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Crisis in Venezuela

An ongoing socioeconomic and political crisis began in Venezuela during the presidency of Hugo Chávez and has worsened during the presidency of his successor Nicolás Maduro. It has been marked by hyperinflation, escalating starvation,[6] disease, crime and mortality rates, resulting in massive emigration from the country.[7]

Crisis in Venezuela
Top to bottom, left to right:
Hundreds of Venezuelans wait to seal their passports at an Ecuadorian customs house; millions demonstrate during the Mother of All Marches in 2017; a man eating from garbage in Venezuela; empty store shelves from shortages; people queued to enter a store; Paola Ramírez, a student killed by colectivos[1][2][3] during the 2017 protests
DateLate 2000s and early 2010s[4][5] – present
Location
Venezuela
Caused by
StatusOngoing
Parties
Lead figures

The situation is believed to be by far the worst economic crisis in Venezuela's history, and is also the worst facing a country in peacetime since the mid-20th century. The crisis is often considered to be more severe than that of the United States during the Great Depression, the 1985–1994 Brazilian economic crisis, or the 2008–2009 hyperinflation in Zimbabwe.[8] Other writers have also compared aspects of the crisis, such as unemployment and GDP contraction, to that of Bosnia and Herzegovina after the 1992–1995 Bosnian War, and those in Russia, Cuba and Albania following the collapse of the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.[9][10]

On 2 June 2010, Chávez declared an "economic war" due to increasing shortages in Venezuela. The crisis intensified under the Maduro government, growing more severe as a result of low oil prices in early 2015,[11] and a drop in Venezuela's oil production from lack of maintenance and investment.[12] In January 2016, the opposition-led National Assembly declared a "health humanitarian crisis".[13] The government failed to cut spending in the face of falling oil revenues, and has dealt with the crisis by denying its existence,[14] as well as violently repressing opposition.[12][15] Extrajudicial killings by the Venezuelan government became common, with the United Nations (UN) reporting 5,287 killings by the Special Action Forces in 2017, with at least another 1,569 killings recorded in the first six months of 2019, stating that some of the killings were "done as a reprisal for [the victims'] participation in anti-government demonstrations."[16] Political corruption, chronic shortages of food and medicine, closure of businesses, unemployment, deterioration of productivity, authoritarianism, human rights violations, gross economic mismanagement and high dependence on oil have also contributed to the worsening crisis.[17][18]

As a response to human rights abuses, the degradation in the rule of law, and corruption, the European Union, the Lima Group, the United States and other countries have applied individual sanctions against government officials and members of both the military and security forces.[19] The United States would later extend its sanctions to the petroleum sector. Supporters of Chávez and Maduro said that the problems result from an "economic war" on Venezuela,[20] falling oil prices, international sanctions,[21] and the country's business elite, while critics of the government say the cause is years of economic mismanagement and corruption.[22] Most observers cite anti-democratic governance,[23][24] corruption,[17][25] and mismanagement of the economy as causes of the crisis.[18][26] Others attribute the crisis to the "socialist",[27][28][29][30] "populist",[31][32][33][34] or "hyper-populist" nature of the government's policies,[35] and the use of these policies to maintain political power.[36][37][38] National and international analysts and economists stated that the crisis is not the result of a conflict, natural disaster, or sanctions, but rather of the consequences of populist policies and corrupt practices that began under the Chávez administration's Bolivarian Revolution and continued under the Maduro administration.[39][40]

The crisis has affected the life of the average Venezuelan on all levels. By 2017, hunger had escalated to the point where almost seventy-five percent of the population had lost an average of over 8 kg (over 19 lbs) in weight[a] and more than half did not have enough income to meet their basic food needs.[42] A UN report estimated in March 2019 that 94% of Venezuelans lived in poverty,[43][44] and by 2021 almost twenty percent of Venezuelans (5.4 million) had left their country.[45][46] The UN analysis estimates in 2019 that 25% of Venezuelans need some form of humanitarian assistance. Venezuela led the world in murder rates, with 81.4 per 100,000 people killed in 2018, making it the third most violent country in the world.[47] Following increased international sanctions throughout 2019, the Maduro government abandoned policies established by Chávez such as price and currency controls, which resulted in the country seeing a temporary rebound from economic decline before COVID-19 entered Venezuela the following year.[48][49] As a response to the devaluation of the official bolívar currency, by 2019 the population increasingly started relying on US dollars for transactions.[50]

According to the national Living Conditions Survey (ENCOVI), by 2021 94.5% of the population was living in poverty based on income, out of which 76.6% lived under extreme poverty, the highest figure ever recorded in the country.[51] In 2022, after the implementation of mild economic liberalization, poverty decreased in Venezuela and the country's economy grew for the first time in eight years. Despite these improvements, Venezuela continues to have the highest rate of inequality in the Americas. Although food shortages and hyperinflation have largely ended, inflation remains high in Venezuela.[52]

Background edit

Chávez presidency edit

After attempting a coup d'état in 1992 and being pardoned by President Rafael Caldera,[53] Hugo Chávez was elected president and maintained the presidency from 1999 until his death in 2013. Increasing oil prices in the early 2000s led to levels of funds not seen in Venezuela since the 1980s. Chávez established Bolivarian missions, aimed at providing public services to improve economic, cultural, and social conditions.[54][55][56][57] According to Corrales and Penfold, "aid was disbursed to some of the poor and, more gravely, in a way that ended up helping the president and his allies and cronies more than anyone else". Nonetheless, poverty was cut more than 20 percent between 2002 and 2008.[58] The Missions entailed the construction of thousands of free medical clinics for the poor,[54] and the enactment of food[56] and housing subsidies.[55] A 2010 OAS report[59] indicated achievements in addressing illiteracy, healthcare and poverty,[60] and economic and social advances.[61] The quality of life for Venezuelans had also improved according to a UN Index.[62] Teresa A. Meade wrote that Chávez's popularity strongly depended "on the lower classes who have benefited from these health initiatives and similar policies."[63] According to Chosun Ilbo, Venezuela began to face economic difficulties due to Chávez's populist policies.[64] On 2 June 2010, Chávez declared an "economic war" due to increasing shortages in Venezuela.[4]

Political corruption, chronic shortages of food and medicine, closure of businesses, unemployment, deterioration of productivity, authoritarianism, human rights violations, gross economic mismanagement and high dependence on oil have also contributed to the worsening crisis.[65][41][66]

The social works initiated by Chávez's government relied on oil products, the keystone of the Venezuelan economy, leading to Dutch disease according to Javier Corrales.[b][67][68] By the early 2010s, economic actions taken by Chávez's government during the preceding decade, such as overspending[69][70][67][71] and price controls,[56][72] became unsustainable. Venezuela's economy faltered while poverty,[62][73] inflation[74] and shortages in Venezuela increased. According to Martinez Lázaro, professor of economics at the IE Business School in Madrid, the economic woes Venezuela continued to suffer under Maduro would have occurred even if Chávez were still in power.[75] In early 2013, shortly after Chávez's death, Foreign Policy stated that whoever succeeded Chávez would "inherit one of the most dysfunctional economies in the Americas—and just as the bill for the deceased leader's policies comes due."[67]

Maduro presidency edit

 
Diosdado Cabello beside Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores

Following Chávez's death in 2013, Nicolás Maduro became president after defeating his opponent Henrique Capriles Radonski by 235,000 votes, a 1.5% margin.[76] Maduro continued most of the existing economic policies of his predecessor Chávez. Upon entering the presidency, his administration faced a high inflation rate and large shortages of goods,[77][78][79] problems left over from Chávez's policies.[67][69][70][80]

Maduro said capitalist speculation had driven high rates of inflation and created widespread shortages of basic necessities. He enacted economic measures against political opponents, who he and loyalists stated were behind an international economic conspiracy.[81][clarification needed] Maduro was criticized[by whom?] for concentrating on public opinion, instead of tending to practical issues which economists had warned about, or creating ideas to improve Venezuela's economic prospects.[82]

By 2014, Venezuela had entered an economic recession[83] and by 2016, the country had an inflation rate of 800%, the highest in its history.[84][85]

The crisis intensified under the Maduro government, growing more severe as a result of low oil prices in early 2015,[11] and a drop in Venezuela's oil production from lack of maintenance and investment.[7] The government failed to cut spending in the face of falling oil revenues, and has dealt with the crisis by denying its existence[14] and violently repressing opposition.[7][15] Extrajudicial killings by the Venezuelan government became common, with the United Nations (UN) reporting 5,287 killings by the Special Action Forces (FAES) in 2017, with at least another 1,569 killings recorded in the first six months of 2019; the UN had "reasonable grounds to believe that many of these killings constitute extrajudicial executions" and characterized the security operations as "aimed at neutralizing, repressing and criminalizing political opponents and people critical of the government". The UN also stated that the Special Action Forces "would plant arms and drugs and fire their weapons against the walls or in the air to suggest a confrontation and to show the victim had resisted authority" and that some of the killings were "done as a reprisal for [the victims'] participation in anti-government demonstrations."[16]

In January 2016, the National Assembly declared a "health humanitarian crisis" given the "serious shortage of medicines, medical supplies and deterioration of humanitarian infrastructure", asking Maduro's government to "guarantee immediate access to the list of essential medicines that are basic and indispensable and that must be accessible at all times."[13] In August, Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon declared that there was a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela caused by the lack of basic needs, including food, water, sanitation and clothing.[86] Before the 2019 presidential crisis, the Maduro government denied several offers of aid, stating that there was not a humanitarian crisis and that such claims were used to justify foreign intervention.[87] Maduro's refusal of aid worsened the effects of Venezuela's crisis.[87]

In March 2019, The Wall Street Journal said that "Mr. Maduro has long used food and other government handouts to pressure impoverished Venezuelans to attend pro-government rallies and to support him during elections as the country's economic meltdown has intensified."[88] In 2019, The Economist wrote that the Maduro government had obtained "extra money from selling gold (both from illegal mines and from its reserves) and narcotics".[89]

Elections and protests since 2017 edit

 
Venezuelans demonstrating during the 2016 Venezuelan protests
 
Number of protests in Venezuela per year
 
Juan Guaidó during the 2019 Venezuelan uprising

Since 2010, Venezuela has been suffering a socioeconomic crisis under Maduro, and briefly under his predecessor, Chávez.[15][80][90] As a result of discontent with the government, in the 2015 parliamentary election the opposition was elected to the majority in the National Assembly,[91] after which the outgoing (lame duck) National Assembly—consisting of Bolivarian officials—filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, the highest court in Venezuela, with Maduro allies.[91][92]

Maduro disavowed the National Assembly in 2017 leading to the 2017 Venezuelan constitutional crisis;[93][94] as of 2018, some considered the National Assembly the only "legitimate" institution left in the country,[c] and human rights organizations said there were no independent institutional checks on presidential power.[d] Following the constitutional crisis and the push to ban opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles from politics for 15 years, protests grew to their most "combative" since they began in 2014. During the protests, the Mother of all Protests involved between 2.5 million and 6 million protesters.[105] On 1 May 2017 following a month of protests that resulted in at least 29 dead, Maduro called for a constituent assembly that would draft a new constitution to replace the 1999 Venezuela Constitution created under Chávez.[106] He invoked Article 347, and stated that his call for a new constitution was necessary to counter the actions of the opposition. The members of the Constituent Assembly would not be elected in open elections, but selected from social organizations loyal to Maduro.[106] It would also allow him to stay in power during the interregnum and skip the 2018 presidential elections, as the process would take at least two years.[107]

Many countries considered these actions a bid by Maduro to stay in power indefinitely,[108] and over 40 countries stated that they would not recognize the 2017 Constituent National Assembly (ANC),[109][110] along with supranational bodies such as the European Union,[111] Mercosur[112] and the OAS.[113] The Democratic Unity Roundtable—the opposition to the incumbent ruling party—boycotted the election, saying that the ANC was "a trick to keep [the incumbent ruling party] in power".[114] Since the opposition did not participate in the election, the incumbent Great Patriotic Pole, dominated by the United Socialist Party of Venezuela, won almost all seats in the assembly by default.[115] Maduro's allies—such as Bolivia, El Salvador, Cuba, Nicaragua, Russia and Syria[116]—discouraged foreign intervention in Venezuelan politics and congratulated the president.[117]

The ANC was sworn in on 4 August 2017,[118] and the next day declared itself to be the government branch with supreme power in Venezuela, banning the opposition-led National Assembly from performing actions that would interfere with the assembly while continuing to pass measures in "support and solidarity" with President Maduro, effectively stripping the National Assembly of all its powers.[119]

In February 2018 Maduro called presidential elections, four months before the prescribed date.[120] There were many irregularities, including the banning from standing of several major opposition parties. Maduro was declared the winner in May 2018. Many said the elections were invalid.[121] Politicians both internally and internationally said Maduro was not legitimately elected,[122] and considered him an ineffective dictator.[123] In the months leading up to his 10 January 2019 inauguration, Maduro was pressured to step down by nations and bodies including the Lima Group (excluding Mexico), the United States, and the OAS; this pressure was increased after the new National Assembly of Venezuela was sworn in on 5 January 2019.[124][125]

The 2019 presidential crisis came to a head when the National Assembly stated that the results of the May 2018 presidential election were invalid and declared National Assembly president Juan Guaidó to be the acting president, citing several clauses of the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution.[126][127]

Corruption edit

Corruption is high in Venezuela according to the Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index and is prevalent at many levels of society.[65] While corruption is difficult to measure reliably, in 2018 Transparency International ranked Venezuela among the top 13 most corrupt countries out of 180 measured, tied with Iraq, but ahead of Afghanistan, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea, North Korea, Libya, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.[128] A 2016 poll found that 73% of Venezuelans believed their police were corrupt.[129] Latinobarómetro's 2018 report said that 65% of Venezuelans believed their president was involved in corruption, and 64% believed that government officials were corrupt.[130][131] Discontent with corruption was cited by opposition-aligned groups as one of the reasons for the 2014 Venezuelan protests.[132] A once wealthy country, Venezuela's economy was driven into political and economic crisis by corruption and mismanagement.[133]

Basic needs edit

Poverty edit

The Wall Street Journal reported in March 2019 that poverty was double that of 2014.[134] A study from Andrés Bello Catholic University indicated that by 2019 at least 8 million Venezuelans did not have enough to eat.[134] A UN report estimated in March 2019 that 94% of Venezuelans live in poverty, and that one quarter of Venezuelans need some form of humanitarian assistance.[135]

According to the Living Conditions Survey by the Andrés Bello Catholic University (Encovi in Spanish, Encuesta de Condiciones de Vida), by 2021 94.5% of the population was in poverty based on income, out of which 76.6% lived under extreme poverty, the highest figure ever recorded in the country.[51]

Food and water edit

More than 70% of Venezuela's food is imported;[136] Venezuela became so dependent on food imports that it could no longer afford when the price of oil dropped in 2014. Chávez gave the military control of food, and nationalized much of the industry, which was then neglected, leading to production shortages. With a "diminished food supply", Maduro put "generals in charge of everything from butter to rice".[137] With the military in charge of food, food trafficking became profitable, bribes and corruption common, and food did not reach the needy. The government imports most of the food the country needs, it is controlled by the military, and the price paid for food is higher than justified by market prices. Venezuelans were spending "all day waiting in lines" to buy rationed food, "pediatric wards filled up with underweight children, and formerly middle-class adults began picking through rubbish bins for scraps".[137]

 
A group of Venezuelans eating garbage on the streets of Caracas in May 2018

Several other factors have led to shortages: imports over the two years until the end of 2017 declined by two-thirds; hyperinflation has made food too costly for many Venezuelans; and for those who depend on food boxes supplied by the government, "these do not reach all Venezuelans who need them, provision of boxes is intermittent, and receipt is often linked to political support of the government".[136]

Corruption became a problem in the distribution of food. The operations director at one food import business says "he pays off a long roster of military officials for each shipment of food he brings in from ... the US. It's an unbroken chain of bribery from when your ship comes in until the food is driven out in trucks."[137] A National Guard lieutenant denies this charge, saying corruption would be worse if the military were not involved; government and military officials say the opposition is overstating the corruption problem for their own benefit.[137] Retired General Antonio Rivero said that "Maduro is trying to prevent soldiers from going hungry and being tempted to participate in an uprising against an increasingly unpopular government", adding that using the military to control food distribution has "drained the feeling of rebellion from the armed forces" by giving soldiers access to food denied others, with the resulting corruption increasing shortages for the general public.[137]

The colectivos are also involved in food trafficking, selling food on the black market; a colectivo leader told InSight Crime that trafficking food and medicine is as profitable as drug-running, but carries less risk.[138] With shadowy connections to the government, The Washington Post says "some have been put in charge of the distribution of government food packages in poor areas—giving them control over hungry neighborhoods."[139]

The Associated Press reports that people gather every evening in downtown Caracas in search of food thrown out on a sidewalk; the people are typically unemployed, but are "frequently joined by small business owners, college students and pensioners—people who consider themselves middle class even though their living standards have long ago been pulverized by triple-digit inflation, food shortages and a collapsing currency".[140] A waste collection official in Maracaibo reported that most of the trash bags he received had been gone through by people searching for food.[141] One dump reports finding parts of dismembered animals, like "dogs, cats, donkeys, horses and pigeons" and there is evidence that people are eating wildlife such as anteaters, flamingos, vultures and lizards.[141]

"Hunger, malnutrition, and severe food shortages are widespread in all Venezuela", according to Human Rights Watch.[142] Doctors at 21 public hospitals in 17 Venezuelan states told The New York Times in 2017 that "their emergency rooms were being overwhelmed by children with severe malnutrition—a condition they had rarely encountered before the economic crisis began", and that "hundreds have died". The government has responded with "a near-total blackout of health statistics, and by creating a culture in which doctors are often afraid to register cases and deaths that may be associated with the government's failures".[143]

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN said that less than 5% of Venezuelans were undernourished between 2008 and 2013, but that number had more than doubled, to almost 12% from 2015 and 2017, representing 3.7 million people.[142] A 2016 survey found that almost three-quarters of the population said that, because of improper nutrition, they had lost on average 8.7 kg (19.4 lbs)[41] and 64% said they lost 11 kg (24 lbs) in 2017.[144][145] A 2016 Venebarometro poll of 1,200 Venezuelans found almost half are no longer able to eat three daily meals; the government blames this on an "economic war" they say is waged by the opposition.[140]

A UN report said that because of lack of water and sanitation, 4.3 million Venezuelans needed assistance in 2019.[135]

During the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts which started on 7 March, the water distribution system also had shortages. José de Viana, an engineer and former president of Hidrocapital, the municipal water company in Caracas, said that 90% of the thermoelectric plants that work as a backup if power fails are not operational because of lack of maintenance, or they have been simply disconnected,[146] and that "the most important population centers in the country [had] zero water supply for more than four days".[147] Analysts said that two-thirds of Venezuela's population (20 million people) were without water, partially or completely, in the weeks after the blackouts.[146] People swarmed the polluted Guaire River in the center of Caracas to fill plastic containers with contaminated water, or collected water from streams at El Ávila National Park.[148] Others tried to catch water from the city's sewer drains.[149] In the state of Lara people bathed in the sewers.[150] The head of the infectious disease department at the University Hospital of Caracas, María Eugenia Landaeta said that, without access to clean water, the chance of people contracting bacterial infections increased, and that doctors had seen during the blackouts "surges in diarrhea, typhoid fever and hepatitis A",[146] while non-sterile water and lack of hygiene was contributing to postpartum infections.[146] The University Hospital goes months without dependable water or power supply, and depends on water tanks and power generators.[146]

The crisis has affected the life of the average Venezuelan on all levels. By 2017, hunger had escalated to the point where almost seventy-five percent of the population had lost an average of over 8 kg (over 19 lbs) in weight[e] and more than half did not have enough income to meet their basic food needs.[151] An UN report estimated in March 2019 that 94% of Venezuelans lived in poverty,[135][44] and by 2021 almost twenty percent of Venezuelans (5.4 million) had left their country.[45][46] The UN analysis estimates in 2019 that 25% of Venezuelans need some form of humanitarian assistance. Venezuela led the world in murder rates, with 81.4 per 100,000 people killed in 2018, making it the third most violent country in the world.[152] Following increased international sanctions throughout 2019, the Maduro government abandoned policies established by Chávez such as price and currency controls, which resulted in the country seeing a temporary rebound from economic decline before COVID-19 entered Venezuela the following year.[48][153] As a response to the devaluation of the official bolívar currency, by 2019 the population increasingly started relying on US dollars for transactions. Maduro described dollarization as an "escape valve" that helps the recovery of the country, the spread of productive forces in the country and the economy. However, Maduro said that the Venezuelan bolívar remained as the national currency.[50]

Health care edit

 
Healthcare spending by percentage of Venezuela's GDP[154]

During the Bolivarian Revolution, the government began providing free healthcare, with Cuban medical professionals providing aid. The government's failure to concentrate on healthcare and a reduction in spending on healthcare, along with unchecked government corruption resulted in avoidable deaths due to severe shortages of medical supplies and equipment, and the emigration of medical professionals to other countries.[155][156]

Venezuela's reliance on imported goods and the complicated exchange rates initiated under Chávez led to increasing shortages during the late 2000s and into the 2010s that affected the availability of medicines and medical equipment in the country.[156] Associated Press says the government stopped publishing medical statistics in 2010.[157] The Health Minister changed multiple times during Chávez's presidency. According to a high-ranking official of Venezuela's Health Ministry, the ministers were treated as scapegoats whenever issues with public health arose in Venezuela.[156] He also said that officials of the Health Ministry engaged in corruption to enrich themselves by selling goods intended for public healthcare to others.[156]

Early in the Maduro presidency, the government could not supply enough money for medical supplies among healthcare providers, with the president of the Venezuelan Medical Federation saying that 9 of 10 large hospitals had only 7% of required supplies and private doctors reporting numbers of patients that are "impossible" to count "dying from easily treatable illnesses when Venezuela's downward economic slide accelerated after Chávez's death".[157] Many Venezuelans died avoidable deaths with medical professionals having scarce resources and using methods that were replaced decades ago.[155] In February 2014, doctors at the University of Caracas Medical Hospital stopped performing surgeries due to the lack of supplies, even though nearly 3,000 people required surgery.[158]

By early 2015, only 35% of hospital beds were available and 50% of operating rooms could not function due to the lack of resources.[155][156] In March 2015, a Venezuelan NGO, Red de Medicos por la Salud, reported that there was a 68% shortage of surgical supplies and a 70% shortage of medicines in Venezuelan pharmacies.[156] In 2018, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) reported that approximately one-third (22,000 of 66,138) of registered physicians left Venezuela as of 2014.[136] Rosemary DiCarlo from the UN said that 40% of medical professionals had left Venezuela and supplies of medicine were at 20% of levels needed.[159] The Venezuelan Medical Federation said that doctors were leaving the public health care system because of shortages of drugs and equipment and poor pay. In August 2015 Human Rights Watch said "We have rarely seen access to essential medicines deteriorate as quickly as it has in Venezuela except in war zones."[160] In 2015, the government reported that a third of patients admitted to public hospitals died.[161] The medications of individuals who die are re-distributed through small-scale and local efforts, with the help of the families of the deceased, to try to supply surviving patients.[162]

