A Look At How Hunger Fuels Crime and Violence in Venezuela
Time: How Hunger Fuels Crime and Violence in Venezuela
Desperate people in Venezuela don’t rob stores or banks. There would be no point; cash machines have been mostly empty since early this year, when hyperinflation transformed the bolÃvar into a worthless piece of paper.
But desperate people in Venezuela do rob restaurants.
As the country creaks into its fifth year of economic crisis, hunger is on everyone’s minds. Nine out of 10 households say they don’t have enough money to buy food. Nearly two-thirds go to sleep hungry at night. Catholic non-profit Cáritas calculates that a family would need 98 times the minimum wage to afford a basic food supply.
Locals call the lack of food, “The Maduro diet,” after President Nicolás Maduro, who since 2013 has led Venezuela’s increasingly authoritarian government and driven the country into humanitarian crisis.
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More News On Venezuela
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Venezuela's Hyperinflation, 24 Months and Counting -- Forbes
Blackouts force Venezuelans to live and work — even perform surgery — in darkness -- Miami Herald
A humanitarian crisis in Venezuela? Nothing to see here, government says -- Washington Post
Venezuela Is Said to Move Cash Through an Obscure Russian Bank -- Bloomberg
US official: Maduro 'looting' Venezuela's gold amid crisis -- AP
Venezuela's Maduro calls Pence 'crazy' over caravan accusation -- Reuters
Amid migrant crisis, Ecuador expels Venezuela ambassador, calls country ‘murderous’ -- Miami Herald
Venezuela teen's political cartoons sketch his country's downfall -- Reuters
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