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) wrote “Venezuela remains mired in a deep economic crisis.” Unemployment has risen from 7.4 percent in 2015 to 25 percent this year and could rise to 28 percent next year.

Inflation may reach 720 percent this year, according to the IMF and could rise to 2,000 percent by 2018.Venezuela's opposition has held a march to honor the people who died in three weeks of protests against the government. The economic crisis is worsen

US car giant General Motors shut down its operations after authorities seized the plant and took its vehicles, the company announced last Thursday.

The factory was “unexpectedly taken,” according to a statement from GM. The company “strongly rejects the arbitrary.
US car giant General Motors shut down its operations after authorities seized the plant and took its vehicles, the company announced last Thursday.
The factory was "unexpectedly taken," according to a statement from GM. The company "strongly rejects the arbitrary measures taken by the authorities and will vigorously take all legal actions, within and outside of Venezuela, to defend its rights," the Detroit-based automaker said in a statement.
The auto industry has followed the rest of the economy in its descent. In a nation of 30 million people, only 293 cars were sold in March, according to figures from Bloomberg. Ford still has a plant in Venezuela, although it is not operating. Toyota and Fiat Chrysler are still operating.
The GM takeover was the first nationalization of a major company's facilities in more than two years. In 2014, household goods company Clorox halted its operations because of inflation and government-mandated price freezes. The government took over and opened up the Clorox sites again.

Michael Welling‏ @WellingMichael
#Venezuela cannot hold #elections while savage dictator Nicolas Maduro is still in power. No #dialogue No elections until he's gone
@RavenHUWolf
#Venezuela citizens in fear of their lives.
"We're afraid the Government will kill us!"
People are hungary/suffering
"Mother of all Marches"
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