One study of 6,500 households by three of the main universities in Venezuela found that "74% of the population had lost on average nineteen pounds in 2016".[10] In April 2017 Venezuela's health ministry reported that maternal mortality jumped by 65% in 2016 and that the number of infant deaths rose by 30%.[163] It also said that the number of cases of malaria was up by 76%.[164] Shortly after Minister of Health Antonieta Caporale released in 2017 this data, and health statistics showing increases in 2016 infant and maternal mortality and infectious diseases, Maduro fired her and replaced the physician with a pharmacist close to vice-president Tareck El Aissami, Luis López Chejade.[136][165] The publications were removed from the Ministry's website, and no further health data has been made available, although the government had produced health bulletins for several decades.[136]

In March 2019, The Wall Street Journal reported that the "collapse of Venezuela's health system, once one of the best in Latin America, has led to a surge in infant and maternal mortality rates and a return of rare diseases that were considered all but eradicated. Health officials say malaria, yellow fever, diphtheria, dengue and tuberculosis are now spreading from Venezuela to neighboring countries as Venezuelan refugees surge over borders."[88] The United Nations estimated in 2019 that 2.8 million Venezuelans have healthcare needs, 300,000 are at risk of dying with cancer, diabetes or HIV as they have not had access to medicine for more than a year, and preventable diseases like diphtheria, malaria, measles and tuberculosis are rising in 2019, along with hepatitis A, because of sanitation and lack of access to water.[135] The April 2019 HRW/Johns Hopkins report showed this rise in infectious and preventable diseases, as well as increasing malnutrition, infant and maternal death, and undertreatment of HIV.[166] Inflation and medicine shortages have meant that patients are asked to bring their own food, water and soap, and medical supplies including scalpels and syringes.[136][167] In August 2019, as part of regional efforts to help Venezuelan migrants, the United States promised that it will provide thousands of doses of HIV medication to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS and to treat those who have it.[168]

2019 Human Rights Watch/Johns Hopkins report edit

 
Venezuelans protesting in 2017 for medicine due to the shortages in Venezuela

In April 2019, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health published the results of a joint, year-long research project in a report entitled "Venezuela's humanitarian emergency: Large-scale UN response needed to address health and food crises".[166][142] Combined with data from the World Health Organization (WHO), the PAHO[166] and Venezuelan sources,[142] the report was based on 156 interviews[136] with Venezuelan emigrants to Colombia and Brazil, officials from relief and humanitarian organizations, Venezuelan health care professionals,[169] and UN and government officials from Brazil and Colombia.[142] Most of the interviews occurred in July or August 2018 in visits by the experts to the Venezuelan border towns of Cúcuta, Colombia and Boa Vista or Pacaraima, Brazil.[136]

The Washington Post stated that the HRW/Johns Hopkins report "paints an extremely grim picture of life in Venezuela, whose once-prosperous economy has imploded because of mismanagement and corruption under Maduro";[169] it documents rising maternal and infant death, spread of preventable diseases, food insecurity, and child malnutrition.[142] HRW declared that the "combination of severe medicine and food shortages ... with the spread of disease ... amounts to a complex humanitarian emergency that requires a full-scale response by the United Nations secretary-general."[142] The Washington Post states that the report describes a healthcare system that is in "utter collapse", with diseases that are preventable via vaccination spreading, and "dramatic surges" in infectious diseases once eradicated in Venezuela.[169]

The economic crisis in Venezuela started around 2010, and the health crisis followed by two years and significantly worsened in 2017, but the situation in 2019 "is even more dismal than researchers expected".[167] Paul Spiegel, MD, who was the editor and reviewer of the report said, "Venezuela is a middle-income country with a previously strong infrastructure, so just to see this incredible decline ... in such a short period of time is quite astonishing."[167] Alberto Paniz-Mondolfi, a doctor in Barquisimeto, Venezuela who is a member of the Venezuelan National Academy of Medicine, told NPR that the report gave an accurate, thorough and timely depiction of the medical situation in his country; he had no affiliation with the report, but said that he had seen cases where there were not even catheters for hooking up children who appeared to have malnutrition for intravenous therapy.[167] Spiegel adds that, because of the infrastructure and trained personnel in Venezuela, aid can be distributed quickly once delivered to Venezuela.[167]

Maduro administration response
Maduro administration on humanitarian crisis

On May 16, 2018, President Maduro said that "everything [that has been said] about measles and diphtheria is a lie, we vaccinate the whole community for free" and that "with regards to food, Venezuela has unique policies, which have enabled us to carry on with a program allowing us to maintain levels of food that are necessary for the people." Days later, the undersecretary of health, Indhriana Parada, gave a speech at WHO highlighting the "achievements" of the Venezuelan health system. She said that "in Venezuela there is no humanitarian crisis" and that "Venezuela guarantees access to basic medicines to the most vulnerable groups through distribution policies." In the case of malaria, she said that government measures had "reduced incidence by 50 percent".


"Venezuela's humanitarian emergency: Large-scale UN response needed to address health and food crises".[136]

The Maduro administration does not publish health statistics,[157][167] but rather it "paint[s] a rosy picture of its health care system".[167] The Guardian reported Maduro's response to the country's health care crisis as "inadequate".[166] "Because of the intransigence of President Nicolás Maduro—who has blamed deprivations on US sanctions and refused to allow anything beyond a trickle of assistance to enter the country"—aid has not been delivered quickly enough.[169] Reuters reported that "Maduro says there is no crisis and no need for humanitarian aid, blaming U.S. sanctions for the country's economic problems."[170] Venezuela's Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza did not respond to a letter asking for Venezuela's "views regarding the extent of the crisis and the policies it was implementing to address it" before the HRW/Johns Hopkins report was published.[136]

The HRW summary of the HRW/Johns Hopkins report said, "The Venezuelan authorities during the presidency of Nicolás Maduro have proven unable to stem the crisis, and have in fact exacerbated it through their efforts to suppress information about the scale and urgency of the problems."[142] The Associated Press said Maduro "suppress[es] information" and has made the problem worse.[171] The Americas director for HRW, José Miguel Vivanco said, "Venezuelan authorities publicly minimise and suppress information about the crisis, and harass and retaliate against those who collect data or speak out about it, while also doing far too little to alleviate it."[166] The report discusses a teaching physician who said "residents are threatened with being expelled from the program or their hospital if they include a malnutrition diagnosis in medical records", causing malnutrition to be understated in Venezuelan data.[136]

The report states that "many analysts have argued that the government's own policies have played a role in causing the economic crisis ... However, under the presidency of Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan government has denied the crisis, hidden health statistics and data, harassed health professionals who speak out about the reality on the ground, and made it harder for sufficient humanitarian assistance to reach the Venezuelan people. Through these policies and practices, authorities have contributed to the worsening humanitarian crisis documented in this report."[136] The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) is a multilateral treaty ratified by Venezuela; it commits its parties to "the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health", and the right to an adequate "standard of living" and "adequate food".[136] The Constitution of Venezuela provides for the right to health.[f][136] The HRW/Johns Hopkins report states that, facing deteriorating health conditions, the government's suppression of information and actions against those speaking about the crisis "represent a violation of Venezuela's obligations to respect, protect, and fulfill the right to health" to which Venezuelans are entitled from both the ICESCR treaty and their Constitution.[136]

Following the April HRW/Johns Hopkins report, and amid announcements from the United Nations about the scale of the humanitarian crisis, along with increasing international pressure, Maduro met with the Red Cross, and it announced it would triple its budget for aid to Venezuela.[173] The increased aid would focus in four areas: the migration crisis, the health care system collapse, water and sanitation, and prisons and detention centers.[173] Maduro, for the first time, indicated he was prepared to accept international aid—although denying a humanitarian crisis exists.[174] The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is "suffering from an economic collapse",[88] and The Guardian reported that Maduro's stance has softened in the face of increasing pressure.[173] Guaidó said the acceptance of humanitarian aid was the "result of our pressure and insistence",[88] and called on Venezuelans to "stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for 'corrupt' purposes".[175]

Infectious and preventable diseases edit

 
From less than 36,000 cases in 2009, to 414,000 cases of malaria in Venezuela in 2017[142]

In 1961, Venezuela was the first country declared free of malaria.[176] In 2009, the WHO reported there were less than 36,000 cases of malaria in Venezuela.[142] In 2013, Venezuela registered a new high in the number of cases of malaria in the past 50 years, and by 2014, was the only country in Latin America where the incidence of malaria was increasing, allegedly in part due to illegal mining;[g] medical shortages in the country hampered treatment.[177] By 2016, Venezuela's malaria-prevention program had collapsed, and there were more than a hundred thousand cases of malaria yearly.[176] In 2017, there were 414,000 confirmed cases of malaria, according to the WHO.[142][167]

Other preventable diseases that "were rare or nonexistent before the economic crisis, have surged",[167] including diphtheria, measles, and tuberculosis. "Venezuela did not experience a single case of diphtheria between 2006 and 2015"; according to the HRW/Johns Hopkins report, since mid-2016, 1,500 of the 2,500 suspected cases have been confirmed.[169][142] Between 2008 and 2015, there was one recorded case of measles, in 2012; since June 2017, 6,200 of the 9,300 reported cases have been confirmed.[142][169] The highest rate of tuberculosis in four decades was reached in 2017.[167] In 2014, there were 6,000 reported cases of tuberculosis; preliminary data shows more than 13,000 for 2017.[142]

In 2014, shortages of antiretroviral medicines to treat HIV/AIDS affected about 50,000 Venezuelans, potentially causing thousands of Venezuelans with HIV to develop AIDS.[178] In 2018, PAHO estimated that 90% of Venezuelans who had HIV and were registered by the government—69,308 of the 79,467 registered[167]—were not receiving antiretroviral treatment.[142][169] The PAHO report estimated that in six years, new HIV cases grew by 24% through 2016, after which the government stopped providing data.[167] NPR reported: "New HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths have increased sharply, in large part because the vast majority of HIV-positive Venezuelans no longer have access to antiretroviral medications."[167] Because of a shortage of HIV test kits, there may be more people who have HIV but are not aware.[167] The HRW/Johns Hopkins report says: "Venezuela is the only country in the world where large numbers of individuals living with HIV have been forced to discontinue their treatment as a result of the lack of availability of antiretroviral (ARV) medicines."[136]

In late 2014, Venezuelans began saying that due to shortages of medicines, it was hard to find acetaminophen to help alleviate symptoms of the newly introduced chikungunya virus, a potentially lethal mosquito-borne disease.[179] In September 2014, the Venezuelan government stated that 400 Venezuelans were infected with chikungunya;[180] the Central University of Venezuela stated that there could be between 65,000 and 117,000 Venezuelans infected.[181] In August 2015 independent health monitors said that there were more than two million people infected with chikungunya while the government said there were 36,000 cases.[160]

COVID-19 pandemic edit

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which reached Venezuela in March 2020, costs for services such as internet and telephone lines rose between 80% and 749%,[182] further limiting access to these utilities. Shortages of beds and essential medical equipment, such as latex gloves and antibiotics, have severely limited the capabilities of the country's medical infrastructure.[183][184]

In April 2020 the Venezuelan government asked the Bank of England to sell $US1.02 billion of the Venezuelan gold reserves held by the bank to help the government fund its response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This was followed on 14 May by a legal claim by the Venezuelan Central Bank (BCV) asking the Bank of England to send the proceeds of the sale of gold to the United Nations Development Programme. The claim stated that the funds would then be used to buy healthcare equipment, medicine, and food to address the country's "COVID-19 emergency".[185] The UK Foreign Office had previously agreed to a request from the Trump administration to block the release of Venezuela's gold.[186] In July 2020, the UK High Court ruled that the gold could not be released to the BCV because the UK government recognised Juan Guaidó as the "constitutional interim president of Venezuela". However, in October 2020, an appeals court overturned the High Court decision and asked the UK Foreign Office to clarify who it recognised as president of Venezuela. The Guardian wrote that the position of the UK government was unclear as it "maintains full consular and diplomatic relations with the Venezuela government".[186] [needs update]

Women, maternal and infant edit

In 2016, infant mortality increased 30% in one year, to 11,466 deaths of children under the age of one.[187][167] By 2019, the UN reported that infant mortality had "soared".[159] "Venezuela is the only South American country where infant mortality has returned to levels last seen in the 1990s", according to the HRW/Johns Hopkins report.[142] Maternal mortality also increased 65% in one year, to 756 deaths.[167][187]

Abortion is illegal in Venezuela;[188] the director of a large family planning clinic in Venezuela indicated that more women are arranging for permanent sterilization, and that more are presenting with "complications from clandestine abortions".[136] One of the causes, according to the Venezuelan Association for Alternative Sexual Education, is the severe shortage of oral and injectable contraceptives and intrauterine devices.[188]

The HRW/Johns Hopkins report states that the more than 454,000 Venezuelan women who have emigrated to Colombia face 'threats of sexual exploitation and abuse, trafficking, and sexual and reproductive rights violations"; violence based on gender accounted for more than 12% of 2018 health-care events, and indigenous women may be at higher risk.[136]

Venezuelan women emigrating are at risk for becoming sex trafficking targets virtually anywhere they flee to. Cases of trafficking in Peru, the United States, Spain, and Colombia display the highest numbers.[189]

Pregnancy and motherhood edit

Due to lack of medical supplies, food and medical care in Venezuelan hospitals, many pregnant women in Venezuela are crossing the border into neighboring countries to give birth.[190] Lack of basic medicine and equipment is causing preventable deaths and maternity is a very high risk for women, especially since there are no blood banks in the event of excessive bleeding.[191] Hospitals frequently have water and electricity outages and only 7% of emergency services are fully operative.[192] Maternal mortality is estimated to have increased by 65% from 2013 to 2016, and unsafe abortions have contributed to 20% of preventable maternal deaths.[191] According to Amnesty International, causes of the increase in maternal deaths include a lack of medical personnel and supplies like anticoagulants, scar healing cream, painkillers, antibiotics, antiseptics, and other tools and equipment.[193]

Statelessness edit

Cúcuta, a city on the Colombian-Venezuela border, has received 14,000 Venezuelan patients at the Erasmo Meoz University Hospital since 2016 and is expecting to receive even more.[192] In this hospital, 75% of the newborns born in the first two months of the year 2019 were Venezuelans.[194] The situation has strained the budget of these hospitals, putting Erasmo Meoz 14 million dollars into debt.[194] While Colombia is the most impacted since it shares a border, women are also traveling to Brazil to give birth.[195] The number of births of Venezuelan babies attended to in Boa Vista, Brazil, has increased from 700 in 2014 to 50,000 in 2017.[195] Venezuelan mothers have also been fleeing to neighboring Peru and Ecuador.[196][197] For Colombian citizenship it is required that Colombian citizens be born to at least one Colombian parent or be born to foreign parents who meet residence requirements and are eligible to become citizens.[198] Due to the influx of Venezuelan babies being born in Colombia and the Venezuelan government's inability to issue citizenship, Colombia has introduced a new measure that will give these Colombian-born newborns Colombian citizenship to avoid 'statelessness'.[194] The measure went into effect August 2019 and includes babies of Venezuelan parents born in Colombia starting in January 2015, having given citizenship to approximately 27,000 babies born in Colombia over the past four years.[194]

Mental health edit

Following the Bolivarian Revolution, the rate of suicide among Venezuelans quadrupled over two decades, with hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans dying from suicide during the period according to the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence.[199] As a result of the crisis, stressors resulting in suicide included economic burden, hunger and loneliness due to the emigration of relatives.[199]

In 2015, concerns about shortages and inflation overtook violent crime as Venezuelans' main worry for the first time in years according to pollster Datanálisis. The chief executive of Datanálisis, Luis Vicente Leon, said that Venezuelans had greater concerns over shortages and became preoccupied with the difficulties surrounding them instead. Eldar Shafir, author and American behavioral scientist, said that the psychological "obsession" with finding scarce goods in Venezuela is because the rarity of the item makes it "precious".[200]

In 2016, reporters from The New York Times visited six psychiatric wards across the Venezuela at the invitation of doctors; all reported shortages of medicine and even food. In the investigation, they reported that El Pampero Hospital had not employed a psychiatrist in two years, and that it only had running water for only a few hours a day. The hospital, the article said, also suffered from shortages of basic personal-care and cleaning supplies, such as soap, shampoo, toothpaste or toilet paper. The nurses declared that without sedatives, they had to restrain patients or lock them in isolation cells to keep them from harming themselves. The reporters also noted that the government had denied that its public hospitals were suffering from shortages, and had refused multiple offers of international medical aid.[201]

Despite the threat of violent protests, the economic crisis affected children more than violence. Abel Saraiba, a psychologist with children's rights organization Cecodap said in 2017, "We have children from a very early age who are having to think about how to survive", with half of her young clients requiring treatment because of the crisis. Children are often forced to stand in food lines or beg with their parents, while the games they play with other children revolve around finding food.[202] Friends of the Child Foundation psychologist Ninoska Zambrano said that children are offering sexual services for food. Zambrano said "Families are doing things that not only lead them to break physically, but in general, socially, we are being morally broken".[203]

In 2017, suicide increased by 67% among the elderly and 18% among minors; by 2018, reports emerged of a rapidly increasing suicide rate due to the stressors surrounding the crisis.[204]

Medical care and elections edit

Mission Barrio Adentro was a program established by Chávez to bring medical care to poor neighborhoods; it was staffed by Cubans that were sent to Venezuela in exchange for petroleum. The New York Times interviewed sixteen Cuban medical professionals in 2019 who had worked for Barrio Adentro prior to the 2018 Venezuelan presidential elections; all sixteen revealed that they were required to participate in voting fraud.[205] Some of the Cubans said that "command centers" for elections were placed near clinics to facilitate "dispatching doctors to pressure residents".[205] Some tactics reported by the Cubans were unrelated to their profession: they were given counterfeit cards to vote even though they were not eligible voters, they witnessed vote tampering when officials opening ballot boxes and destroyed ballots, and they were told to instruct easily manipulated elderly patients in how to vote.[205]

But they also "described a system of deliberate political manipulation"; their services as medical professionals "were wielded to secure votes for the governing Socialist Party, often through coercion", they told The New York Times.[205] Facing a shortage of supplies and medicine, they were instructed to withhold treatment–even for emergencies–so supplies and treatment could be "doled out closer to the election, part of a national strategy to compel patients to vote for the government".[205] They reported that life-saving treatment was denied to patients who supported the opposition. As the election neared, they were sent door-to-door, on house visits with a political purpose: "to hand out medicine and enlist voters for Venezuela's Socialist Party".[205] Patients were warned that they could lose their medical care if they did not vote for the socialist party, and that, if Maduro lost, ties would be broken with Cuba, and Venezuelans would lose all medical care. Patients with chronic conditions, at risk of death if they couldn't get medicine, were a particular focus of these tactics. One said that government officials were posing as doctors to make these house calls before elections; 'We, the doctors, were asked to give our extra robes to people. The fake doctors were even giving out medicines, without knowing what they were or how to use them," he said.[205]

Housing edit

 
Slums in Caracas seen above El Paraíso tunnel

Since the mid-2000s during Chávez's presidency, Venezuela has had a housing crisis.[206] In 2005, the Venezuelan Construction Chamber (CVC) estimated that there was a shortage of 1.6 million homes, with only 10,000 of 120,000 promised homes constructed by Chávez's government despite billions of dollars in investments.[207] Poor Venezuelans attempted to construct homes on their own despite structural risks.[207]

By 2011, there was a housing shortage of 2 million homes, with nearly twenty prime developments being occupied by squatters following Chávez's call for the poor to occupy "unused land".[206][208] Up to 2011, only 500,000 homes were constructed during the Chávez administration, with over two-thirds of the new housing developments being built by private companies; his government provided about the same amount of housing as previous administrations.[208] Housing shortages were further exacerbated when private construction halted due to the fear of property expropriations and because of the government's inability to construct and provide housing.[206] Urban theorist and author Mike Davis said in July 2011 to The Guardian, "Despite official rhetoric, the Bolivarianist regime has undertaken no serious redistribution of wealth in the cities and oil revenues pay for too many other programmes and subsidies to leave room for new housing construction."[209] By 2012, a shortage of building materials also disrupted construction, with metal production at a 16-year low.[210] By the end of Chávez's presidency in 2013, the number of Venezuelans in inadequate housing had grown to 3 million.[210]

Under the Maduro government, housing shortages continued to worsen. Maduro announced in 2014 that due to the shortage of steel, abandoned cars and other vehicles would be acquired by the government and melted to provide rebar for housing.[210] In April 2014, Maduro ruled by decree that Venezuelans who owned three or more rental properties would be forced by the government to sell their rental units at a set price or they would face fines or have their property possessed by the government.[211] By 2016, residents of government-provided housing, who were usually supporters of the government, began protesting due to the lack of utilities and food.[212]

Social edit

Crime edit

 
Murder rate (murder per 100,000 citizens) from 1998 to 2018.
Sources: OVV,[213][214] PROVEA,[215][216] UN;[215][216][217] UN data is extrapolated between 2007 and 2012 because of missing data

Escalating violent crime, especially murder, had been called "perhaps the biggest concern" of Venezuelans during the crisis.[218] Venezuela had "by various measures, the world's highest violent-crime rate" in 2017, and almost none of crimes that were reported were prosecuted.[176] InSight Crime says the crisis has "all too often been obscured by the government's reluctance to release damning crime statistics".[219] The New Yorker reporter found that even stairwells in a public hospital were not safe from robbers, who preyed on staff and patients despite the large number of security forces guarding the hospital, saying this was because the police were assigned to contain journalists who might embarrass the government with exposés on the state of the hospital; they were not assigned to protect its occupants. The police allegedly collaborated with the robbers receiving a cut of what they stole.[176]

According to The U.S. Bureau of Diplomatic Security, street gang violence, "corrupt" underpaid police officers, "an inefficient and politicized judicial system", an extremely troubled prison system, and an increased widespread of weaponry has resulted in the majority of criminal activity in Venezuela, with murder being the crime committed the most.[220] The Bureau states that there were 73 daily violent deaths in 2018, and that the government "often attempts to refute or repudiate reports of increasing crime and murder rates; however, independent observers widely reject" the Venezuelan government's claims.[220] The government says there were 60 daily homicides in 2016, and 45 daily in 2015,[221] corresponding with Venezuela's downward economic spiral; the OVV says the numbers are higher.[221]

For 2015, the government says the rate of homicides was 70.1 per 100,000 people.[221] The Venezuelan Observatory of Violence (OVV) says the rate was 91.8 homicides per 100,000 people (in 2015, the comparative U.S. number was 4.9 per 100,000 inhabitants).[221] According to the World Bank, the 2016 homicide rate was 56 per 100,000, making Venezuela third in the world, after El Salvador and Honduras.[222] OVV data has 23,047 homicides committed in Venezuela in 2018, a rate of 81.4 per 100,000 people, with the decline being attributed to emigration.[222]

According to the Los Angeles Times,

... carjack gangs set up ambushes, sometimes laying down nail-embedded strips to puncture tires of vehicles ferrying potential quarry. Motorists speak matter-of-factly of spotting body parts along roadways. ... While most crime victims are poor, they also include members of the middle and upper classes and scores of police and military personnel killed each year, sometimes for their weapons. ... "Before the thieves would only rob you," is a common refrain here in the capital. "Now they kill you."[223]

As a response to the high rate of crime, the Venezuelan government banned private ownership of firearms by some individuals in 2012.[224][225][226] El País reported in 2014 that Chávez had years earlier assigned colectivos to be "the armed wing of the Bolivarian Revolution" for the Venezuelan government, giving them weapons, communication systems, motorcycles and surveillance equipment to exercise control in the hills of Caracas where police are forbidden entry.[227] In 2006, they received arms and funding from the state when they were brought under the government's community councils.[138] Chávez eliminated the Metropolitan Police in 2011, turning security over to the colectivos in some Caracas barrios.[138] Some weapons given to the groups include assault rifles, submachine guns and grenades.[227] Despite the Venezuelan government's statements saying that only official authorities can carry weapons for the defense of Venezuela, colectivos are armed with automatic rifles such as AK-47s, submachine guns, fragmentation grenades, and tear gas.[228][229]

 
Number of kidnappings in Venezuela 1989–2011.
Source: CICPC[230][231][232]
Note: Express kidnappings may not be included in data.

During the 2014 Venezuelan protests against Maduro, colectivos acted against the opposition protesters.[233] As the crisis intensified, armed gangs have taken control of cities.[8] The Civil Association for Citizen Control said that more than half of those killed during the protests were killed by colectivos.[234] Human Rights Watch described colectivos as "armed gangs who use violence with impunity" to harass political opponents of the Venezuelan government.[235][236] Amnesty International calls them "armed pro-government supporters who are tolerated or supported by the authorities".[237] During the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts in March, Maduro called on the armed paramilitary gangs, saying, "The time has come for active resistance".[238] As blackouts continued, on 31 March, citizens protested the lack of electricity and water in Caracas and other cities; Maduro called again on the colectivos, asking them "to defend the peace of every barrio, of every block".[239] Videos circulated on social media showing colectivos threatening protesters and shooting in the streets;[240] two protestors were shot.[239]

There is no reliable data on kidnapping in Venezuela and available data is considered an underestimate;[219][221] it is against the law to pay ransom, and according to criminologists, at least 80% of kidnappings are not reported for fear of retaliation,[220] or because relatives prefer to negotiate, hoping the hostage will be released and fearing they will be killed if authorities are contacted.[219][221] Available data underestimates the amount of express kidnapping, where victims are typically released in less than two days after relatives pay a quick ransom.[219][221] Most express kidnapping victims are released, but in 2016, 18 were killed.[219] At least 80% of kidnappings occur in a limited area around Caracas and including Miranda State. In the areas where most kidnappings occur, the government set up so-called "peace zones" where official police withdrew and gangs took over;[219] "experts say the government has armed these groups ... [who] ... control large territories, financed through extortion and the drug trade".[221]

Illegal mining creates pools of standing water that encourage mosquito breeding, a partial cause of the increase in malaria seen in Venezuela.[136]

The murder rate in Venezuela had also decreased significantly between 2017 and 2019. In 2018, Venezuela's murder rate–described as the highest in the world–had begun to decrease to 81.4 per 100,000 people according to the Venezuelan Violence Observatory (OVV), with the organization stating that this downward trend was due to the millions of Venezuelans that emigrated from the country at the time.[241] The murder rate declined even further to 60.3 in 2019.[242]

Human rights edit

 
Arbitrary detentions in Venezuela between 2014 and 2019 according to Foro Penal. Arrests by year in blue and total arrests in red.

Repression and politically motivated detentions have risen to record levels in 2019.[243] Foro Penal states that Venezuela has at least 900 political prisoners as of April 2019, with more arrests of people being held longer in poor conditions and on dubious charges. The human rights organization has documented more than 50 instances that include "sexual abuse, strangulation using plastic bags and the use of razor blades to cut detainees' feet".[243] In the first three months of 2019, Foro Penal says 1,712 people were arrested and about two-thirds of those were held for more than 48 hours, the threshold used to classify a detainee as a political prisoner.[243] Maduro calls those arrested members of "terrorist groups" and says his government will not hesitate to send them to prison. Juan Requesens and Roberto Marrero are examples of "purely political" arrests, according to their attorney.[243] Increasingly high numbers of the detainees are working-class people, who have been driven to protest by the crisis.[243]

The final published report addressed the extrajudicial executions, torture, forced disappearances and other human rights violations reportedly committed by Venezuelan security forces in the recent years.[244] Bachelet expressed her concerns for the "shockingly high" number of extrajudicial killings and urged for the dissolution of the FAES.[245] According to the report, 1,569 cases of executions as consequence as a result of "resistance to authority" were registered by the Venezuelan authorities from 1 January to 19 March.[245] Other 52 deaths that occurred during 2019 protests were attributed to colectivos.[246] The report also details how the Venezuelan government "aimed at neutralising, repressing and criminalising political opponents and people critical of the government" since 2016.[245]

On 16 September 2020, the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on Venezuela accused the Maduro government of crimes against humanity.[247]

On 15 February 2024, the Maduro government closed the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights office in Caracas after High Commissioner Volker Türk condemned the detention of activist Rocío San Miguel, demanding "her immediate release and respect for her right to legal defense". Maduro's government expelled its officials, giving them 72 hours to leave the country.[248]

Emigration edit

The exodus of millions of desperate impoverished Venezuelans to surrounding countries has been called "a risk for the entire region".[7] Millions of Venezuelan people have voluntarily emigrated from Venezuela during the Chávez and Maduro presidencies.[249][250] The crisis started during the Chávez presidency, but became much more pronounced during Maduro's term.[251] Emigration has been motivated by economic collapse, expansion of state control over the economy, high crime, high inflation, general uncertainty, a lack of hope for a change in government,[249][252] a failing public sector, and "shortages of basic necessities".[251] The PGA Group estimates more than 1.5 million Venezuelans emigrated in the 15 years between 1999 and 2014;[249] an estimated 1.8 million left in ten years through 2015.[253][254]

The UN said that in the first part of 2018, about 5,000 Venezuelans were leaving Venezuela daily.[255] A February 2019 UN reported estimated that 3.4 million Venezuelans have emigrated, and they expect another 1.9 million may emigrate in 2019.[135][255] The UN estimates 2.7 million have gone to the Caribbean and Latin America.[256][255] Most have gone to Colombia; estimates of Venezuelans emigrating to Colombia are 1.1 million, Peru 506,000, Chile 288,000, Ecuador 221,000, Argentina 130,000, and Brazil 96,000.[256] This is in contrast to Venezuela's high immigration rate during the 20th century.[250] Kevin Whitaker, the U.S. ambassador in Colombia, says, "Colombians, in their tens and hundreds of thousands, migrated to Venezuela in the '60s and '70s and '80s, when Venezuela was a wealthy country and Colombia was not so much. Now, more than 1 million Venezuelans, many of them since 2015, have gone to live in Colombia."[256]

Those who leave by foot are known as los caminantes (the walkers); the walk to Bogotá, Colombia is 560 kilometres (350 mi), and some walk hundreds of kilometres further, to Ecuador or Peru.[256] Alba Pereira, who helps feed and clothe about 800 walkers daily in Northern Colombia, said in 2019 she is seeing more sick, elderly and pregnant among the walkers.[256] The Colombian Red Cross has set up rest tents with food and water on the side of the roads for Venezuelans.[257] Venezuelans also cross into northern Brazil, where UNHCR has set up 10 shelters to house thousands of Venezuelans.[257] Images of Venezuelans fleeing the country by sea have raised symbolic comparisons to the images seen from the Cuban diaspora.[258]

In 1998, only 14 Venezuelans were granted U.S. asylum, and by September 1999, 1,086 Venezuelans were granted asylum according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.[259] The first wave of Venezuelan emigrants were wealthy and middle class Venezuelans concerned by Chávez's rhetoric of redistributing wealth to the poor;[258] the early exodus of college-educated people with capital caused a brain drain.[251]

Emigration especially increased during the Maduro presidency.[260] This second wave of emigration consisted of lower class Venezuelans suffering directly from the economic crisis facing the country; thus, the same individuals whom Chávez attempted to aid were now seeking to emigrate, driven by worsening economic conditions, scarcity of food and medicine, and rising rates of violent crime.[258] Tomás Pérez, who studies the Venezuelan diaspora at the Central University of Venezuela, said in 2018 that because "now everyone is poor", it is mostly poor leaving the country.[251] Carlos Malamud, from a Spanish think tank, said Maduro is "using migration as a political weapon against the opposition".[251] The scale of the crisis has surpassed in four years the Cuban exodus, in which 1.7 million emigrated over a period of sixty years; Malamud says "Latin American societies aren't prepared for such wide-scale arrivals".[251]

Impacting the health care crisis in Venezuela, health care professionals are emigrating; a primary factor driving emigration to Colombia is the lack of "medicines, supplies, health providers, and basic health services" in Venezuela.[136] Since 2017, the banking sector has seen 18,000 employees leave the country.[261]

Economic edit

Maduro's government stopped releasing social and economic indicators, so most data rely on estimates.[134] The Institute of International Finance (IIF) stated in March 2019 that "Venezuela's economic collapse is among the world's worst in recent history".[134] A chief economist of the IIF said the crisis resulted from "policy decisions, economic mismanagement, and political turmoil", saying it is on a scale that "one would only expect from extreme natural disasters or military confrontations".[134] The April 2019 International Monetary Fund (IMF) World Economic Outlook described Venezuela as being in a "wartime economy".[9] For the fifth consecutive year, Bloomberg rated Venezuela last on its misery index in 2019.[262] The government's main source of income is oil, with output "plummeting due to lack of investment, poor maintenance and neglect",[134] from which consultant Eduardo Fortuny expects will take 12 years to recover.[134]

As of 2020 the Venezuelan government has liberalized many socialist or redistributive economic policies—price and currency controls, stringent labor laws—and brought a rapprochement with members of the local business community—especially Lorenzo Mendoza of the iconic Empresas Polar conglomerate (who is no longer denounced as a "thief," a "parasite" and a "traitor"), in exchange for an abandonment of political opposition by Mendoza.[263] However, a "slight recovery" in economic activity in January 2020 reportedly "evaporated in February and March" due to "the fall in global oil prices and the coronavirus pandemic".[264]

Business and industry edit

 
Ratings for Venezuela from 1998 to 2017 by the U.S. Government-funded NGO Freedom House[265] (1 = free, 7 = not free)

A number of foreign firms have left the nation—often due to quarrels with the socialist government—including Smurfit Kappa, Clorox, Kimberly Clark and General Mills; the departures aggravate unemployment and shortages.[266] Before the effects of the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts, the number of multinational companies in the industrial city of Valencia in Carabobo State had dropped from 5,000 when Chávez became president to a tenth of that.[267]

Airline industry edit

Domestic airlines are having difficulties because of hyperinflation and parts shortages, and most international airlines have left the country.[268][269] Airlines from many countries ceased operating in Venezuela, making travel to the country difficult:[269] Air Canada became the first international airline to cease Venezuela operations in March 2014 and was followed by Alitalia in April 2015.[270]

Other airlines that have left are Aeroméxico, Avianca, Delta, Lufthansa, LATAM, and United Airlines.[271] According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the government of Venezuela has not paid US$3.8 billion to international airlines in an issue involving conversion of local currency to U.S. dollars.[271] Airlines have left for other reasons, including crime against flight crews and foreign passengers, stolen baggage, and problems with the quality of jet fuel and maintenance of runways.[272][273][274] Aerolíneas Argentinas left in 2017, citing security reasons,[269] and American Airlines, the last U.S. airline serving Venezuela, left on 15 March 2019, after its pilots refused to fly to Venezuela, citing safety issues.[275] Currently, the only North American airline flying to Venezuela is Sunwing Airlines, with seasonal service to Margarita Island and Punto Fijo.[citation needed]

Following the increasing economic partnership between Venezuela and Turkey in October 2016, Turkish Airlines started offering direct flights from December 2016 connecting between Caracas to Istanbul (via Havana, Cuba) in an effort to "link and expand contacts" between the two countries.[276]

Iranian airline Mahan Air (blacklisted by the U.S. government since 2011[277]) began direct flights to Caracas in April 2019,[278] "signifying a growing relationship between the two nations" according to Fox News.[277]

In May 2019, the United States Department of Transport and Department of Homeland Security suspended all flights between Venezuela and the United States, due to safety and security concerns.[279] The suspension affects mainly Venezuelan airlines flying to Miami, which are Avior Airlines, LASER Airlines and Estelar Latinoamérica.

Gross domestic product edit

Estimated to drop by 25% in 2019, the IMF said the contraction in Venezuela's GDP—the largest since the Libyan Civil War began in 2014—was affecting all of Latin America.[9]

In 2015 the Venezuelan economy contracted 5.7% and in 2016 it contracted 18.6% according to the Venezuelan central bank;[84] after that, the government stopped producing data.[134] Ecoanalítica, a Venezuelan consultant, told The Wall Street Journal that output had halved between 2016 and 2019.[134] The IMF and AGPV Asesores Económicos, a consulting firm based in Caracas, estimate that GDP shrunk to $80 billion in 2018 from $196 billion in 2013, making the economy smaller than Guatemala's or Ethiopia's.[134]

Inflation edit

 
Venezuela hyperinflation May 2018 - October 2019

The annual inflation rate for consumer prices has risen hundreds of thousands of percent during the crisis.[7] Inflation in Venezuela remained high during Chávez's presidency. By 2010, inflation removed any advancement of wage increases,[280] and by 2014 at 69%[281] it was the highest in the world.[282][283] In November 2016, Venezuela entered a period of hyperinflation,[284] with inflation reaching 4,000% in 2017;[144] the Venezuelan government "essentially stopped" producing inflation estimates in early 2018.[10] At the end of 2018, inflation had reached 1.35 million percent.[285]

In the 2017 Christmas season, some shops stopped using price tags since prices would inflate so quickly.[286] From 2017 to 2019, some Venezuelans became video game gold farmers and could be seen playing games such as RuneScape to sell in-game currency or characters for real currency; players could make more money than salaried workers by earning only a few dollars per day.[287][288] Some of these "gold farmers" will use cryptocurrencies as an intermediary currency before converting into Bolivares, as indicated in this interview.

In October 2018, the IMF estimated that inflation would reach 10,000,000% by the end of 2019.[289]

In early 2019, the monthly minimum salary was the equivalent of US$5.50 (18,000 sovereign bolivars)—less than the price of a Happy Meal at McDonald's.[9] Ecoanalitica estimated that prices jumped by 465% in the first two-and-a-half months of 2019.[134] The Wall Street Journal stated in March 2019 that the "main cause of hyperinflation is the central bank printing money to increase money supply, thus boosting domestic spending.", reporting that a teacher can buy a dozen eggs and two pounds of cheese with a month's wages.[134]

In May 2019, the Central Bank of Venezuela released economic data for the first time since 2015. According to the release, Venezuela's inflation rate was 274% in 2016, 863% in 2017 and 130,060% in 2018.[290] The new reports imply a contraction of more than half of the economy in five years, according to the Financial Times "one of the biggest contractions in Latin American history".[291] Sources quoted by Reuters, said that China may have asked Venezuela to release the data to bring Venezuela into compliance with the IMF and make it more difficult for the IMF to recognise Juan Guaidó during the presidential crisis.[292] The IMF said it was not able to assess the quality of the data as it had no contact with the Venezuelan government.[292]

Shortages edit

Shortages in Venezuela became prevalent after price controls were enacted according to the economic policy of the Hugo Chávez government.[79][78] Under the economic policy of the Nicolás Maduro government, greater shortages occurred due to the Venezuelan government's policy of withholding United States dollars from importers with price controls.[293] Some Venezuelans must search for food—occasionally resorting to eating wild fruit or garbage—wait in lines for hours and sometimes settle without having certain products.[140]

Unemployment edit

"Wartime economy"

[Venezuela's wartime economy has the] world's highest unemployment since end of Bosnian War in world's biggest contraction since 2014 start of Libyan Civil War

April 2019 International Monetary Fund (IMF) World Economic Outlook[9]

In January 2016 the unemployment rate was 18.1 percent[294] and the economy was the worst in the world according to the misery index.[66] Venezuela has not reported official unemployment figures since April 2016, when the rate was at 7.3 percent.[295]

Unemployment was forecasted to reach 44% for 2019; the IMF stated that this was the highest unemployment seen since the end of the Bosnian War in 1995.[9]

Venezuelan debt edit

In August 2017 President of the United States Donald Trump imposed sanctions on Venezuela[296] which banned transactions involving Venezuela's state debt including debt restructuring. The technical default period ended 13 November 2017 and Venezuela did not pay coupons on its dollar eurobonds, causing a cross-default on other dollar bonds. A committee consisting of the fifteen largest banks admitted default on state debt obligations which in turn entailed payments on CDS on 30 November.[297]

In November 2017, The Economist estimated Venezuela's debt at US$105 billion and its reserves at US$10 billion.[298] In 2018, Venezuela's debt grew to US$156 billion[299] and as of March 2019, its reserves had dropped to US$8 billion.[300]

With the exception of PDVSA's 2020 bonds,[301] as of January 2019, all of Venezuela's bonds are in default,[302] and Venezuela's government and state-owned companies owe nearly US$8 billion in unpaid interest and principal.[303] As of March 2019, the government and state-owned companies have US$150 billion in debt.[300]

Oil industry edit

By 2018 the political and economic troubles facing Venezuela had engulfed the El Tigre-San Tomé region, a key region for oil production in eastern Venezuela. Oil workers were fleeing the state-owned oil company as salaries could not keep up with hyperinflation, reducing families to starvation. Workers and criminals stripped vital oil industry equipment of anything valuable, ranging from pickup trucks to the copper wire within critical oil production components.[304] Oil facilities were neglected and unprotected, crippling oil production and leading to environmental damage.[305] As noted petroleum historian, expert, and former San Tomé resident Emma Brossard[306] stated in 2005, "Venezuelan oil fields had a depletion rate of 25 per cent annually [and] there had to be an investment of US$3.4 billion a year to keep up its production." "But since Chávez has become president there has been no investment."[307]

As of 2020 there were no longer any oil rigs searching for oil in Venezuela, and production has been "reduced to a trickle". Oil exports are expected to total $2.3 billion for 2020, continuing a decline of more than a decade.[308] Pollution from crude oil leaking from abandoned underwater wells and pipelines has caused serious damage to fishing and human health.[308]

In 2022, rising oil prices caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine led the World Oil Commission to start meetings with the Venezuelan Government to push oil production to have a control over the price.[citation needed]

Public opinion edit

A November 2016 Datincorp survey that asked Venezuelans living in urban areas which entity was responsible for the crisis, 59% blamed chavismo or the presidents (Chávez, 25%; Maduro 19%; Chavismo 15%) while others blamed the opposition (10%), entrepreneurs (4%) and the United States (2%).[309]

A September 2018 Meganálisis survey found that 85% of Venezuelans wanted Maduro to leave power immediately.[310] A November 2018 Datanálisis poll found that 54% of Venezuelans opposed a foreign military intervention to remove Maduro, while 35% supported an intervention. Instead, 63% supported a "negotiated settlement to remove Maduro".[311]

An 11–14 March 2019 survey of 1,100 people in 16 Venezuelan states and 32 cities by Meganálisis found that 89% of respondents wanted Maduro to leave the presidency.[312] A Datanálisis poll on 4 March 2019 found Maduro's approval rating at an all-time low of 14%.[313]

According to Datanálisis, in early 2019, 63% of Venezuelans believed that a change of government was possible. Fourteen months later, in May 2020, after the Macuto Bay raid, the percentage decreased to 20%.[314]

According to economists interviewed by The New York Times, the situation is by far the worst economic crisis in Venezuela's history, and is also the worst facing a country in peace time since the mid-20th century. The crisis is also more severe than that of the United States during the Great Depression, the 1985–1994 Brazilian economic crisis, or the 2008–2009 hyperinflation in Zimbabwe.[8] Other writers have also compared aspects of the crisis, such as unemployment and GDP contraction, to that of Bosnia and Herzegovina after the 1992–1995 Bosnian War, and those in Russia, Cuba and Albania following the collapse of the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.[9][10]

Reaction edit

Economic sanctions edit

The European Union, the Lima Group, the United States and other countries have applied individual sanctions against government officials and members of both the military and security forces as a response to human rights violations, corruption, degradation in the rule of law and repression of democracy.[19] The United States would later extend its sanctions to the petroleum sector.[315][316]

Economists have stated that shortages and high inflation in Venezuela began before US sanctions were directed towards the country.[317] The Wall Street Journal said that economists place the blame for Venezuela's economy shrinking by half on "Maduro's policies, including widespread nationalizations, out-of-control spending that sparked inflation, price controls that led to shortages, and widespread graft and mismanagement."[318] The Venezuelan government has stated that the United States is responsible for its economic collapse.[318] The HRW/Johns Hopkins report noted that most sanctions are "limited to canceling visas and freezing assets of key officials implicated in abuses and corruption. They in no way target the Venezuelan economy."[136] The report also stated that the 2017 ban on dealing in Venezuelan government stocks and bonds allows exceptions for food and medicine, and that the 28 January 2019 PDVSA sanctions could worsen the situation, although "the crisis precedes them".[136] The Washington Post stated that "the deprivation long predates recently imposed US sanctions".[169]

In 2011, the United States sanctioned Venezuela's state-owned oil company Petróleos de Venezuela. According to executives within the company as well as the Venezuelan government, the sanctions were mostly symbolic and had little effect (if any) on Venezuela's trade with the US since the company's sale of oil to the US and the operations of its US-based subsidiary Citgo were unaffected.[319] On 9 March 2015, Barack Obama signed and issued an executive order declaring Venezuela a national security threat and ordered sanctions against Venezuelan officials. The sanctions did not affect Venezuela's oil company and trade relations with the US continued.[320] In 2017, Trump's administration imposed additional economic sanctions on Venezuela.[321] In 2018, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) documented that "information gathered indicates that the socioeconomic crisis had been unfolding for several years prior to the imposition of these sanctions".[322]

According to The Wall Street Journal, new 2019 sanctions, aimed at depriving the Maduro government of petroleum revenues.[318] In 2019, former UN rapporteur Alfred de Zayas said that US sanctions on Venezuela were illegal as they constituted economic warfare and "could amount to 'crimes against humanity' under international law".[323] His report, which he says was ignored by the UN, was criticized by the Latin America and Caribbean programme director for the Crisis Group for neglecting to mention the impact of a "difficult business environment on the country", which the director said "was a symptom of Chavismo and the socialist governments' failures", and that "Venezuela could not recover under current government policies even if the sanctions were lifted."[323] Michelle Bachelet updated the situation in a 20 March oral report following the visit of a five-person delegation to Venezuela,[324] saying that the social and economic crisis was dramatically deteriorating, the government had not acknowledged or addressed the extent of the crisis, and she was concerned that although the "pervasive and devastating economic and social crisis began before the imposition of the first economic sanctions", the sanctions could worsen the situation.[324][325]

In February 2019, Jorge Arreaza, Maduro's Minister for Foreign Affairs, said he was forming a coalition of diplomats who "believe the U.S. and others are violating the U.N. charter against non-interference in member states". During the announcement, he was surrounded by diplomats from 16 other countries, including Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, and Cuba. Arreaza said the cost to the Venezuelan economy of the US blockade was over $30 billion.[326] Reporting on Arreaza's statements, the Associated Press said that Maduro was blocking aid, and "saying that Venezuelans are not beggars and that the move is part of a U.S.-led coup".[327]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, world leaders called for a suspension of economic sanctions, including against Venezuela and Iran, that have "increasingly become the pursuit of war by other means". The US responded by intensifying the sanctions against Venezuela.[328]

An October 2020 report published by the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) by Venezuelan economist Luis Oliveros found that "while Venezuela's economic crisis began before the first U.S. sectoral sanctions were imposed in 2017, these measures 'directly contributed to its deep decline, and to the further deterioration of the quality of life of Venezuelans' ". The report concluded that economic sanctions "have cost Venezuela's government as much as $31 billion since 2017"[329][330]

Alena Douhan, United Nations special rapporteur on the negative impact of unilateral coercive measures, was due to visit Venezuela in August 2020 to investigate the impact of international sanctions.[331] Before her visit, 66 Venezuelan NGOs (including PROVEA) asked Douhan in an open letter to consider the harmful impact of sanctions in the context of years of repression, corruption and economic mismanagement that predate the sanctions, and requested she meet independent press and civil society researchers.[332][333][334][335] She arrived on 31 January, and was welcomed on arrival by a government minister and the Venezuelan ambassador to the UN.[333] She declared on her preliminary findings as she left on 12 February:[336] that sanctions against Venezuela have had a "devastating" noticeable impact in both the economy and the population.[337] She said "the increasing number of unilateral sanctions imposed by United States, the European Union and other countries have exacerbated the economic and humanitarian calamities in Venezuela" but that Venezuela's economic decline "began in 2014 with the fall in oil prices" and that "mismanagement and corruption had also contributed." The government welcomed the report, while the opposition accused her of "playing into the hands of the regime" of Maduro.[338][339][340][341] Douhan was harshly criticized by the Venezuelan civil society,[342] and several non-governmental organizations pronounced themselves in social media with the hashtag "#Lacrisisfueprimero" (The crisis came first).[343][344][345]

Foreign involvement edit

 
On 18 February, President Trump urged Venezuela's military to abandon Nicolás Maduro or 'lose everything'.[346]

On 11 August 2017, President Trump said that he is "not going to rule out a military option" to confront the autocratic government of Nicolás Maduro and the deepening crisis in Venezuela.[347] Military Times said the unnamed aides told Trump it was not wise to even discuss a military solution due to the history of unpopular intervention in Latin America by the United States.[348] Venezuela's Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino criticized Trump for the statement, calling it "an act of supreme extremism" and "an act of madness". The Venezuelan communications minister, Ernesto Villegas, said Trump's words amounted to "an unprecedented threat to national sovereignty".[349]

Representatives of the United States were in contact with dissident Venezuelan military officers during 2017 and 2018 but declined to collaborate with them or provide assistance to them.[350] The opinion of other Latin American nations was split with respect to military intervention. Luis Almagro, the Secretary General of the Organization of American States, while visiting Colombia, did not rule out the potential benefit of the use of military force to intervene with the crisis. Canada, Colombia and Guyana, which are members of the Lima Group, refused to sign the organization's document rejecting military intervention in Venezuela.[351][352]

During the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis, allegations of potential United States military involvement began to circulate,[353] with military intervention in Venezuela was already being executed by the governments of Cuba and Russia.[353] According to professor Erick Langer of Georgetown University, while it was being discussed whether the United States would militarily intervene, "Cuba and Russia have already intervened".[353] Hundreds or thousands of Cuban security forces have allegedly been operating in Venezuela while professor Robert Ellis of United States Army War College described the between several dozen and 400 Wagner Group mercenaries provided by Russia as the "palace guard of Nicolás Maduro".[353] Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied the deployment of Russian mercenaries, calling it "fake news".[354] On 2 April 2019, the Russian Foreign Ministry rejected Trump's call to "get out" saying their 100 military servicemen now in Venezuela will support Maduro "for as long as needed".[355]

Humanitarian aid edit

 
Aid for Venezuela sent by the United States to Colombia
 
Location of the humanitarian aid points outside of Venezuela

Throughout the crisis, humanitarian aid was provided to Venezuelans in need both within Venezuela and abroad. In October 2018, the USNS Comfort departed for an eleven-week operation in Latin America, with a primary mission being to assist countries who received Venezuelan refugees who fled the crisis in Venezuela. The main goal was to relieve health systems in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and other nations which faced the arrival of thousands of Venezuelan migrants.[356]

At the end of January 2019, as the US prepared to bring aid across the border, the International Committee of the Red Cross warned the United States about the risk of delivering humanitarian aid without the approval of the government's security forces.[357] The UN similarly warned the US about politicising the crisis and using aid as a pawn in the power struggle.[358] Other humanitarian organisations also raised risks.[359]

On 23 February 2019, 14 trucks carrying 280 tons of humanitarian aid attempted to bring aid across the Simon Bolivar and Francisco de Paula Santander bridges from Colombia. There were clashes, with Venezuelan security forces reported to use tear gas attack in attempt to maintain a blockade of the border. Colombia said around 285 people were injured and at least two trucks set on fire.[360][361] CNN reported that the Venezuela government accused Guaidó supporters of burning the trucks and noted that "While a CNN team saw incendiary devices from police on the Venezuelan side of the border ignite the trucks, the network's journalists are unsure if the trucks were burned on purpose."[362] In March, The New York Times reported that footage showed that it was anti-Maduro protestors rather than Venezuelan security forces who were responsible for the burning trucks.[363][364] The New York Times reported that the trucks had been set on fire by anti-Maduro protester who threw a Molotov cocktail that hit one of the trucks.[364] Colombian foreign minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo rejected the claims by The New York Times that the Colombian government manipulated the video of the burning of the aid truck, insisting that Nicolás Maduro was responsible.[365] Responding when asked about the claims in a BBC interview, Juan Guaidó stressed that its findings suggested only a possible theory, that it was the newspaper's point of view and that a total of three trucks were burned, while the footage focused on one.[366] Journalist Karla Salcedo Flores denounced state-run Telesur for plagiarism and the manipulation of her photos for propaganda purposes after the network claimed protesters poured gasoline on the trucks.[367] Agence France-Presse published an investigation disproving Telesur's claims with the photos.[368] Bellingcat reported that since the open source evidence examined for its investigation does not show the moment of ignition, it is not possible to make a definitive determination regarding the cause of the fire.[369]

Franceso Rocca, president of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, announced on 29 March 2019 that the Red Cross was preparing to bring humanitarian aid to the country to help ease both the chronic hunger and the medical crisis.[370] The Guardian reported that Maduro had "long denied the existence of a humanitarian crisis, and on 23 February blocked an effort led by Guaidó to bring aid into the country", and that the Red Cross had "brokered a deal" between the Maduro and Guaidó administrations "indicating a seldom-seen middle ground between the two men".[371]

The Red Cross aid shipments were expected to begin within a few weeks, and the first shipment would help about 650,000 people;[371] simultaneously, a leaked UN report estimated that seven million Venezuelans were likely in need of humanitarian assistance.[166] During what The Wall Street Journal called "Latin America's worst humanitarian crisis ever", the "operation would rival Red Cross relief efforts in war-torn Syria, signaling the depth of Venezuela's crisis."[88] Rocca said the efforts would focus first on hospitals, including state-run facilities, and said the Red Cross was open to the possibility of delivering aid products stored on the Venezuelan borders with Colombia and Brazil.[175] He warned that the Red Cross would not accept any political interference,[175] and said the effort must be "independent, neutral, impartial and unhindered".[371]

Maduro and Arreaza met with representative of Red Cross International on 9 April to discuss the aid effort.[372] The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is "suffering from an economic collapse", adding that "until a few days ago, the government maintained there was no crisis and it didn't need outside help".[88] Guaidó said the acceptance of humanitarian aid was the "result of our pressure and insistence",[88] and called on Venezuelans to "stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for 'corrupt' purposes".[175]

The first Red Cross delivery of supplies for hospitals arrived on 16 April, offering an encouraging sign that the Maduro administration would allow more aid to enter.[373] Quoting Tamara Taraciuk—an expert at Human Rights Watch on Venezuela—who called the situation "a completely man-made crisis", The New York Times said the aid effort in Venezuela presented challenges regarding how to deliver aid in an "unprecedented political, economic and humanitarian crisis" that was "caused largely by the policies of a government intent on staying in power, rather than war or natural disaster".[374] Armed pro-government paramilitaries fired weapons to disrupt the first Red Cross delivery, and officials associated with Maduro's party told the Red Cross to leave.[374]

An April 2021 report by the inspector general at United States Agency for International Development found that the Trump administration had politicized the early 2019 humanitarian aid package and was motivated by regime change in Venezuela more so than ameliorating the humanitarian situation there.[375][376]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Venezuela's Living Conditions Survey (ENCOVI) found nearly 75% of the population had lost an average of at least 8.7 kg (19.4 lb) in weight due to a lack of proper nutrition.[41]
  2. ^ Javier Corrales says in Foreign Policy, "... excessive dependence on commodity exports can distort an economy in fundamental ways. One manifestation of this principle is what has come to be known as 'Dutch Disease' (named after the problems faced by the Netherlands as it reaped a windfall from North Sea oil in the 1970s). Dutch Disease occurs when a country that is excessively dependent on commodity exports experiences a price boom. The sudden inflow of foreign currency raises the demand for local currency, yielding an uncompetitive exchange rate. This overvalued exchange rate, if unaddressed, can kill the country's other exports as well as stimulating an avalanche of imports, which can hurt domestic producers."[67]
  3. ^ Sources reporting on claims of the National Assembly being the "only democratically elected" or "only legitimate" political body in Venezuela include: Financial Times,[95] the BBC,[96] Economic Times,[97] CTV,[98] Reuters agency,[99] CBC,[100] etc.
  4. ^ On unchecked power of the executive: Human Rights Watch 2018 report,[101] Human Rights Watch 2017 report,[102] Amnesty International,[103] and Amnesty International on opposition.[104]
  5. ^ Venezuela's Living Conditions Survey (ENCOVI) found nearly 75% of the population had lost an average of at least 8.7 kg (19.4 lb) in weight due to a lack of proper nutrition.[41]
  6. ^ Article 83: Health is a fundamental social right and the responsibility of the State, which shall guarantee it as part of the right to life. The State shall promote and develop policies oriented toward improving the quality of life, common welfare and access to services. All persons have the right to protection of health, as well as the duty to participate actively in the furtherance and protection of the same, and to comply with such health and hygiene measures as may be established by law, and in accordance with international conventions and treaties signed and ratified by the Republic.[172]
  7. ^ Illegal mining creates pools of standing water that encourage mosquito breeding, a partial cause of the increase in malaria seen in Venezuela.[136]

References edit

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  2. ^ (in Spanish). Venezuelan Observatory of Violence. 15 August 2017. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 23 March 2019. Allí cayó la joven de 23 años en medio de un enfrentamiento entre un vecino del sector y este grupo armado.
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crisis, venezuela, this, article, about, socioeconomic, political, crisis, venezuela, other, uses, venezuelan, crisis, disambiguation, ongoing, socioeconomic, political, crisis, began, venezuela, during, presidency, hugo, chávez, worsened, during, presidency, . This article is about the socioeconomic and political crisis in Venezuela For other uses see Venezuelan crisis disambiguation An ongoing socioeconomic and political crisis began in Venezuela during the presidency of Hugo Chavez and has worsened during the presidency of his successor Nicolas Maduro It has been marked by hyperinflation escalating starvation 6 disease crime and mortality rates resulting in massive emigration from the country 7 Crisis in VenezuelaTop to bottom left to right Hundreds of Venezuelans wait to seal their passports at an Ecuadorian customs house millions demonstrate during the Mother of All Marches in 2017 a man eating from garbage in Venezuela empty store shelves from shortages people queued to enter a store Paola Ramirez a student killed by colectivos 1 2 3 during the 2017 protestsDateLate 2000s and early 2010s 4 5 presentLocationVenezuelaCaused byBolivarian Revolution and presidency of Hugo Chavez Desire for Hugo Chavez to seek a third term as President of Venezuela Economic crisis caused by the failure of the country s economic policies Continued decline in oil prices since the financial crisis of 2007 2008StatusOngoingPartiesGPPSB PSUV PCV PPT MRT MUD AD PU PJ UNT VP LCRLead figuresHugo Chavez Nicolas Maduro Diosdado Cabello Delcy Rodriguez Tareck El Aissami Leopoldo Lopez Juan Guaido Henrique Capriles Henry Ramos Allup Julio BorgesThis article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information July 2023 The situation is believed to be by far the worst economic crisis in Venezuela s history and is also the worst facing a country in peacetime since the mid 20th century The crisis is often considered to be more severe than that of the United States during the Great Depression the 1985 1994 Brazilian economic crisis or the 2008 2009 hyperinflation in Zimbabwe 8 Other writers have also compared aspects of the crisis such as unemployment and GDP contraction to that of Bosnia and Herzegovina after the 1992 1995 Bosnian War and those in Russia Cuba and Albania following the collapse of the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 9 10 On 2 June 2010 Chavez declared an economic war due to increasing shortages in Venezuela The crisis intensified under the Maduro government growing more severe as a result of low oil prices in early 2015 11 and a drop in Venezuela s oil production from lack of maintenance and investment 12 In January 2016 the opposition led National Assembly declared a health humanitarian crisis 13 The government failed to cut spending in the face of falling oil revenues and has dealt with the crisis by denying its existence 14 as well as violently repressing opposition 12 15 Extrajudicial killings by the Venezuelan government became common with the United Nations UN reporting 5 287 killings by the Special Action Forces in 2017 with at least another 1 569 killings recorded in the first six months of 2019 stating that some of the killings were done as a reprisal for the victims participation in anti government demonstrations 16 Political corruption chronic shortages of food and medicine closure of businesses unemployment deterioration of productivity authoritarianism human rights violations gross economic mismanagement and high dependence on oil have also contributed to the worsening crisis 17 18 As a response to human rights abuses the degradation in the rule of law and corruption the European Union the Lima Group the United States and other countries have applied individual sanctions against government officials and members of both the military and security forces 19 The United States would later extend its sanctions to the petroleum sector Supporters of Chavez and Maduro said that the problems result from an economic war on Venezuela 20 falling oil prices international sanctions 21 and the country s business elite while critics of the government say the cause is years of economic mismanagement and corruption 22 Most observers cite anti democratic governance 23 24 corruption 17 25 and mismanagement of the economy as causes of the crisis 18 26 Others attribute the crisis to the socialist 27 28 29 30 populist 31 32 33 34 or hyper populist nature of the government s policies 35 and the use of these policies to maintain political power 36 37 38 National and international analysts and economists stated that the crisis is not the result of a conflict natural disaster or sanctions but rather of the consequences of populist policies and corrupt practices that began under the Chavez administration s Bolivarian Revolution and continued under the Maduro administration 39 40 The crisis has affected the life of the average Venezuelan on all levels By 2017 hunger had escalated to the point where almost seventy five percent of the population had lost an average of over 8 kg over 19 lbs in weight a and more than half did not have enough income to meet their basic food needs 42 A UN report estimated in March 2019 that 94 of Venezuelans lived in poverty 43 44 and by 2021 almost twenty percent of Venezuelans 5 4 million had left their country 45 46 The UN analysis estimates in 2019 that 25 of Venezuelans need some form of humanitarian assistance Venezuela led the world in murder rates with 81 4 per 100 000 people killed in 2018 making it the third most violent country in the world 47 Following increased international sanctions throughout 2019 the Maduro government abandoned policies established by Chavez such as price and currency controls which resulted in the country seeing a temporary rebound from economic decline before COVID 19 entered Venezuela the following year 48 49 As a response to the devaluation of the official bolivar currency by 2019 the population increasingly started relying on US dollars for transactions 50 According to the national Living Conditions Survey ENCOVI by 2021 94 5 of the population was living in poverty based on income out of which 76 6 lived under extreme poverty the highest figure ever recorded in the country 51 In 2022 after the implementation of mild economic liberalization poverty decreased in Venezuela and the country s economy grew for the first time in eight years Despite these improvements Venezuela continues to have the highest rate of inequality in the Americas Although food shortages and hyperinflation have largely ended inflation remains high in Venezuela 52 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Chavez presidency 1 2 Maduro presidency 1 3 Elections and protests since 2017 1 4 Corruption 2 Basic needs 2 1 Poverty 2 2 Food and water 2 3 Health care 2 3 1 2019 Human Rights Watch Johns Hopkins report 2 3 2 Infectious and preventable diseases 2 3 2 1 COVID 19 pandemic 2 3 3 Women maternal and infant 2 3 3 1 Pregnancy and motherhood 2 3 3 2 Statelessness 2 3 4 Mental health 2 3 5 Medical care and elections 2 4 Housing 3 Social 3 1 Crime 3 2 Human rights 3 3 Emigration 4 Economic 4 1 Business and industry 4 1 1 Airline industry 4 2 Gross domestic product 4 3 Inflation 4 4 Shortages 4 5 Unemployment 4 6 Venezuelan debt 4 7 Oil industry 5 Public opinion 6 Reaction 6 1 Economic sanctions 6 2 Foreign involvement 6 3 Humanitarian aid 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksBackground editSee also History of Venezuela 1999 present Chavez presidency edit After attempting a coup d etat in 1992 and being pardoned by President Rafael Caldera 53 Hugo Chavez was elected president and maintained the presidency from 1999 until his death in 2013 Increasing oil prices in the early 2000s led to levels of funds not seen in Venezuela since the 1980s Chavez established Bolivarian missions aimed at providing public services to improve economic cultural and social conditions 54 55 56 57 According to Corrales and Penfold aid was disbursed to some of the poor and more gravely in a way that ended up helping the president and his allies and cronies more than anyone else Nonetheless poverty was cut more than 20 percent between 2002 and 2008 58 The Missions entailed the construction of thousands of free medical clinics for the poor 54 and the enactment of food 56 and housing subsidies 55 A 2010 OAS report 59 indicated achievements in addressing illiteracy healthcare and poverty 60 and economic and social advances 61 The quality of life for Venezuelans had also improved according to a UN Index 62 Teresa A Meade wrote that Chavez s popularity strongly depended on the lower classes who have benefited from these health initiatives and similar policies 63 According to Chosun Ilbo Venezuela began to face economic difficulties due to Chavez s populist policies 64 On 2 June 2010 Chavez declared an economic war due to increasing shortages in Venezuela 4 Political corruption chronic shortages of food and medicine closure of businesses unemployment deterioration of productivity authoritarianism human rights violations gross economic mismanagement and high dependence on oil have also contributed to the worsening crisis 65 41 66 The social works initiated by Chavez s government relied on oil products the keystone of the Venezuelan economy leading to Dutch disease according to Javier Corrales b 67 68 By the early 2010s economic actions taken by Chavez s government during the preceding decade such as overspending 69 70 67 71 and price controls 56 72 became unsustainable Venezuela s economy faltered while poverty 62 73 inflation 74 and shortages in Venezuela increased According to Martinez Lazaro professor of economics at the IE Business School in Madrid the economic woes Venezuela continued to suffer under Maduro would have occurred even if Chavez were still in power 75 In early 2013 shortly after Chavez s death Foreign Policy stated that whoever succeeded Chavez would inherit one of the most dysfunctional economies in the Americas and just as the bill for the deceased leader s policies comes due 67 Maduro presidency edit nbsp Diosdado Cabello beside Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores Following Chavez s death in 2013 Nicolas Maduro became president after defeating his opponent Henrique Capriles Radonski by 235 000 votes a 1 5 margin 76 Maduro continued most of the existing economic policies of his predecessor Chavez Upon entering the presidency his administration faced a high inflation rate and large shortages of goods 77 78 79 problems left over from Chavez s policies 67 69 70 80 Maduro said capitalist speculation had driven high rates of inflation and created widespread shortages of basic necessities He enacted economic measures against political opponents who he and loyalists stated were behind an international economic conspiracy 81 clarification needed Maduro was criticized by whom for concentrating on public opinion instead of tending to practical issues which economists had warned about or creating ideas to improve Venezuela s economic prospects 82 By 2014 Venezuela had entered an economic recession 83 and by 2016 the country had an inflation rate of 800 the highest in its history 84 85 The crisis intensified under the Maduro government growing more severe as a result of low oil prices in early 2015 11 and a drop in Venezuela s oil production from lack of maintenance and investment 7 The government failed to cut spending in the face of falling oil revenues and has dealt with the crisis by denying its existence 14 and violently repressing opposition 7 15 Extrajudicial killings by the Venezuelan government became common with the United Nations UN reporting 5 287 killings by the Special Action Forces FAES in 2017 with at least another 1 569 killings recorded in the first six months of 2019 the UN had reasonable grounds to believe that many of these killings constitute extrajudicial executions and characterized the security operations as aimed at neutralizing repressing and criminalizing political opponents and people critical of the government The UN also stated that the Special Action Forces would plant arms and drugs and fire their weapons against the walls or in the air to suggest a confrontation and to show the victim had resisted authority and that some of the killings were done as a reprisal for the victims participation in anti government demonstrations 16 In January 2016 the National Assembly declared a health humanitarian crisis given the serious shortage of medicines medical supplies and deterioration of humanitarian infrastructure asking Maduro s government to guarantee immediate access to the list of essential medicines that are basic and indispensable and that must be accessible at all times 13 In August Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki moon declared that there was a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela caused by the lack of basic needs including food water sanitation and clothing 86 Before the 2019 presidential crisis the Maduro government denied several offers of aid stating that there was not a humanitarian crisis and that such claims were used to justify foreign intervention 87 Maduro s refusal of aid worsened the effects of Venezuela s crisis 87 In March 2019 The Wall Street Journal said that Mr Maduro has long used food and other government handouts to pressure impoverished Venezuelans to attend pro government rallies and to support him during elections as the country s economic meltdown has intensified 88 In 2019 The Economist wrote that the Maduro government had obtained extra money from selling gold both from illegal mines and from its reserves and narcotics 89 Elections and protests since 2017 edit Further information Venezuelan protests 2014 present 2017 Venezuelan Constituent Assembly election 2018 Venezuelan presidential election and Venezuelan presidential crisis nbsp Venezuelans demonstrating during the 2016 Venezuelan protests nbsp Number of protests in Venezuela per year nbsp Juan Guaido during the 2019 Venezuelan uprising Since 2010 Venezuela has been suffering a socioeconomic crisis under Maduro and briefly under his predecessor Chavez 15 80 90 As a result of discontent with the government in the 2015 parliamentary election the opposition was elected to the majority in the National Assembly 91 after which the outgoing lame duck National Assembly consisting of Bolivarian officials filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice the highest court in Venezuela with Maduro allies 91 92 Maduro disavowed the National Assembly in 2017 leading to the 2017 Venezuelan constitutional crisis 93 94 as of 2018 some considered the National Assembly the only legitimate institution left in the country c and human rights organizations said there were no independent institutional checks on presidential power d Following the constitutional crisis and the push to ban opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles from politics for 15 years protests grew to their most combative since they began in 2014 During the protests the Mother of all Protests involved between 2 5 million and 6 million protesters 105 On 1 May 2017 following a month of protests that resulted in at least 29 dead Maduro called for a constituent assembly that would draft a new constitution to replace the 1999 Venezuela Constitution created under Chavez 106 He invoked Article 347 and stated that his call for a new constitution was necessary to counter the actions of the opposition The members of the Constituent Assembly would not be elected in open elections but selected from social organizations loyal to Maduro 106 It would also allow him to stay in power during the interregnum and skip the 2018 presidential elections as the process would take at least two years 107 Many countries considered these actions a bid by Maduro to stay in power indefinitely 108 and over 40 countries stated that they would not recognize the 2017 Constituent National Assembly ANC 109 110 along with supranational bodies such as the European Union 111 Mercosur 112 and the OAS 113 The Democratic Unity Roundtable the opposition to the incumbent ruling party boycotted the election saying that the ANC was a trick to keep the incumbent ruling party in power 114 Since the opposition did not participate in the election the incumbent Great Patriotic Pole dominated by the United Socialist Party of Venezuela won almost all seats in the assembly by default 115 Maduro s allies such as Bolivia El Salvador Cuba Nicaragua Russia and Syria 116 discouraged foreign intervention in Venezuelan politics and congratulated the president 117 The ANC was sworn in on 4 August 2017 118 and the next day declared itself to be the government branch with supreme power in Venezuela banning the opposition led National Assembly from performing actions that would interfere with the assembly while continuing to pass measures in support and solidarity with President Maduro effectively stripping the National Assembly of all its powers 119 In February 2018 Maduro called presidential elections four months before the prescribed date 120 There were many irregularities including the banning from standing of several major opposition parties Maduro was declared the winner in May 2018 Many said the elections were invalid 121 Politicians both internally and internationally said Maduro was not legitimately elected 122 and considered him an ineffective dictator 123 In the months leading up to his 10 January 2019 inauguration Maduro was pressured to step down by nations and bodies including the Lima Group excluding Mexico the United States and the OAS this pressure was increased after the new National Assembly of Venezuela was sworn in on 5 January 2019 124 125 The 2019 presidential crisis came to a head when the National Assembly stated that the results of the May 2018 presidential election were invalid and declared National Assembly president Juan Guaido to be the acting president citing several clauses of the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution 126 127 Corruption edit Main article Corruption in Venezuela Corruption is high in Venezuela according to the Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index and is prevalent at many levels of society 65 While corruption is difficult to measure reliably in 2018 Transparency International ranked Venezuela among the top 13 most corrupt countries out of 180 measured tied with Iraq but ahead of Afghanistan Burundi Equatorial Guinea Guinea North Korea Libya Somalia South Sudan Sudan Syria and Yemen 128 A 2016 poll found that 73 of Venezuelans believed their police were corrupt 129 Latinobarometro s 2018 report said that 65 of Venezuelans believed their president was involved in corruption and 64 believed that government officials were corrupt 130 131 Discontent with corruption was cited by opposition aligned groups as one of the reasons for the 2014 Venezuelan protests 132 A once wealthy country Venezuela s economy was driven into political and economic crisis by corruption and mismanagement 133 Basic needs editPoverty edit The Wall Street Journal reported in March 2019 that poverty was double that of 2014 134 A study from Andres Bello Catholic University indicated that by 2019 at least 8 million Venezuelans did not have enough to eat 134 A UN report estimated in March 2019 that 94 of Venezuelans live in poverty and that one quarter of Venezuelans need some form of humanitarian assistance 135 According to the Living Conditions Survey by the Andres Bello Catholic University Encovi in Spanish Encuesta de Condiciones de Vida by 2021 94 5 of the population was in poverty based on income out of which 76 6 lived under extreme poverty the highest figure ever recorded in the country 51 Food and water edit More than 70 of Venezuela s food is imported 136 Venezuela became so dependent on food imports that it could no longer afford when the price of oil dropped in 2014 Chavez gave the military control of food and nationalized much of the industry which was then neglected leading to production shortages With a diminished food supply Maduro put generals in charge of everything from butter to rice 137 With the military in charge of food food trafficking became profitable bribes and corruption common and food did not reach the needy The government imports most of the food the country needs it is controlled by the military and the price paid for food is higher than justified by market prices Venezuelans were spending all day waiting in lines to buy rationed food pediatric wards filled up with underweight children and formerly middle class adults began picking through rubbish bins for scraps 137 nbsp A group of Venezuelans eating garbage on the streets of Caracas in May 2018 Several other factors have led to shortages imports over the two years until the end of 2017 declined by two thirds hyperinflation has made food too costly for many Venezuelans and for those who depend on food boxes supplied by the government these do not reach all Venezuelans who need them provision of boxes is intermittent and receipt is often linked to political support of the government 136 Corruption became a problem in the distribution of food The operations director at one food import business says he pays off a long roster of military officials for each shipment of food he brings in from the US It s an unbroken chain of bribery from when your ship comes in until the food is driven out in trucks 137 A National Guard lieutenant denies this charge saying corruption would be worse if the military were not involved government and military officials say the opposition is overstating the corruption problem for their own benefit 137 Retired General Antonio Rivero said that Maduro is trying to prevent soldiers from going hungry and being tempted to participate in an uprising against an increasingly unpopular government adding that using the military to control food distribution has drained the feeling of rebellion from the armed forces by giving soldiers access to food denied others with the resulting corruption increasing shortages for the general public 137 The colectivos are also involved in food trafficking selling food on the black market a colectivo leader told InSight Crime that trafficking food and medicine is as profitable as drug running but carries less risk 138 With shadowy connections to the government The Washington Post says some have been put in charge of the distribution of government food packages in poor areas giving them control over hungry neighborhoods 139 The Associated Press reports that people gather every evening in downtown Caracas in search of food thrown out on a sidewalk the people are typically unemployed but are frequently joined by small business owners college students and pensioners people who consider themselves middle class even though their living standards have long ago been pulverized by triple digit inflation food shortages and a collapsing currency 140 A waste collection official in Maracaibo reported that most of the trash bags he received had been gone through by people searching for food 141 One dump reports finding parts of dismembered animals like dogs cats donkeys horses and pigeons and there is evidence that people are eating wildlife such as anteaters flamingos vultures and lizards 141 Hunger malnutrition and severe food shortages are widespread in all Venezuela according to Human Rights Watch 142 Doctors at 21 public hospitals in 17 Venezuelan states told The New York Times in 2017 that their emergency rooms were being overwhelmed by children with severe malnutrition a condition they had rarely encountered before the economic crisis began and that hundreds have died The government has responded with a near total blackout of health statistics and by creating a culture in which doctors are often afraid to register cases and deaths that may be associated with the government s failures 143 The Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN said that less than 5 of Venezuelans were undernourished between 2008 and 2013 but that number had more than doubled to almost 12 from 2015 and 2017 representing 3 7 million people 142 A 2016 survey found that almost three quarters of the population said that because of improper nutrition they had lost on average 8 7 kg 19 4 lbs 41 and 64 said they lost 11 kg 24 lbs in 2017 144 145 A 2016 Venebarometro poll of 1 200 Venezuelans found almost half are no longer able to eat three daily meals the government blames this on an economic war they say is waged by the opposition 140 A UN report said that because of lack of water and sanitation 4 3 million Venezuelans needed assistance in 2019 135 During the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts which started on 7 March the water distribution system also had shortages Jose de Viana an engineer and former president of Hidrocapital the municipal water company in Caracas said that 90 of the thermoelectric plants that work as a backup if power fails are not operational because of lack of maintenance or they have been simply disconnected 146 and that the most important population centers in the country had zero water supply for more than four days 147 Analysts said that two thirds of Venezuela s population 20 million people were without water partially or completely in the weeks after the blackouts 146 People swarmed the polluted Guaire River in the center of Caracas to fill plastic containers with contaminated water or collected water from streams at El Avila National Park 148 Others tried to catch water from the city s sewer drains 149 In the state of Lara people bathed in the sewers 150 The head of the infectious disease department at the University Hospital of Caracas Maria Eugenia Landaeta said that without access to clean water the chance of people contracting bacterial infections increased and that doctors had seen during the blackouts surges in diarrhea typhoid fever and hepatitis A 146 while non sterile water and lack of hygiene was contributing to postpartum infections 146 The University Hospital goes months without dependable water or power supply and depends on water tanks and power generators 146 The crisis has affected the life of the average Venezuelan on all levels By 2017 hunger had escalated to the point where almost seventy five percent of the population had lost an average of over 8 kg over 19 lbs in weight e and more than half did not have enough income to meet their basic food needs 151 An UN report estimated in March 2019 that 94 of Venezuelans lived in poverty 135 44 and by 2021 almost twenty percent of Venezuelans 5 4 million had left their country 45 46 The UN analysis estimates in 2019 that 25 of Venezuelans need some form of humanitarian assistance Venezuela led the world in murder rates with 81 4 per 100 000 people killed in 2018 making it the third most violent country in the world 152 Following increased international sanctions throughout 2019 the Maduro government abandoned policies established by Chavez such as price and currency controls which resulted in the country seeing a temporary rebound from economic decline before COVID 19 entered Venezuela the following year 48 153 As a response to the devaluation of the official bolivar currency by 2019 the population increasingly started relying on US dollars for transactions Maduro described dollarization as an escape valve that helps the recovery of the country the spread of productive forces in the country and the economy However Maduro said that the Venezuelan bolivar remained as the national currency 50 Health care edit Main article Health care in Venezuela nbsp Healthcare spending by percentage of Venezuela s GDP 154 During the Bolivarian Revolution the government began providing free healthcare with Cuban medical professionals providing aid The government s failure to concentrate on healthcare and a reduction in spending on healthcare along with unchecked government corruption resulted in avoidable deaths due to severe shortages of medical supplies and equipment and the emigration of medical professionals to other countries 155 156 Venezuela s reliance on imported goods and the complicated exchange rates initiated under Chavez led to increasing shortages during the late 2000s and into the 2010s that affected the availability of medicines and medical equipment in the country 156 Associated Press says the government stopped publishing medical statistics in 2010 157 The Health Minister changed multiple times during Chavez s presidency According to a high ranking official of Venezuela s Health Ministry the ministers were treated as scapegoats whenever issues with public health arose in Venezuela 156 He also said that officials of the Health Ministry engaged in corruption to enrich themselves by selling goods intended for public healthcare to others 156 Early in the Maduro presidency the government could not supply enough money for medical supplies among healthcare providers with the president of the Venezuelan Medical Federation saying that 9 of 10 large hospitals had only 7 of required supplies and private doctors reporting numbers of patients that are impossible to count dying from easily treatable illnesses when Venezuela s downward economic slide accelerated after Chavez s death 157 Many Venezuelans died avoidable deaths with medical professionals having scarce resources and using methods that were replaced decades ago 155 In February 2014 doctors at the University of Caracas Medical Hospital stopped performing surgeries due to the lack of supplies even though nearly 3 000 people required surgery 158 By early 2015 only 35 of hospital beds were available and 50 of operating rooms could not function due to the lack of resources 155 156 In March 2015 a Venezuelan NGO Red de Medicos por la Salud reported that there was a 68 shortage of surgical supplies and a 70 shortage of medicines in Venezuelan pharmacies 156 In 2018 the Pan American Health Organization PAHO reported that approximately one third 22 000 of 66 138 of registered physicians left Venezuela as of 2014 136 Rosemary DiCarlo from the UN said that 40 of medical professionals had left Venezuela and supplies of medicine were at 20 of levels needed 159 The Venezuelan Medical Federation said that doctors were leaving the public health care system because of shortages of drugs and equipment and poor pay In August 2015 Human Rights Watch said We have rarely seen access to essential medicines deteriorate as quickly as it has in Venezuela except in war zones 160 In 2015 the government reported that a third of patients admitted to public hospitals died 161 The medications of individuals who die are re distributed through small scale and local efforts with the help of the families of the deceased to try to supply surviving patients 162 One study of 6 500 households by three of the main universities in Venezuela found that 74 of the population had lost on average nineteen pounds in 2016 10 In April 2017 Venezuela s health ministry reported that maternal mortality jumped by 65 in 2016 and that the number of infant deaths rose by 30 163 It also said that the number of cases of malaria was up by 76 164 Shortly after Minister of Health Antonieta Caporale released in 2017 this data and health statistics showing increases in 2016 infant and maternal mortality and infectious diseases Maduro fired her and replaced the physician with a pharmacist close to vice president Tareck El Aissami Luis Lopez Chejade 136 165 The publications were removed from the Ministry s website and no further health data has been made available although the government had produced health bulletins for several decades 136 In March 2019 The Wall Street Journal reported that the collapse of Venezuela s health system once one of the best in Latin America has led to a surge in infant and maternal mortality rates and a return of rare diseases that were considered all but eradicated Health officials say malaria yellow fever diphtheria dengue and tuberculosis are now spreading from Venezuela to neighboring countries as Venezuelan refugees surge over borders 88 The United Nations estimated in 2019 that 2 8 million Venezuelans have healthcare needs 300 000 are at risk of dying with cancer diabetes or HIV as they have not had access to medicine for more than a year and preventable diseases like diphtheria malaria measles and tuberculosis are rising in 2019 along with hepatitis A because of sanitation and lack of access to water 135 The April 2019 HRW Johns Hopkins report showed this rise in infectious and preventable diseases as well as increasing malnutrition infant and maternal death and undertreatment of HIV 166 Inflation and medicine shortages have meant that patients are asked to bring their own food water and soap and medical supplies including scalpels and syringes 136 167 In August 2019 as part of regional efforts to help Venezuelan migrants the United States promised that it will provide thousands of doses of HIV medication to prevent the spread of HIV AIDS and to treat those who have it 168 2019 Human Rights Watch Johns Hopkins report edit nbsp Venezuelans protesting in 2017 for medicine due to the shortages in Venezuela In April 2019 Human Rights Watch HRW and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health published the results of a joint year long research project in a report entitled Venezuela s humanitarian emergency Large scale UN response needed to address health and food crises 166 142 Combined with data from the World Health Organization WHO the PAHO 166 and Venezuelan sources 142 the report was based on 156 interviews 136 with Venezuelan emigrants to Colombia and Brazil officials from relief and humanitarian organizations Venezuelan health care professionals 169 and UN and government officials from Brazil and Colombia 142 Most of the interviews occurred in July or August 2018 in visits by the experts to the Venezuelan border towns of Cucuta Colombia and Boa Vista or Pacaraima Brazil 136 The Washington Post stated that the HRW Johns Hopkins report paints an extremely grim picture of life in Venezuela whose once prosperous economy has imploded because of mismanagement and corruption under Maduro 169 it documents rising maternal and infant death spread of preventable diseases food insecurity and child malnutrition 142 HRW declared that the combination of severe medicine and food shortages with the spread of disease amounts to a complex humanitarian emergency that requires a full scale response by the United Nations secretary general 142 The Washington Post states that the report describes a healthcare system that is in utter collapse with diseases that are preventable via vaccination spreading and dramatic surges in infectious diseases once eradicated in Venezuela 169 The economic crisis in Venezuela started around 2010 and the health crisis followed by two years and significantly worsened in 2017 but the situation in 2019 is even more dismal than researchers expected 167 Paul Spiegel MD who was the editor and reviewer of the report said Venezuela is a middle income country with a previously strong infrastructure so just to see this incredible decline in such a short period of time is quite astonishing 167 Alberto Paniz Mondolfi a doctor in Barquisimeto Venezuela who is a member of the Venezuelan National Academy of Medicine told NPR that the report gave an accurate thorough and timely depiction of the medical situation in his country he had no affiliation with the report but said that he had seen cases where there were not even catheters for hooking up children who appeared to have malnutrition for intravenous therapy 167 Spiegel adds that because of the infrastructure and trained personnel in Venezuela aid can be distributed quickly once delivered to Venezuela 167 Maduro administration response Maduro administration on humanitarian crisis On May 16 2018 President Maduro said that everything that has been said about measles and diphtheria is a lie we vaccinate the whole community for free and that with regards to food Venezuela has unique policies which have enabled us to carry on with a program allowing us to maintain levels of food that are necessary for the people Days later the undersecretary of health Indhriana Parada gave a speech at WHO highlighting the achievements of the Venezuelan health system She said that in Venezuela there is no humanitarian crisis and that Venezuela guarantees access to basic medicines to the most vulnerable groups through distribution policies In the case of malaria she said that government measures had reduced incidence by 50 percent Venezuela s humanitarian emergency Large scale UN response needed to address health and food crises 136 The Maduro administration does not publish health statistics 157 167 but rather it paint s a rosy picture of its health care system 167 The Guardian reported Maduro s response to the country s health care crisis as inadequate 166 Because of the intransigence of President Nicolas Maduro who has blamed deprivations on US sanctions and refused to allow anything beyond a trickle of assistance to enter the country aid has not been delivered quickly enough 169 Reuters reported that Maduro says there is no crisis and no need for humanitarian aid blaming U S sanctions for the country s economic problems 170 Venezuela s Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza did not respond to a letter asking for Venezuela s views regarding the extent of the crisis and the policies it was implementing to address it before the HRW Johns Hopkins report was published 136 The HRW summary of the HRW Johns Hopkins report said The Venezuelan authorities during the presidency of Nicolas Maduro have proven unable to stem the crisis and have in fact exacerbated it through their efforts to suppress information about the scale and urgency of the problems 142 The Associated Press said Maduro suppress es information and has made the problem worse 171 The Americas director for HRW Jose Miguel Vivanco said Venezuelan authorities publicly minimise and suppress information about the crisis and harass and retaliate against those who collect data or speak out about it while also doing far too little to alleviate it 166 The report discusses a teaching physician who said residents are threatened with being expelled from the program or their hospital if they include a malnutrition diagnosis in medical records causing malnutrition to be understated in Venezuelan data 136 The report states that many analysts have argued that the government s own policies have played a role in causing the economic crisis However under the presidency of Nicolas Maduro the Venezuelan government has denied the crisis hidden health statistics and data harassed health professionals who speak out about the reality on the ground and made it harder for sufficient humanitarian assistance to reach the Venezuelan people Through these policies and practices authorities have contributed to the worsening humanitarian crisis documented in this report 136 The International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights ICESCR is a multilateral treaty ratified by Venezuela it commits its parties to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health and the right to an adequate standard of living and adequate food 136 The Constitution of Venezuela provides for the right to health f 136 The HRW Johns Hopkins report states that facing deteriorating health conditions the government s suppression of information and actions against those speaking about the crisis represent a violation of Venezuela s obligations to respect protect and fulfill the right to health to which Venezuelans are entitled from both the ICESCR treaty and their Constitution 136 Following the April HRW Johns Hopkins report and amid announcements from the United Nations about the scale of the humanitarian crisis along with increasing international pressure Maduro met with the Red Cross and it announced it would triple its budget for aid to Venezuela 173 The increased aid would focus in four areas the migration crisis the health care system collapse water and sanitation and prisons and detention centers 173 Maduro for the first time indicated he was prepared to accept international aid although denying a humanitarian crisis exists 174 The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is suffering from an economic collapse 88 and The Guardian reported that Maduro s stance has softened in the face of increasing pressure 173 Guaido said the acceptance of humanitarian aid was the result of our pressure and insistence 88 and called on Venezuelans to stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for corrupt purposes 175 Infectious and preventable diseases edit nbsp From less than 36 000 cases in 2009 to 414 000 cases of malaria in Venezuela in 2017 142 In 1961 Venezuela was the first country declared free of malaria 176 In 2009 the WHO reported there were less than 36 000 cases of malaria in Venezuela 142 In 2013 Venezuela registered a new high in the number of cases of malaria in the past 50 years and by 2014 was the only country in Latin America where the incidence of malaria was increasing allegedly in part due to illegal mining g medical shortages in the country hampered treatment 177 By 2016 Venezuela s malaria prevention program had collapsed and there were more than a hundred thousand cases of malaria yearly 176 In 2017 there were 414 000 confirmed cases of malaria according to the WHO 142 167 Other preventable diseases that were rare or nonexistent before the economic crisis have surged 167 including diphtheria measles and tuberculosis Venezuela did not experience a single case of diphtheria between 2006 and 2015 according to the HRW Johns Hopkins report since mid 2016 1 500 of the 2 500 suspected cases have been confirmed 169 142 Between 2008 and 2015 there was one recorded case of measles in 2012 since June 2017 6 200 of the 9 300 reported cases have been confirmed 142 169 The highest rate of tuberculosis in four decades was reached in 2017 167 In 2014 there were 6 000 reported cases of tuberculosis preliminary data shows more than 13 000 for 2017 142 In 2014 shortages of antiretroviral medicines to treat HIV AIDS affected about 50 000 Venezuelans potentially causing thousands of Venezuelans with HIV to develop AIDS 178 In 2018 PAHO estimated that 90 of Venezuelans who had HIV and were registered by the government 69 308 of the 79 467 registered 167 were not receiving antiretroviral treatment 142 169 The PAHO report estimated that in six years new HIV cases grew by 24 through 2016 after which the government stopped providing data 167 NPR reported New HIV infections and AIDS related deaths have increased sharply in large part because the vast majority of HIV positive Venezuelans no longer have access to antiretroviral medications 167 Because of a shortage of HIV test kits there may be more people who have HIV but are not aware 167 The HRW Johns Hopkins report says Venezuela is the only country in the world where large numbers of individuals living with HIV have been forced to discontinue their treatment as a result of the lack of availability of antiretroviral ARV medicines 136 In late 2014 Venezuelans began saying that due to shortages of medicines it was hard to find acetaminophen to help alleviate symptoms of the newly introduced chikungunya virus a potentially lethal mosquito borne disease 179 In September 2014 the Venezuelan government stated that 400 Venezuelans were infected with chikungunya 180 the Central University of Venezuela stated that there could be between 65 000 and 117 000 Venezuelans infected 181 In August 2015 independent health monitors said that there were more than two million people infected with chikungunya while the government said there were 36 000 cases 160 COVID 19 pandemic edit Main article COVID 19 pandemic in Venezuela As a result of the COVID 19 pandemic which reached Venezuela in March 2020 costs for services such as internet and telephone lines rose between 80 and 749 182 further limiting access to these utilities Shortages of beds and essential medical equipment such as latex gloves and antibiotics have severely limited the capabilities of the country s medical infrastructure 183 184 In April 2020 the Venezuelan government asked the Bank of England to sell US1 02 billion of the Venezuelan gold reserves held by the bank to help the government fund its response to the COVID 19 pandemic This was followed on 14 May by a legal claim by the Venezuelan Central Bank BCV asking the Bank of England to send the proceeds of the sale of gold to the United Nations Development Programme The claim stated that the funds would then be used to buy healthcare equipment medicine and food to address the country s COVID 19 emergency 185 The UK Foreign Office had previously agreed to a request from the Trump administration to block the release of Venezuela s gold 186 In July 2020 the UK High Court ruled that the gold could not be released to the BCV because the UK government recognised Juan Guaido as the constitutional interim president of Venezuela However in October 2020 an appeals court overturned the High Court decision and asked the UK Foreign Office to clarify who it recognised as president of Venezuela The Guardian wrote that the position of the UK government was unclear as it maintains full consular and diplomatic relations with the Venezuela government 186 needs update Women maternal and infant edit In 2016 infant mortality increased 30 in one year to 11 466 deaths of children under the age of one 187 167 By 2019 the UN reported that infant mortality had soared 159 Venezuela is the only South American country where infant mortality has returned to levels last seen in the 1990s according to the HRW Johns Hopkins report 142 Maternal mortality also increased 65 in one year to 756 deaths 167 187 Abortion is illegal in Venezuela 188 the director of a large family planning clinic in Venezuela indicated that more women are arranging for permanent sterilization and that more are presenting with complications from clandestine abortions 136 One of the causes according to the Venezuelan Association for Alternative Sexual Education is the severe shortage of oral and injectable contraceptives and intrauterine devices 188 The HRW Johns Hopkins report states that the more than 454 000 Venezuelan women who have emigrated to Colombia face threats of sexual exploitation and abuse trafficking and sexual and reproductive rights violations violence based on gender accounted for more than 12 of 2018 health care events and indigenous women may be at higher risk 136 Venezuelan women emigrating are at risk for becoming sex trafficking targets virtually anywhere they flee to Cases of trafficking in Peru the United States Spain and Colombia display the highest numbers 189 Pregnancy and motherhood edit Due to lack of medical supplies food and medical care in Venezuelan hospitals many pregnant women in Venezuela are crossing the border into neighboring countries to give birth 190 Lack of basic medicine and equipment is causing preventable deaths and maternity is a very high risk for women especially since there are no blood banks in the event of excessive bleeding 191 Hospitals frequently have water and electricity outages and only 7 of emergency services are fully operative 192 Maternal mortality is estimated to have increased by 65 from 2013 to 2016 and unsafe abortions have contributed to 20 of preventable maternal deaths 191 According to Amnesty International causes of the increase in maternal deaths include a lack of medical personnel and supplies like anticoagulants scar healing cream painkillers antibiotics antiseptics and other tools and equipment 193 Statelessness edit Cucuta a city on the Colombian Venezuela border has received 14 000 Venezuelan patients at the Erasmo Meoz University Hospital since 2016 and is expecting to receive even more 192 In this hospital 75 of the newborns born in the first two months of the year 2019 were Venezuelans 194 The situation has strained the budget of these hospitals putting Erasmo Meoz 14 million dollars into debt 194 While Colombia is the most impacted since it shares a border women are also traveling to Brazil to give birth 195 The number of births of Venezuelan babies attended to in Boa Vista Brazil has increased from 700 in 2014 to 50 000 in 2017 195 Venezuelan mothers have also been fleeing to neighboring Peru and Ecuador 196 197 For Colombian citizenship it is required that Colombian citizens be born to at least one Colombian parent or be born to foreign parents who meet residence requirements and are eligible to become citizens 198 Due to the influx of Venezuelan babies being born in Colombia and the Venezuelan government s inability to issue citizenship Colombia has introduced a new measure that will give these Colombian born newborns Colombian citizenship to avoid statelessness 194 The measure went into effect August 2019 and includes babies of Venezuelan parents born in Colombia starting in January 2015 having given citizenship to approximately 27 000 babies born in Colombia over the past four years 194 Mental health edit Following the Bolivarian Revolution the rate of suicide among Venezuelans quadrupled over two decades with hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans dying from suicide during the period according to the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence 199 As a result of the crisis stressors resulting in suicide included economic burden hunger and loneliness due to the emigration of relatives 199 In 2015 concerns about shortages and inflation overtook violent crime as Venezuelans main worry for the first time in years according to pollster Datanalisis The chief executive of Datanalisis Luis Vicente Leon said that Venezuelans had greater concerns over shortages and became preoccupied with the difficulties surrounding them instead Eldar Shafir author and American behavioral scientist said that the psychological obsession with finding scarce goods in Venezuela is because the rarity of the item makes it precious 200 In 2016 reporters from The New York Times visited six psychiatric wards across the Venezuela at the invitation of doctors all reported shortages of medicine and even food In the investigation they reported that El Pampero Hospital had not employed a psychiatrist in two years and that it only had running water for only a few hours a day The hospital the article said also suffered from shortages of basic personal care and cleaning supplies such as soap shampoo toothpaste or toilet paper The nurses declared that without sedatives they had to restrain patients or lock them in isolation cells to keep them from harming themselves The reporters also noted that the government had denied that its public hospitals were suffering from shortages and had refused multiple offers of international medical aid 201 Despite the threat of violent protests the economic crisis affected children more than violence Abel Saraiba a psychologist with children s rights organization Cecodap said in 2017 We have children from a very early age who are having to think about how to survive with half of her young clients requiring treatment because of the crisis Children are often forced to stand in food lines or beg with their parents while the games they play with other children revolve around finding food 202 Friends of the Child Foundation psychologist Ninoska Zambrano said that children are offering sexual services for food Zambrano said Families are doing things that not only lead them to break physically but in general socially we are being morally broken 203 In 2017 suicide increased by 67 among the elderly and 18 among minors by 2018 reports emerged of a rapidly increasing suicide rate due to the stressors surrounding the crisis 204 Medical care and elections edit Mission Barrio Adentro was a program established by Chavez to bring medical care to poor neighborhoods it was staffed by Cubans that were sent to Venezuela in exchange for petroleum The New York Times interviewed sixteen Cuban medical professionals in 2019 who had worked for Barrio Adentro prior to the 2018 Venezuelan presidential elections all sixteen revealed that they were required to participate in voting fraud 205 Some of the Cubans said that command centers for elections were placed near clinics to facilitate dispatching doctors to pressure residents 205 Some tactics reported by the Cubans were unrelated to their profession they were given counterfeit cards to vote even though they were not eligible voters they witnessed vote tampering when officials opening ballot boxes and destroyed ballots and they were told to instruct easily manipulated elderly patients in how to vote 205 But they also described a system of deliberate political manipulation their services as medical professionals were wielded to secure votes for the governing Socialist Party often through coercion they told The New York Times 205 Facing a shortage of supplies and medicine they were instructed to withhold treatment even for emergencies so supplies and treatment could be doled out closer to the election part of a national strategy to compel patients to vote for the government 205 They reported that life saving treatment was denied to patients who supported the opposition As the election neared they were sent door to door on house visits with a political purpose to hand out medicine and enlist voters for Venezuela s Socialist Party 205 Patients were warned that they could lose their medical care if they did not vote for the socialist party and that if Maduro lost ties would be broken with Cuba and Venezuelans would lose all medical care Patients with chronic conditions at risk of death if they couldn t get medicine were a particular focus of these tactics One said that government officials were posing as doctors to make these house calls before elections We the doctors were asked to give our extra robes to people The fake doctors were even giving out medicines without knowing what they were or how to use them he said 205 Housing edit nbsp Slums in Caracas seen above El Paraiso tunnel Since the mid 2000s during Chavez s presidency Venezuela has had a housing crisis 206 In 2005 the Venezuelan Construction Chamber CVC estimated that there was a shortage of 1 6 million homes with only 10 000 of 120 000 promised homes constructed by Chavez s government despite billions of dollars in investments 207 Poor Venezuelans attempted to construct homes on their own despite structural risks 207 By 2011 there was a housing shortage of 2 million homes with nearly twenty prime developments being occupied by squatters following Chavez s call for the poor to occupy unused land 206 208 Up to 2011 only 500 000 homes were constructed during the Chavez administration with over two thirds of the new housing developments being built by private companies his government provided about the same amount of housing as previous administrations 208 Housing shortages were further exacerbated when private construction halted due to the fear of property expropriations and because of the government s inability to construct and provide housing 206 Urban theorist and author Mike Davis said in July 2011 to The Guardian Despite official rhetoric the Bolivarianist regime has undertaken no serious redistribution of wealth in the cities and oil revenues pay for too many other programmes and subsidies to leave room for new housing construction 209 By 2012 a shortage of building materials also disrupted construction with metal production at a 16 year low 210 By the end of Chavez s presidency in 2013 the number of Venezuelans in inadequate housing had grown to 3 million 210 Under the Maduro government housing shortages continued to worsen Maduro announced in 2014 that due to the shortage of steel abandoned cars and other vehicles would be acquired by the government and melted to provide rebar for housing 210 In April 2014 Maduro ruled by decree that Venezuelans who owned three or more rental properties would be forced by the government to sell their rental units at a set price or they would face fines or have their property possessed by the government 211 By 2016 residents of government provided housing who were usually supporters of the government began protesting due to the lack of utilities and food 212 Social editCrime edit Further information Crime in Venezuela and Colectivo Venezuela nbsp Murder rate murder per 100 000 citizens from 1998 to 2018 Sources OVV 213 214 PROVEA 215 216 UN 215 216 217 UN data is extrapolated between 2007 and 2012 because of missing data Escalating violent crime especially murder had been called perhaps the biggest concern of Venezuelans during the crisis 218 Venezuela had by various measures the world s highest violent crime rate in 2017 and almost none of crimes that were reported were prosecuted 176 InSight Crime says the crisis has all too often been obscured by the government s reluctance to release damning crime statistics 219 The New Yorker reporter found that even stairwells in a public hospital were not safe from robbers who preyed on staff and patients despite the large number of security forces guarding the hospital saying this was because the police were assigned to contain journalists who might embarrass the government with exposes on the state of the hospital they were not assigned to protect its occupants The police allegedly collaborated with the robbers receiving a cut of what they stole 176 According to The U S Bureau of Diplomatic Security street gang violence corrupt underpaid police officers an inefficient and politicized judicial system an extremely troubled prison system and an increased widespread of weaponry has resulted in the majority of criminal activity in Venezuela with murder being the crime committed the most 220 The Bureau states that there were 73 daily violent deaths in 2018 and that the government often attempts to refute or repudiate reports of increasing crime and murder rates however independent observers widely reject the Venezuelan government s claims 220 The government says there were 60 daily homicides in 2016 and 45 daily in 2015 221 corresponding with Venezuela s downward economic spiral the OVV says the numbers are higher 221 For 2015 the government says the rate of homicides was 70 1 per 100 000 people 221 The Venezuelan Observatory of Violence OVV says the rate was 91 8 homicides per 100 000 people in 2015 the comparative U S number was 4 9 per 100 000 inhabitants 221 According to the World Bank the 2016 homicide rate was 56 per 100 000 making Venezuela third in the world after El Salvador and Honduras 222 OVV data has 23 047 homicides committed in Venezuela in 2018 a rate of 81 4 per 100 000 people with the decline being attributed to emigration 222 According to the Los Angeles Times carjack gangs set up ambushes sometimes laying down nail embedded strips to puncture tires of vehicles ferrying potential quarry Motorists speak matter of factly of spotting body parts along roadways While most crime victims are poor they also include members of the middle and upper classes and scores of police and military personnel killed each year sometimes for their weapons Before the thieves would only rob you is a common refrain here in the capital Now they kill you 223 As a response to the high rate of crime the Venezuelan government banned private ownership of firearms by some individuals in 2012 224 225 226 El Pais reported in 2014 that Chavez had years earlier assigned colectivos to be the armed wing of the Bolivarian Revolution for the Venezuelan government giving them weapons communication systems motorcycles and surveillance equipment to exercise control in the hills of Caracas where police are forbidden entry 227 In 2006 they received arms and funding from the state when they were brought under the government s community councils 138 Chavez eliminated the Metropolitan Police in 2011 turning security over to the colectivos in some Caracas barrios 138 Some weapons given to the groups include assault rifles submachine guns and grenades 227 Despite the Venezuelan government s statements saying that only official authorities can carry weapons for the defense of Venezuela colectivos are armed with automatic rifles such as AK 47s submachine guns fragmentation grenades and tear gas 228 229 nbsp Number of kidnappings in Venezuela 1989 2011 Source CICPC 230 231 232 Note Express kidnappings may not be included in data During the 2014 Venezuelan protests against Maduro colectivos acted against the opposition protesters 233 As the crisis intensified armed gangs have taken control of cities 8 The Civil Association for Citizen Control said that more than half of those killed during the protests were killed by colectivos 234 Human Rights Watch described colectivos as armed gangs who use violence with impunity to harass political opponents of the Venezuelan government 235 236 Amnesty International calls them armed pro government supporters who are tolerated or supported by the authorities 237 During the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts in March Maduro called on the armed paramilitary gangs saying The time has come for active resistance 238 As blackouts continued on 31 March citizens protested the lack of electricity and water in Caracas and other cities Maduro called again on the colectivos asking them to defend the peace of every barrio of every block 239 Videos circulated on social media showing colectivos threatening protesters and shooting in the streets 240 two protestors were shot 239 There is no reliable data on kidnapping in Venezuela and available data is considered an underestimate 219 221 it is against the law to pay ransom and according to criminologists at least 80 of kidnappings are not reported for fear of retaliation 220 or because relatives prefer to negotiate hoping the hostage will be released and fearing they will be killed if authorities are contacted 219 221 Available data underestimates the amount of express kidnapping where victims are typically released in less than two days after relatives pay a quick ransom 219 221 Most express kidnapping victims are released but in 2016 18 were killed 219 At least 80 of kidnappings occur in a limited area around Caracas and including Miranda State In the areas where most kidnappings occur the government set up so called peace zones where official police withdrew and gangs took over 219 experts say the government has armed these groups who control large territories financed through extortion and the drug trade 221 Illegal mining creates pools of standing water that encourage mosquito breeding a partial cause of the increase in malaria seen in Venezuela 136 The murder rate in Venezuela had also decreased significantly between 2017 and 2019 In 2018 Venezuela s murder rate described as the highest in the world had begun to decrease to 81 4 per 100 000 people according to the Venezuelan Violence Observatory OVV with the organization stating that this downward trend was due to the millions of Venezuelans that emigrated from the country at the time 241 The murder rate declined even further to 60 3 in 2019 242 Human rights edit Further information Human rights in Venezuela Civil and political rights nbsp Arbitrary detentions in Venezuela between 2014 and 2019 according to Foro Penal Arrests by year in blue and total arrests in red Repression and politically motivated detentions have risen to record levels in 2019 243 Foro Penal states that Venezuela has at least 900 political prisoners as of April 2019 with more arrests of people being held longer in poor conditions and on dubious charges The human rights organization has documented more than 50 instances that include sexual abuse strangulation using plastic bags and the use of razor blades to cut detainees feet 243 In the first three months of 2019 Foro Penal says 1 712 people were arrested and about two thirds of those were held for more than 48 hours the threshold used to classify a detainee as a political prisoner 243 Maduro calls those arrested members of terrorist groups and says his government will not hesitate to send them to prison Juan Requesens and Roberto Marrero are examples of purely political arrests according to their attorney 243 Increasingly high numbers of the detainees are working class people who have been driven to protest by the crisis 243 The final published report addressed the extrajudicial executions torture forced disappearances and other human rights violations reportedly committed by Venezuelan security forces in the recent years 244 Bachelet expressed her concerns for the shockingly high number of extrajudicial killings and urged for the dissolution of the FAES 245 According to the report 1 569 cases of executions as consequence as a result of resistance to authority were registered by the Venezuelan authorities from 1 January to 19 March 245 Other 52 deaths that occurred during 2019 protests were attributed to colectivos 246 The report also details how the Venezuelan government aimed at neutralising repressing and criminalising political opponents and people critical of the government since 2016 245 On 16 September 2020 the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on Venezuela accused the Maduro government of crimes against humanity 247 On 15 February 2024 the Maduro government closed the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights office in Caracas after High Commissioner Volker Turk condemned the detention of activist Rocio San Miguel demanding her immediate release and respect for her right to legal defense Maduro s government expelled its officials giving them 72 hours to leave the country 248 Emigration edit Further information Venezuelan refugee crisis The exodus of millions of desperate impoverished Venezuelans to surrounding countries has been called a risk for the entire region 7 Millions of Venezuelan people have voluntarily emigrated from Venezuela during the Chavez and Maduro presidencies 249 250 The crisis started during the Chavez presidency but became much more pronounced during Maduro s term 251 Emigration has been motivated by economic collapse expansion of state control over the economy high crime high inflation general uncertainty a lack of hope for a change in government 249 252 a failing public sector and shortages of basic necessities 251 The PGA Group estimates more than 1 5 million Venezuelans emigrated in the 15 years between 1999 and 2014 249 an estimated 1 8 million left in ten years through 2015 253 254 The UN said that in the first part of 2018 about 5 000 Venezuelans were leaving Venezuela daily 255 A February 2019 UN reported estimated that 3 4 million Venezuelans have emigrated and they expect another 1 9 million may emigrate in 2019 135 255 The UN estimates 2 7 million have gone to the Caribbean and Latin America 256 255 Most have gone to Colombia estimates of Venezuelans emigrating to Colombia are 1 1 million Peru 506 000 Chile 288 000 Ecuador 221 000 Argentina 130 000 and Brazil 96 000 256 This is in contrast to Venezuela s high immigration rate during the 20th century 250 Kevin Whitaker the U S ambassador in Colombia says Colombians in their tens and hundreds of thousands migrated to Venezuela in the 60s and 70s and 80s when Venezuela was a wealthy country and Colombia was not so much Now more than 1 million Venezuelans many of them since 2015 have gone to live in Colombia 256 Those who leave by foot are known as los caminantes the walkers the walk to Bogota Colombia is 560 kilometres 350 mi and some walk hundreds of kilometres further to Ecuador or Peru 256 Alba Pereira who helps feed and clothe about 800 walkers daily in Northern Colombia said in 2019 she is seeing more sick elderly and pregnant among the walkers 256 The Colombian Red Cross has set up rest tents with food and water on the side of the roads for Venezuelans 257 Venezuelans also cross into northern Brazil where UNHCR has set up 10 shelters to house thousands of Venezuelans 257 Images of Venezuelans fleeing the country by sea have raised symbolic comparisons to the images seen from the Cuban diaspora 258 In 1998 only 14 Venezuelans were granted U S asylum and by September 1999 1 086 Venezuelans were granted asylum according to the U S Citizenship and Immigration Services 259 The first wave of Venezuelan emigrants were wealthy and middle class Venezuelans concerned by Chavez s rhetoric of redistributing wealth to the poor 258 the early exodus of college educated people with capital caused a brain drain 251 Emigration especially increased during the Maduro presidency 260 This second wave of emigration consisted of lower class Venezuelans suffering directly from the economic crisis facing the country thus the same individuals whom Chavez attempted to aid were now seeking to emigrate driven by worsening economic conditions scarcity of food and medicine and rising rates of violent crime 258 Tomas Perez who studies the Venezuelan diaspora at the Central University of Venezuela said in 2018 that because now everyone is poor it is mostly poor leaving the country 251 Carlos Malamud from a Spanish think tank said Maduro is using migration as a political weapon against the opposition 251 The scale of the crisis has surpassed in four years the Cuban exodus in which 1 7 million emigrated over a period of sixty years Malamud says Latin American societies aren t prepared for such wide scale arrivals 251 Impacting the health care crisis in Venezuela health care professionals are emigrating a primary factor driving emigration to Colombia is the lack of medicines supplies health providers and basic health services in Venezuela 136 Since 2017 the banking sector has seen 18 000 employees leave the country 261 Economic editFurther information 2013 present economic crisis in Venezuela and Economic policy of the Nicolas Maduro administration Maduro s government stopped releasing social and economic indicators so most data rely on estimates 134 The Institute of International Finance IIF stated in March 2019 that Venezuela s economic collapse is among the world s worst in recent history 134 A chief economist of the IIF said the crisis resulted from policy decisions economic mismanagement and political turmoil saying it is on a scale that one would only expect from extreme natural disasters or military confrontations 134 The April 2019 International Monetary Fund IMF World Economic Outlook described Venezuela as being in a wartime economy 9 For the fifth consecutive year Bloomberg rated Venezuela last on its misery index in 2019 262 The government s main source of income is oil with output plummeting due to lack of investment poor maintenance and neglect 134 from which consultant Eduardo Fortuny expects will take 12 years to recover 134 As of 2020 the Venezuelan government has liberalized many socialist or redistributive economic policies price and currency controls stringent labor laws and brought a rapprochement with members of the local business community especially Lorenzo Mendoza of the iconic Empresas Polar conglomerate who is no longer denounced as a thief a parasite and a traitor in exchange for an abandonment of political opposition by Mendoza 263 However a slight recovery in economic activity in January 2020 reportedly evaporated in February and March due to the fall in global oil prices and the coronavirus pandemic 264 Business and industry edit See also Perrera nbsp Ratings for Venezuela from 1998 to 2017 by the U S Government funded NGO Freedom House 265 1 free 7 not free A number of foreign firms have left the nation often due to quarrels with the socialist government including Smurfit Kappa Clorox Kimberly Clark and General Mills the departures aggravate unemployment and shortages 266 Before the effects of the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts the number of multinational companies in the industrial city of Valencia in Carabobo State had dropped from 5 000 when Chavez became president to a tenth of that 267 Airline industry edit Domestic airlines are having difficulties because of hyperinflation and parts shortages and most international airlines have left the country 268 269 Airlines from many countries ceased operating in Venezuela making travel to the country difficult 269 Air Canada became the first international airline to cease Venezuela operations in March 2014 and was followed by Alitalia in April 2015 270 Other airlines that have left are Aeromexico Avianca Delta Lufthansa LATAM and United Airlines 271 According to the International Air Transport Association IATA the government of Venezuela has not paid US 3 8 billion to international airlines in an issue involving conversion of local currency to U S dollars 271 Airlines have left for other reasons including crime against flight crews and foreign passengers stolen baggage and problems with the quality of jet fuel and maintenance of runways 272 273 274 Aerolineas Argentinas left in 2017 citing security reasons 269 and American Airlines the last U S airline serving Venezuela left on 15 March 2019 after its pilots refused to fly to Venezuela citing safety issues 275 Currently the only North American airline flying to Venezuela is Sunwing Airlines with seasonal service to Margarita Island and Punto Fijo citation needed Following the increasing economic partnership between Venezuela and Turkey in October 2016 Turkish Airlines started offering direct flights from December 2016 connecting between Caracas to Istanbul via Havana Cuba in an effort to link and expand contacts between the two countries 276 Iranian airline Mahan Air blacklisted by the U S government since 2011 277 began direct flights to Caracas in April 2019 278 signifying a growing relationship between the two nations according to Fox News 277 In May 2019 the United States Department of Transport and Department of Homeland Security suspended all flights between Venezuela and the United States due to safety and security concerns 279 The suspension affects mainly Venezuelan airlines flying to Miami which are Avior Airlines LASER Airlines and Estelar Latinoamerica Gross domestic product edit Estimated to drop by 25 in 2019 the IMF said the contraction in Venezuela s GDP the largest since the Libyan Civil War began in 2014 was affecting all of Latin America 9 In 2015 the Venezuelan economy contracted 5 7 and in 2016 it contracted 18 6 according to the Venezuelan central bank 84 after that the government stopped producing data 134 Ecoanalitica a Venezuelan consultant told The Wall Street Journal that output had halved between 2016 and 2019 134 The IMF and AGPV Asesores Economicos a consulting firm based in Caracas estimate that GDP shrunk to 80 billion in 2018 from 196 billion in 2013 making the economy smaller than Guatemala s or Ethiopia s 134 Inflation edit nbsp Venezuela hyperinflation May 2018 October 2019 Main article Hyperinflation in Venezuela The annual inflation rate for consumer prices has risen hundreds of thousands of percent during the crisis 7 Inflation in Venezuela remained high during Chavez s presidency By 2010 inflation removed any advancement of wage increases 280 and by 2014 at 69 281 it was the highest in the world 282 283 In November 2016 Venezuela entered a period of hyperinflation 284 with inflation reaching 4 000 in 2017 144 the Venezuelan government essentially stopped producing inflation estimates in early 2018 10 At the end of 2018 inflation had reached 1 35 million percent 285 In the 2017 Christmas season some shops stopped using price tags since prices would inflate so quickly 286 From 2017 to 2019 some Venezuelans became video game gold farmers and could be seen playing games such as RuneScape to sell in game currency or characters for real currency players could make more money than salaried workers by earning only a few dollars per day 287 288 Some of these gold farmers will use cryptocurrencies as an intermediary currency before converting into Bolivares as indicated in this interview In October 2018 the IMF estimated that inflation would reach 10 000 000 by the end of 2019 289 In early 2019 the monthly minimum salary was the equivalent of US 5 50 18 000 sovereign bolivars less than the price of a Happy Meal at McDonald s 9 Ecoanalitica estimated that prices jumped by 465 in the first two and a half months of 2019 134 The Wall Street Journal stated in March 2019 that the main cause of hyperinflation is the central bank printing money to increase money supply thus boosting domestic spending reporting that a teacher can buy a dozen eggs and two pounds of cheese with a month s wages 134 In May 2019 the Central Bank of Venezuela released economic data for the first time since 2015 According to the release Venezuela s inflation rate was 274 in 2016 863 in 2017 and 130 060 in 2018 290 The new reports imply a contraction of more than half of the economy in five years according to the Financial Times one of the biggest contractions in Latin American history 291 Sources quoted by Reuters said that China may have asked Venezuela to release the data to bring Venezuela into compliance with the IMF and make it more difficult for the IMF to recognise Juan Guaido during the presidential crisis 292 The IMF said it was not able to assess the quality of the data as it had no contact with the Venezuelan government 292 Shortages edit Further information Shortages in Venezuela Shortages in Venezuela became prevalent after price controls were enacted according to the economic policy of the Hugo Chavez government 79 78 Under the economic policy of the Nicolas Maduro government greater shortages occurred due to the Venezuelan government s policy of withholding United States dollars from importers with price controls 293 Some Venezuelans must search for food occasionally resorting to eating wild fruit or garbage wait in lines for hours and sometimes settle without having certain products 140 Unemployment edit Wartime economy Venezuela s wartime economy has the world s highest unemployment since end of Bosnian War in world s biggest contraction since 2014 start of Libyan Civil War April 2019 International Monetary Fund IMF World Economic Outlook 9 In January 2016 the unemployment rate was 18 1 percent 294 and the economy was the worst in the world according to the misery index 66 Venezuela has not reported official unemployment figures since April 2016 when the rate was at 7 3 percent 295 Unemployment was forecasted to reach 44 for 2019 the IMF stated that this was the highest unemployment seen since the end of the Bosnian War in 1995 9 Venezuelan debt edit In August 2017 President of the United States Donald Trump imposed sanctions on Venezuela 296 which banned transactions involving Venezuela s state debt including debt restructuring The technical default period ended 13 November 2017 and Venezuela did not pay coupons on its dollar eurobonds causing a cross default on other dollar bonds A committee consisting of the fifteen largest banks admitted default on state debt obligations which in turn entailed payments on CDS on 30 November 297 In November 2017 The Economist estimated Venezuela s debt at US 105 billion and its reserves at US 10 billion 298 In 2018 Venezuela s debt grew to US 156 billion 299 and as of March 2019 its reserves had dropped to US 8 billion 300 With the exception of PDVSA s 2020 bonds 301 as of January 2019 all of Venezuela s bonds are in default 302 and Venezuela s government and state owned companies owe nearly US 8 billion in unpaid interest and principal 303 As of March 2019 the government and state owned companies have US 150 billion in debt 300 Oil industry edit By 2018 the political and economic troubles facing Venezuela had engulfed the El Tigre San Tome region a key region for oil production in eastern Venezuela Oil workers were fleeing the state owned oil company as salaries could not keep up with hyperinflation reducing families to starvation Workers and criminals stripped vital oil industry equipment of anything valuable ranging from pickup trucks to the copper wire within critical oil production components 304 Oil facilities were neglected and unprotected crippling oil production and leading to environmental damage 305 As noted petroleum historian expert and former San Tome resident Emma Brossard 306 stated in 2005 Venezuelan oil fields had a depletion rate of 25 per cent annually and there had to be an investment of US 3 4 billion a year to keep up its production But since Chavez has become president there has been no investment 307 As of 2020 there were no longer any oil rigs searching for oil in Venezuela and production has been reduced to a trickle Oil exports are expected to total 2 3 billion for 2020 continuing a decline of more than a decade 308 Pollution from crude oil leaking from abandoned underwater wells and pipelines has caused serious damage to fishing and human health 308 In 2022 rising oil prices caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine led the World Oil Commission to start meetings with the Venezuelan Government to push oil production to have a control over the price citation needed Public opinion editA November 2016 Datincorp survey that asked Venezuelans living in urban areas which entity was responsible for the crisis 59 blamed chavismo or the presidents Chavez 25 Maduro 19 Chavismo 15 while others blamed the opposition 10 entrepreneurs 4 and the United States 2 309 A September 2018 Meganalisis survey found that 85 of Venezuelans wanted Maduro to leave power immediately 310 A November 2018 Datanalisis poll found that 54 of Venezuelans opposed a foreign military intervention to remove Maduro while 35 supported an intervention Instead 63 supported a negotiated settlement to remove Maduro 311 An 11 14 March 2019 survey of 1 100 people in 16 Venezuelan states and 32 cities by Meganalisis found that 89 of respondents wanted Maduro to leave the presidency 312 A Datanalisis poll on 4 March 2019 found Maduro s approval rating at an all time low of 14 313 According to Datanalisis in early 2019 63 of Venezuelans believed that a change of government was possible Fourteen months later in May 2020 after the Macuto Bay raid the percentage decreased to 20 314 According to economists interviewed by The New York Times the situation is by far the worst economic crisis in Venezuela s history and is also the worst facing a country in peace time since the mid 20th century The crisis is also more severe than that of the United States during the Great Depression the 1985 1994 Brazilian economic crisis or the 2008 2009 hyperinflation in Zimbabwe 8 Other writers have also compared aspects of the crisis such as unemployment and GDP contraction to that of Bosnia and Herzegovina after the 1992 1995 Bosnian War and those in Russia Cuba and Albania following the collapse of the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 9 10 Reaction editEconomic sanctions edit Main article International sanctions during the Venezuelan crisis The European Union the Lima Group the United States and other countries have applied individual sanctions against government officials and members of both the military and security forces as a response to human rights violations corruption degradation in the rule of law and repression of democracy 19 The United States would later extend its sanctions to the petroleum sector 315 316 Economists have stated that shortages and high inflation in Venezuela began before US sanctions were directed towards the country 317 The Wall Street Journal said that economists place the blame for Venezuela s economy shrinking by half on Maduro s policies including widespread nationalizations out of control spending that sparked inflation price controls that led to shortages and widespread graft and mismanagement 318 The Venezuelan government has stated that the United States is responsible for its economic collapse 318 The HRW Johns Hopkins report noted that most sanctions are limited to canceling visas and freezing assets of key officials implicated in abuses and corruption They in no way target the Venezuelan economy 136 The report also stated that the 2017 ban on dealing in Venezuelan government stocks and bonds allows exceptions for food and medicine and that the 28 January 2019 PDVSA sanctions could worsen the situation although the crisis precedes them 136 The Washington Post stated that the deprivation long predates recently imposed US sanctions 169 In 2011 the United States sanctioned Venezuela s state owned oil company Petroleos de Venezuela According to executives within the company as well as the Venezuelan government the sanctions were mostly symbolic and had little effect if any on Venezuela s trade with the US since the company s sale of oil to the US and the operations of its US based subsidiary Citgo were unaffected 319 On 9 March 2015 Barack Obama signed and issued an executive order declaring Venezuela a national security threat and ordered sanctions against Venezuelan officials The sanctions did not affect Venezuela s oil company and trade relations with the US continued 320 In 2017 Trump s administration imposed additional economic sanctions on Venezuela 321 In 2018 the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights OHCHR documented that information gathered indicates that the socioeconomic crisis had been unfolding for several years prior to the imposition of these sanctions 322 According to The Wall Street Journal new 2019 sanctions aimed at depriving the Maduro government of petroleum revenues 318 In 2019 former UN rapporteur Alfred de Zayas said that US sanctions on Venezuela were illegal as they constituted economic warfare and could amount to crimes against humanity under international law 323 His report which he says was ignored by the UN was criticized by the Latin America and Caribbean programme director for the Crisis Group for neglecting to mention the impact of a difficult business environment on the country which the director said was a symptom of Chavismo and the socialist governments failures and that Venezuela could not recover under current government policies even if the sanctions were lifted 323 Michelle Bachelet updated the situation in a 20 March oral report following the visit of a five person delegation to Venezuela 324 saying that the social and economic crisis was dramatically deteriorating the government had not acknowledged or addressed the extent of the crisis and she was concerned that although the pervasive and devastating economic and social crisis began before the imposition of the first economic sanctions the sanctions could worsen the situation 324 325 In February 2019 Jorge Arreaza Maduro s Minister for Foreign Affairs said he was forming a coalition of diplomats who believe the U S and others are violating the U N charter against non interference in member states During the announcement he was surrounded by diplomats from 16 other countries including Russia China Iran North Korea and Cuba Arreaza said the cost to the Venezuelan economy of the US blockade was over 30 billion 326 Reporting on Arreaza s statements the Associated Press said that Maduro was blocking aid and saying that Venezuelans are not beggars and that the move is part of a U S led coup 327 During the COVID 19 pandemic world leaders called for a suspension of economic sanctions including against Venezuela and Iran that have increasingly become the pursuit of war by other means The US responded by intensifying the sanctions against Venezuela 328 An October 2020 report published by the Washington Office on Latin America WOLA by Venezuelan economist Luis Oliveros found that while Venezuela s economic crisis began before the first U S sectoral sanctions were imposed in 2017 these measures directly contributed to its deep decline and to the further deterioration of the quality of life of Venezuelans The report concluded that economic sanctions have cost Venezuela s government as much as 31 billion since 2017 329 330 Alena Douhan United Nations special rapporteur on the negative impact of unilateral coercive measures was due to visit Venezuela in August 2020 to investigate the impact of international sanctions 331 Before her visit 66 Venezuelan NGOs including PROVEA asked Douhan in an open letter to consider the harmful impact of sanctions in the context of years of repression corruption and economic mismanagement that predate the sanctions and requested she meet independent press and civil society researchers 332 333 334 335 She arrived on 31 January and was welcomed on arrival by a government minister and the Venezuelan ambassador to the UN 333 She declared on her preliminary findings as she left on 12 February 336 that sanctions against Venezuela have had a devastating noticeable impact in both the economy and the population 337 She said the increasing number of unilateral sanctions imposed by United States the European Union and other countries have exacerbated the economic and humanitarian calamities in Venezuela but that Venezuela s economic decline began in 2014 with the fall in oil prices and that mismanagement and corruption had also contributed The government welcomed the report while the opposition accused her of playing into the hands of the regime of Maduro 338 339 340 341 Douhan was harshly criticized by the Venezuelan civil society 342 and several non governmental organizations pronounced themselves in social media with the hashtag Lacrisisfueprimero The crisis came first 343 344 345 Foreign involvement edit nbsp On 18 February President Trump urged Venezuela s military to abandon Nicolas Maduro or lose everything 346 Main article Foreign involvement in the Venezuelan presidential crisis On 11 August 2017 President Trump said that he is not going to rule out a military option to confront the autocratic government of Nicolas Maduro and the deepening crisis in Venezuela 347 Military Times said the unnamed aides told Trump it was not wise to even discuss a military solution due to the history of unpopular intervention in Latin America by the United States 348 Venezuela s Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino criticized Trump for the statement calling it an act of supreme extremism and an act of madness The Venezuelan communications minister Ernesto Villegas said Trump s words amounted to an unprecedented threat to national sovereignty 349 Representatives of the United States were in contact with dissident Venezuelan military officers during 2017 and 2018 but declined to collaborate with them or provide assistance to them 350 The opinion of other Latin American nations was split with respect to military intervention Luis Almagro the Secretary General of the Organization of American States while visiting Colombia did not rule out the potential benefit of the use of military force to intervene with the crisis Canada Colombia and Guyana which are members of the Lima Group refused to sign the organization s document rejecting military intervention in Venezuela 351 352 During the 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis allegations of potential United States military involvement began to circulate 353 with military intervention in Venezuela was already being executed by the governments of Cuba and Russia 353 According to professor Erick Langer of Georgetown University while it was being discussed whether the United States would militarily intervene Cuba and Russia have already intervened 353 Hundreds or thousands of Cuban security forces have allegedly been operating in Venezuela while professor Robert Ellis of United States Army War College described the between several dozen and 400 Wagner Group mercenaries provided by Russia as the palace guard of Nicolas Maduro 353 Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied the deployment of Russian mercenaries calling it fake news 354 On 2 April 2019 the Russian Foreign Ministry rejected Trump s call to get out saying their 100 military servicemen now in Venezuela will support Maduro for as long as needed 355 Humanitarian aid edit See also 2019 shipping of humanitarian aid to Venezuela nbsp Aid for Venezuela sent by the United States to Colombia nbsp Location of the humanitarian aid points outside of Venezuela Throughout the crisis humanitarian aid was provided to Venezuelans in need both within Venezuela and abroad In October 2018 the USNS Comfort departed for an eleven week operation in Latin America with a primary mission being to assist countries who received Venezuelan refugees who fled the crisis in Venezuela The main goal was to relieve health systems in Colombia Ecuador Peru and other nations which faced the arrival of thousands of Venezuelan migrants 356 At the end of January 2019 as the US prepared to bring aid across the border the International Committee of the Red Cross warned the United States about the risk of delivering humanitarian aid without the approval of the government s security forces 357 The UN similarly warned the US about politicising the crisis and using aid as a pawn in the power struggle 358 Other humanitarian organisations also raised risks 359 On 23 February 2019 14 trucks carrying 280 tons of humanitarian aid attempted to bring aid across the Simon Bolivar and Francisco de Paula Santander bridges from Colombia There were clashes with Venezuelan security forces reported to use tear gas attack in attempt to maintain a blockade of the border Colombia said around 285 people were injured and at least two trucks set on fire 360 361 CNN reported that the Venezuela government accused Guaido supporters of burning the trucks and noted that While a CNN team saw incendiary devices from police on the Venezuelan side of the border ignite the trucks the network s journalists are unsure if the trucks were burned on purpose 362 In March The New York Times reported that footage showed that it was anti Maduro protestors rather than Venezuelan security forces who were responsible for the burning trucks 363 364 The New York Times reported that the trucks had been set on fire by anti Maduro protester who threw a Molotov cocktail that hit one of the trucks 364 Colombian foreign minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo rejected the claims by The New York Times that the Colombian government manipulated the video of the burning of the aid truck insisting that Nicolas Maduro was responsible 365 Responding when asked about the claims in a BBC interview Juan Guaido stressed that its findings suggested only a possible theory that it was the newspaper s point of view and that a total of three trucks were burned while the footage focused on one 366 Journalist Karla Salcedo Flores denounced state run Telesur for plagiarism and the manipulation of her photos for propaganda purposes after the network claimed protesters poured gasoline on the trucks 367 Agence France Presse published an investigation disproving Telesur s claims with the photos 368 Bellingcat reported that since the open source evidence examined for its investigation does not show the moment of ignition it is not possible to make a definitive determination regarding the cause of the fire 369 Franceso Rocca president of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies announced on 29 March 2019 that the Red Cross was preparing to bring humanitarian aid to the country to help ease both the chronic hunger and the medical crisis 370 The Guardian reported that Maduro had long denied the existence of a humanitarian crisis and on 23 February blocked an effort led by Guaido to bring aid into the country and that the Red Cross had brokered a deal between the Maduro and Guaido administrations indicating a seldom seen middle ground between the two men 371 The Red Cross aid shipments were expected to begin within a few weeks and the first shipment would help about 650 000 people 371 simultaneously a leaked UN report estimated that seven million Venezuelans were likely in need of humanitarian assistance 166 During what The Wall Street Journal called Latin America s worst humanitarian crisis ever the operation would rival Red Cross relief efforts in war torn Syria signaling the depth of Venezuela s crisis 88 Rocca said the efforts would focus first on hospitals including state run facilities and said the Red Cross was open to the possibility of delivering aid products stored on the Venezuelan borders with Colombia and Brazil 175 He warned that the Red Cross would not accept any political interference 175 and said the effort must be independent neutral impartial and unhindered 371 Maduro and Arreaza met with representative of Red Cross International on 9 April to discuss the aid effort 372 The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is suffering from an economic collapse adding that until a few days ago the government maintained there was no crisis and it didn t need outside help 88 Guaido said the acceptance of humanitarian aid was the result of our pressure and insistence 88 and called on Venezuelans to stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for corrupt purposes 175 The first Red Cross delivery of supplies for hospitals arrived on 16 April offering an encouraging sign that the Maduro administration would allow more aid to enter 373 Quoting Tamara Taraciuk an expert at Human Rights Watch on Venezuela who called the situation a completely man made crisis The New York Times said the aid effort in Venezuela presented challenges regarding how to deliver aid in an unprecedented political economic and humanitarian crisis that was caused largely by the policies of a government intent on staying in power rather than war or natural disaster 374 Armed pro government paramilitaries fired weapons to disrupt the first Red Cross delivery and officials associated with Maduro s party told the Red Cross to leave 374 An April 2021 report by the inspector general at United States Agency for International Development found that the Trump administration had politicized the early 2019 humanitarian aid package and was motivated by regime change in Venezuela more so than ameliorating the humanitarian situation there 375 376 See also editFuel shortages in Venezuela Guaire miners Pemon conflict a theatre of the Venezuelan crisisNotes edit Venezuela s Living Conditions Survey ENCOVI found nearly 75 of the population had lost an average of at least 8 7 kg 19 4 lb in weight due to a lack of proper nutrition 41 Javier Corrales says in Foreign Policy excessive dependence on commodity exports can distort an economy in fundamental ways One manifestation of this principle is what has come to be known as Dutch Disease named after the problems faced by the Netherlands as it reaped a windfall from North Sea oil in the 1970s Dutch Disease occurs when a country that is excessively dependent on commodity exports experiences a price boom The sudden inflow of foreign currency raises the demand for local currency yielding an uncompetitive exchange rate This overvalued exchange rate if unaddressed can kill the country s other exports as well as stimulating an avalanche of imports which can hurt domestic producers 67 Sources reporting on claims of the National Assembly being the only democratically elected or only legitimate political body in Venezuela include Financial Times 95 the BBC 96 Economic Times 97 CTV 98 Reuters agency 99 CBC 100 etc On unchecked power of the executive Human Rights Watch 2018 report 101 Human Rights Watch 2017 report 102 Amnesty International 103 and Amnesty International on opposition 104 Venezuela s Living Conditions Survey ENCOVI found nearly 75 of the population had lost an average of at least 8 7 kg 19 4 lb in weight due to a lack of proper nutrition 41 Article 83 Health is a fundamental social right and the responsibility of the State which shall guarantee it as part of the right to life The State shall promote and develop policies oriented toward improving the quality of life common welfare and access to services All persons have the right to protection of health as well as the duty to participate actively in the furtherance and protection of the same and to comply with such health and hygiene measures as may be established by law and in accordance with international conventions and treaties signed and ratified by the Republic 172 Illegal mining creates pools of standing water that encourage mosquito breeding a partial cause of the increase in malaria seen in Venezuela 136 References edit Report of the General Secretariat Of The Organization Of American States And The Panel Of Independent International Experts On The Possible Commission of Crimes Against Humanity In Venezuela PDF Organization of American States 29 May 2018 p 70 That same April 19 23 year old Paola Andreina Ramirez Gomez a student at the Catholic University of San Cristobal was killed in the vicinity of the Plaza de Las Palomas of the neighborhood of San Carlos Tachira state when she was intercepted by several armed civilians on motorcycles patrolling the demonstrations taking place in the area They tried to strip her of her belongings and as she tried to run away she was struck down by a bullet that perforated her lungs Colectivos el rostro civil de la represion en Tachira in Spanish Venezuelan Observatory of Violence 15 August 2017 Archived from the original on 3 April 2019 Retrieved 23 March 2019 Alli cayo la joven de 23 anos en medio de un enfrentamiento entre un vecino del sector y este grupo armado Asi mataron los colectivos chavistas a Paola Ramirez la segunda victima del 19A en Venezuela Infobae in Spanish 20 April 2017 Retrieved 23 March 2019 El asesinato de Paola Andreina Ramirez Gomez una joven estudiante de 23 anos quedo registrado en al menos dos videos que muestran como operan los colectivos chavistas que acabaron con su vida a b Chavez declara guerra economica a burguesia en Venezuela El Universo in Spanish 2 June 2010 Retrieved 16 July 2018 Ellsworth Brian 14 February 2012 Insight Post election hangover looms for Venezuela economy Reuters Retrieved 22 February 2017 One in three Venezuelans not getting enough to eat UN finds The Guardian 24 February 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2020 a b c d e Larmer Brook 1 November 2018 What 52 000 Percent Inflation Can Do to a Country The New York Times Retrieved 2 November 2018 a b c Kurmanaev Anatoly 17 May 2019 Venezuela s Collapse Is the Worst Outside of War in Decades Economists Say The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 18 May 2019 Venezuela s fall is the single largest economic collapse outside of war in at least 45 years economists say economists say the poor governance corruption and misguided policies of President Nicolas Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chavez have fueled runaway inflation shuttered businesses and brought the country to its knees most independent economists say the recession began years before the sanctions a b c d e f g Biller David and Patricia Laya 9 April 2019 Venezuela unemployment nears that of war ruined Bosnia IMF says Bloomberg Retrieved 9 April 2019 a b c d Krauze Enrique 8 March 2018 Hell of a Fiesta New York Review of Books 65 4 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Goodman Joshua and Luis Alonso Lugo 19 April 2018 US officials 16 nations agree to track Venezuela corruption The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 19 April 2018 Retrieved 20 April 2018 a b Mariana Zuniga and Anthony Faiola Even sex is in crisis in Venezuela where contraceptives are growing scarce Friedman Uri 4 June 2017 How Populism Helped Wreck Venezuela The Atlantic a b Larmer Brook 1 November 2018 What 52 000 Percent Inflation Can Do to a Country The New York Times Retrieved 2 November 2018 a b Asamblea Nacional de Venezuela declara crisis humanitaria de salud por escasez de medicamentos Venezuela s National Assembly declares humanitarian health crisis due to medicine shortage in Spanish BBC 27 January 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b Delcy Rodriguez No existe crisis humanitaria en Venezuela El Nacional in Spanish 31 August 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Maduro niega la diaspora venezolana en la ONU Se ha fabricado por distintas vias una crisis migratoria LaPatilla com LaPatilla com in European Spanish 26 September 2018 Retrieved 27 September 2018 a b c Venezuela blackout in 2nd day threatens food supplies and patient lives The New York Times 8 March 2019 Retrieved 18 March 2019 The Maduro administration has been responsible for grossly mismanaging the economy and plunging the country into a deep humanitarian crisis in which many people lack food and medical care He has also attempted to crush the opposition by jailing or exiling critics and using lethal force against antigovernment protesters a b Venezuela Forces Killed Thousands Then Covered It Up U N Says New York Times 5 July 2019 a b Sibery Brian Loughman Richard A 2012 Bribery and corruption navigating the global risks Hoboken N J Wiley ISBN 978 1118011362 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Venezuela deve continuar como economia mais miseravel do mundo economia uol com br 4 February 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2017 a b EU extends Venezuela sanctions over democracy rights violations Reuters 6 November 2018 Retrieved 3 April 2019 Grupo de Lima prohibira entrada a sus paises a miembros del Gobierno de Maduro El Comercio in Spanish Retrieved 13 February 2021 Swiss impose sanctions on seven senior Venezuelan officials Reuters 28 March 2018 Retrieved 3 April 2019 Also at Diario Las Americas Canada imposes sanctions on key Venezuelan officials CBC Canada Thomson Reuters 22 September 2017 Retrieved 3 April 2019 Que significa que EE UU considere a Venezuela una amenaza para la seguridad nacional BBC Mundo 10 March 2015 Retrieved 2 April 2019 Lane Sylvan Rafael Bernal 26 July 2017 Treasury sanctions target Venezuela president s allies The Hill Retrieved 3 April 2019 Sullivan Andy Lisa Lambert 15 February 2019 U S sanctions five Venezuelans ratcheting up pressure on Maduro Reuters Retrieved 3 April 2019 Venezuela 2016 inflation hits 800 percent GDP shrinks 19 percent document Reuters 20 January 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2017 Welle www dw com Deutsche The human cost of the US sanctions on Venezuela DW 01 10 2019 DW COM Retrieved 22 September 2020 Melimopoulos Elizabeth 21 January 2019 Venezuela in crisis How did the country get here Al Jazeera Retrieved 23 March 2019 Toro Francisco 21 August 2018 No Venezuela doesn t prove anything about socialism The Washington Post Retrieved 4 June 2019 Since the turn of the century every big country in South America except Colombia has elected a socialist president at some point Socialists have taken power in South America s largest economy Brazil in its poorest Bolivia and in its most capitalist Chile Socialists have led South America s most stable country Uruguay as well as its most unstable Ecuador Argentina and Peru elected leftists who for various reasons didn t refer to themselves as socialists but certainly governed as such Mysteriously the supposedly automatic link between socialism and the zombie apocalypse skipped all of them Not content with merely not collapsing a number of these countries have thrived Socialismo de Maduro ha convertido a Venezuela en un estado de pobreza y desesperacion Trump El Financiero 5 February 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2019 Lopez Maya Margarita 14 December 2018 Populism 21st century socialism and corruption in Venezuela Thesis Eleven 149 67 83 doi 10 1177 0725513618818727 S2CID 150327831 Rabouin Dion 19 May 2018 Here s why you can t blame socialism for Venezuela s crisis Yahoo Finance Retrieved 4 June 2019 Socialism can result in diverse outcomes that range from the economy of Norway to that of Venezuela and socialist leaders who vary as widely as Bolivia s Evo Morales and France s former President Francois Hollande Venezuela s problems stem from corruption and egregious mismanagement which can happen anywhere Countries with socialist regimes such as China Vietnam Chile and many in Europe have managed to successfully grow their economies as Venezuela s has tumbled Cusack Asa Is socialism to blame for Venezuela s never ending crisis Aljazeera Archived from the original on 6 October 2020 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Faiola Anthony In socialist Venezuela a crisis of faith not in just their leader but their economic model The Washington Post No 11 February 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2019 Di Martino Daniel 21 March 2019 How Socialism Destroyed Venezuela Economics21 Archived from the original on 17 April 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Oliveros Asdrubal Arcay Guillermo Leidenz Jean Paul 10 January 2018 Hiperinflaciones socialistas Prodavinci in Spanish Archived from the original on 10 January 2018 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Heritage Andrew December 2002 Financial Times World Desk Reference Dorling Kindersley pp 618 621 ISBN 9780789488053 Wilpert Gregory Wilpert 2007 Changing Venezuela By Taking Power The History and Policies of the Chavez Government Verso p 69 ISBN 978 1 84467 552 4 A Populist Paradox Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University 1 November 2010 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Chavez won the election despite multiple signs that some of his populist policies including redistributive land reform and price setting were harming average Venezuelans Murphy Robert P 6 May 2017 The Venezuelan Crisis Is Due to Economic Ignorance The Independent Institute Retrieved 31 August 2018 As awful as the Venezuelan crisis is it is not surprising Indeed the pattern we see there is a predictable outcome of populist policies that ignore the basic laws of economics Corrales Javier 7 May 2015 Don t Blame It On the Oil Foreign Policy Retrieved 18 November 2019 Corrales Javier 7 March 2013 The House That Chavez Built Foreign Policy Retrieved 6 February 2015 Venezuela s Expensive Friendships Stratfor 2 January 2016 Retrieved 20 January 2016 Min woo Nam 2 May 2018 Hwapyegyeongje muneojyeossneunde choejeoimgeum insang e mogmaeneun Benesuella 화폐경제 무너졌는데 최저임금 인상에 목매는 베네수엘라 The economy collapsed Venezuela clamors for minimum wage hike The Chosun Ilbo in Korean Retrieved 22 May 2018 Venezuela s fall is considered to be mainly caused by the populist policy Venezuela for decades has increased the number of public sector employees and has promoted populist support to maintain the regime Kurmanaev Anatoly 17 May 2019 Venezuela s Collapse Is the Worst Outside of War in Decades Economists Say The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 18 May 2019 Venezuela s fall is the single largest economic collapse outside of war in at least 45 years economists say economists say the poor governance corruption and misguided policies of President Nicolas Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chavez have fueled runaway inflation shuttered businesses and brought the country to its knees most independent economists say the recession began years before the sanctions Corrales Javier 7 March 2013 The House That Chavez Built Foreign Policy Retrieved 6 February 2015 Benzaquen Mercy 16 July 2017 How Food in Venezuela Went From Subsidized to Scarce The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 18 July 2017 The Venezuelan refugee crisis Challenges and solutions PDF Brookings Institution 13 April 2018 Retrieved 10 December 2018 Venezuela tropezando con la misma piedra PDF Ecoanalitica in Spanish Retrieved 23 March 2019 permanent dead link Proyeccion del documental El pueblo soy yo Venezuela en populismo Prensa Libre in Spanish 18 March 2019 Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 23 March 2019 a b c d Venezuela 75 of population lost 19 pounds amid crisis UPI Retrieved 1 May 2017 Caraballo Arias Yohama Madrid Jesus Barrios Marcial 25 September 2018 Working in Venezuela How the Crisis has Affected the Labor Conditions Annals of Global Health 84 3 512 522 doi 10 29024 aogh 2325 ISSN 2214 9996 PMC 6748246 PMID 30835391 Nichols Michelle 29 March 2019 Venezuelans facing unprecedented challenges many need aid internal U N report Reuters Retrieved 6 April 2019 a b Venezuelan migrant exodus hits 3 million U N Reuters 8 November 2018 Retrieved 28 February 2019 a b Venezuela situation United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2021 a b Wyss Jim 13 August 2019 A nation is vanishing Has Venezuela lost almost 20 percent of its population The Miami Herald Retrieved 15 August 2019 UNODC Intentional Homicide Victims United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime UNODC Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b Venezuela s timid gains in taming inflation fade as food prices soar Reuters 11 May 2020 More dollars and fewer protests in Venezuela The Economist 18 December 2019 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 27 December 2019 a b Maduro says thank God for dollarization in Venezuela Reuters 17 November 2019 Retrieved 18 November 2019 a b Encovi 2021 Venezuela Is The Poorest Country in Latin America Caracas Chronicles 30 September 2021 Archived from the original on 30 September 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Frangie Mawad Tony 19 January 2023 Venezuela s Modest Economic Liberalization Has Created a Hellscape of Inequality Foreign Policy Retrieved 10 July 2023 Volume 57 Social Sciences Government and Politics Venezuela Rene Salgado a b Estrategia de Cooperacion de OPS OMS con Venezuela 2006 2008 PDF in Spanish Pan American Health Organization June 2006 pp p 54 Archived from the original PDF on 24 October 2006 Retrieved 31 December 2006 a b Fact Sheet Social Missions in Venezuela PDF Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela to the United States 12 November 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 21 June 2017 Retrieved 3 May 2017 a b c Barreiro C Raquel 4 March 2006 Mercal es 34 mas barato in Spanish El Universal Retrieved 29 December 2006 Venezuela s economy Medieval policies The Economist 20 August 2011 Retrieved 21 April 2014 Heritage Andrew December 2002 Financial Times World Desk Reference Dorling Kindersley pp 618 21 ISBN 9780789488053 Corrales Javier Penfold Michael 2 April 2015 Dragon in the Tropics The Legacy of Hugo Chavez Brookings Institution Press p 5 ISBN 978 0815725930 Press release N 20 10 IACHR publishes report on Venezuela Inter American Commission on Human Rights Press release Organization of American States 24 February 2010 Retrieved 26 February 2010 Alonso Juan Francisco 24 February 2010 IACHR requests the Venezuelan government to guarantee all human rights El Universal Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 25 February 2010 Schimizzi Carrie 24 February 2010 Venezuela government violating basic human rights report Jurist Legal news and research Archived from the original on 20 October 2013 Retrieved 25 February 2010 a b Charlie Devereux amp Raymond Colitt 7 March 2013 Venezuelans Quality of Life Improved in UN Index Under Chavez Bloomberg L P Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 7 March 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Meade Teresa A History of Modern Latin America 1800 to the Present Oxford 2010 p 313 Min woo Nam 2 May 2018 Hwapyegyeongje muneojyeossneunde choejeoimgeum insang e mogmaeneun Benesuella 화폐경제 무너졌는데 최저임금 인상에 목매는 베네수엘라 The economy collapsed Venezuela clamors for minimum wage hike The Chosun Ilbo in Korean Retrieved 22 May 2018 Venezuela s fall is considered to be mainly caused by the populist policy Venezuela for decades has increased the number of public sector employees and has promoted populist support to maintain the regime a b Sibery Brian Loughman Richard A 2012 Bribery and corruption navigating the global risks Hoboken N J Wiley ISBN 978 1118011362 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Venezuela deve continuar como economia mais miseravel do mundo economia uol com br 4 February 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2017 a b c d e Corrales Javier 7 March 2013 The House That Chavez Built Foreign Policy Retrieved 6 February 2015 Corrales Javier Romero Carlos 2013 U S Venezuela relations since the 1990s coping with mid level security threats New York Routledge pp 79 81 ISBN 978 0415895248 a b Siegel Robert 25 December 2014 For Venezuela Drop In Global Oil Prices Could Be Catastrophic NPR Retrieved 4 January 2015 a b Scharfenberg Ewald 1 February 2015 Volver a ser pobre en Venezuela El Pais Retrieved 3 February 2015 Gallagher J J 25 March 2015 Venezuela Does an increase in poverty signal threat to government The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 29 March 2015 Corrales Javier 7 May 2015 Don t Blame It On the Oil Foreign Policy Retrieved 10 May 2015 Las principales causas de la escasez en Venezuela Banca amp Negocios 27 March 2014 Archived from the original on 22 April 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2014 El ascenso de la escasez El Universal 13 February 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2014 Por que faltan dolares en Venezuela El Nacional 8 October 2013 Archived from the original on 22 April 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2014 Cristobal Nagel Juan 4 June 2014 Poverty Shoots Up in Venezuela Foreign Policy Retrieved 26 October 2015 2014 Panorama Social de America Latina PDF United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean United Nations Retrieved 24 October 2015 Venezuela s economy Medieval policies The Economist 20 August 2011 Retrieved 23 February 2014 Post Chavez Venezuela Enters a Downward Spiral Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania 4 April 2014 Retrieved 21 February 2015 Corrales Javier 2015 Autocratic Legalism in Venezuela Journal of Democracy 26 2 37 51 doi 10 1353 jod 2015 0031 S2CID 153641967 Venezuela s April inflation jumps to 5 7 percent report Reuters 17 May 2014 Retrieved 18 May 2014 a b Ferdman Roberto A 26 March 2014 Venezuela s black market rate for US dollars just jumped by almost 40 Quartz Retrieved 27 March 2014 a b Venezuela s currency The not so strong bolivar The Economist 11 February 2013 Retrieved 18 February 2013 a b Voigt Kevin 6 March 2013 Chavez leaves Venezuelan economy more equal less stable CNN Retrieved 6 March 2013 Mr Maduro in His Labyrinth The New York Times The New York Times 26 January 2015 Retrieved 26 January 2015 Venezuela s government seizes electronic goods shops BBC Retrieved 19 February 2014 Maduro anuncia que el martes arranca nueva ofensiva economica La Patilla 22 April 2014 Retrieved 23 April 2014 Maduro insiste con una nueva ofensiva economica La Nacion 23 April 2014 Archived from the original on 2 May 2014 Retrieved 1 May 2014 Castillo Mariano Hernandez Osmary 20 November 2013 Decree powers widen Venezuelan president s economic war CNN Retrieved 21 February 2014 Yapur Nicolle 24 April 2014 Primera ofensiva economica trajo mas inflacion y escasez El Nacional Archived from the original on 24 April 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2014 Gupta Girish 3 November 2014 Could Low Oil Prices End Venezuela s Revolution The New Yorker Retrieved 15 November 2014 New Year s Wishes for Venezuela Bloomberg The Washington Post 2 January 2015 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Pons Corina Cawthorne Andrew 30 December 2014 Recession hit Venezuela vows New Year reforms foes scoff Reuters a b Pons Corina 20 January 2017 Venezuela 2016 inflation hits 800 percent GDP shrinks 19 percent Reuters Retrieved 15 November 2017 Cristobal Nagel Juan 13 July 2015 Looking Into the Black Box of Venezuela s Economy Foreign Policy Retrieved 14 July 2015 Ban Ki moon En Venezuela hay una crisis humanitaria Ban Ki moon There is a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela La Nacion in Spanish 10 August 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2022 Estoy muy preocupado por la situacion actual en la que las necesidades basicas no pueden ser cubiertas como la comida el agua la sanidad la ropa no estan disponibles Eso crea una crisis humanitaria en Venezuela dijo el secretario general a b Maduro niega la diaspora venezolana en la ONU Se ha fabricado por distintas vias una crisis migratoria LaPatilla com LaPatilla com in European Spanish 26 September 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Charner Flora 15 October 2016 The face of hunger in Venezuela CNN Retrieved 20 February 2019 Vyas Kejal and Ryan Dube 6 April 2018 Venezuelans Die as Maduro Government Refuses Medical Aid The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Glusing Jens 8 August 2018 The Country of Hunger A State of Deep Suffering in Venezuela s Hospitals Der Spiegel Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b c d e f g Dube Ryan 29 March 2019 Red Cross announces Venezuelan aid effort The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones Institutional News via ProQuest Also available online More dollars and fewer protests in Venezuela The Economist 18 December 2019 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 27 December 2019 Most Western and Latin American countries recognise Mr Guaido s claim Corrales Javier 7 March 2013 The House That Chavez Built Foreign Policy Retrieved 6 February 2015 Benzaquen Mercy 16 July 2017 How Food in Venezuela Went From Subsidized to Scarce The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 18 July 2017 The Venezuelan refugee crisis Challenges and solutions PDF Brookings Institution 13 April 2018 Retrieved 10 December 2018 Venezuela tropezando con la misma piedra PDF Ecoanalitica in Spanish Retrieved 23 March 2019 permanent dead link Proyeccion del documental El pueblo soy yo Venezuela en populismo Prensa Libre in Spanish 18 March 2019 Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 23 March 2019 a b Casey Nicholas Torres Patricia 30 March 2017 Venezuela Muzzles Legislature Moving Closer to One Man Rule The New York Times p A1 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Venezuela s Lame Duck Congress Names New Supreme Court Justices Bloomberg 23 December 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Venezuela s Maduro begins second term BBC News 10 January 2019 Archived from the original on 10 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Romo Rafael 30 March 2017 Venezuela s high court dissolves National Assembly CNN Retrieved 8 April 2019 Long Gideon 13 January 2019 Venezuela s opposition vows to help end Maduro s rule Financial Times Retrieved 15 January 2019 the National Assembly is the only democratically elected institution left in the country Venezuela crisis Guaido rejects talks with Maduro 26 January 2019 Retrieved 31 January 2019 Russia China block US push for UN to back Venezuela s Juan Guaido Economic Times Archived from the original on 1 February 2019 Retrieved 31 January 2019 Freeland says Venezuela s Maduro regime is now fully entrenched as a dictatorship CTV 10 January 2019 Retrieved 31 January 2019 Reuters US pushes UN Security Council to back Venezuela s Guaido Kyiv Post 26 January 2019 Retrieved 31 January 2019 Singh calls on Trudeau to part ways with US Brazil on Venezuela crisis CBC News Retrieved 31 January 2019 Venezuela Events of 2018 Human Rights Watch 20 December 2018 Retrieved 4 February 2019 No independent government institutions remain today in Venezuela to act as a check on executive power A series of measures by the Maduro and Chavez governments stacked the courts with judges who make no pretense of independence The government has been repressing dissent through often violent crackdowns on street protests jailing opponents and prosecuting civilians in military courts It has also stripped power from the opposition led legislature In 2017 President Maduro convened a Constituent Assembly by presidential decree despite a constitutional requirement that a public referendum be held before any effort to rewrite the Constitution The assembly is made up exclusively of government supporters chosen through an election that Smartmatic a British company hired by the government to verify the results called fraudulent The Constituent Assembly has in practice replaced the opposition led National Assembly as the country s legislative branch Venezuela Events of 2017 Human Rights Watch 5 January 2018 Retrieved 4 February 2019 The Venezuelan government has jailed political opponents and disqualified them from running for office At time of writing more than 340 political prisoners were languishing in Venezuelan prisons or intelligence services headquarters according to the Penal Forum a Venezuelan network of pro bono criminal defense lawyers In mid 2017 the Supreme Court sentenced five opposition mayors after summary proceedings that violated international norms of due process to 15 months in prison and disqualified them from running for office Venezuela 2017 2018 Amnesty International Retrieved 4 February 2019 The judicial system continued to be used to silence dissidents including using military jurisdiction to prosecute civilians The justice system continued to be subject to government interference especially in cases involving people critical of the government or those who were considered to be acting against the interests of the authorities The Bolivarian National Intelligence Service continued to ignore court decisions to transfer and release people in its custody Wave of arrests as government turns against elected opposition Amnesty International 11 August 2017 Retrieved 4 February 2019 The arrest of four officials from the opposition in Venezuela the removal from office of a further 11 and the issuing of arrest warrants against another five demonstrates the Maduro administration s tightening stranglehold on any form of dissent taking repression to a frightening new level said Amnesty International Lugo Galicia Hernan and Ayatola Nuneza 20 April 2017 El pais grito Maduro no te queremos El Nacional in Spanish Archived from the original on 26 March 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2017 El corresponsal de SEMANA en Caracas relata como la madre de todas las marchas que convoco la oposicion venezolana termino como se esperaba con represion con violencia Analisis del duro panorama en el vecino pais Semana 20 April 2017 Archived from the original on 4 July 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2017 Noticias de America Dia de violencia en las marchas a favor y en contra de Maduro Radio France Internationale in European Spanish 20 April 2017 Retrieved 21 April 2017 a b Venezuela s embattled socialist president calls for citizens congress new constitution USA Today Associated Press 1 May 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2017 Que busca Nicolas Maduro con el nuevo autogolpe que quiere imponer en Venezuela What is Maduro seeking with the new self coup that he tries to impose in Venezuela La Nacion in Spanish 2 May 2017 Archived from the original on 11 January 2018 Retrieved 1 May 2017 Cascione Silvio 5 August 2017 Mercosur suspends Venezuela urges immediate transition Reuters com Retrieved 6 August 2017 La lista de los 40 paises democraticos que hasta el momento desconocieron la Asamblea Constituyente de Venezuela Infobae in Spanish 31 July 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Venezuela New assembly leader warns justice will come 4 August 2017 Retrieved 19 August 2017 As Venezuela unrest spreads Maduro presses on with plans to rewrite charter Reuters 24 May 2017 Retrieved 24 May 2017 Venezuelan gov t proposes constitutional assembly election on July 30 EFE 4 June 2017 Retrieved 6 June 2017 40 countries protest Venezuela s new assembly amid fraud accusations Retrieved 4 August 2017 Declaration by the High Representative on behalf of the European Union on the situation in Venezuela Consilium consilium europa eu High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Retrieved 30 July 2017 Devereux Charlie 21 July 2017 Venezuela Urged by Mercosur to Refrain From Escalating Tensions Bloomberg com Retrieved 12 April 2018 Almagro 13 OAS Nations Demand Maduro Suspend Constitutional Assembly Latin American Herald Tribune 26 July 2017 Archived from the original on 30 July 2017 Retrieved 29 July 2017 Venezuela opposition boycotts meeting on Maduro assembly clashes rage Reuters 8 April 2017 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Mogollon Mery and Chris Kraul 29 July 2017 As Venezuelan election nears more upheaval and cries of fraud Los Angeles Times Retrieved 8 April 2019 What are Venezuelans voting for and why is it so divisive BBC News 30 July 2017 Retrieved 30 July 2017 Bronstein Hugh 29 July 2017 Venezuelan opposition promises new tactics after Sunday s vote Reuters India Archived from the original on 7 April 2019 Retrieved 30 July 2017 Syria congratulates Venezuela on successful election of the Constituent Assembly sana sy Syrian Arab News Agency Retrieved 1 August 2017 Venezuela Where is the condemnation 4 July 2017 Archived from the original on 31 July 2017 Retrieved 31 July 2017 Hanna Jason and Nicole Chavez 4 August 2017 Venezuela New assembly leader warns justice will come CNN Retrieved 2 April 2018 Goodman Joshua and Fabiola Sanchez 8 August 2017 New Venezuela assembly declares itself superior government branch Chicago Tribune Associated Press Retrieved 9 August 2017 Venezuela opposition weighs election run BBC News 8 February 2018 Retrieved 8 February 2018 ANC aprobo un decreto para la validacion de los partidos politicos El Nacional 20 December 2017 Olmo BBCgolmo Guillermo D 10 January 2019 Por que es polemico que Maduro jure como presidente de Venezuela y por que lo hace ahora si las elecciones fueron en mayo BBC News Mundo Retrieved 11 January 2019 Maduro gana con la abstencion historica mas alta en comicios presidenciales Efecto Cocuyo efectococuyo com Archived from the original on 21 December 2018 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Venezuela opposition banned from running in 2018 election BBC News 11 December 2017 Sen Ashish Kumar 18 May 2018 Venezuela s Sham Election Atlantic Council Archived from the original on 18 November 2018 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Corrales Javier Venezuela s Odd Transition to Dictatorship Americas Quarterly Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2016 Brodzinsky Sibylla 21 October 2016 Venezuelans warn of dictatorship after officials block bid to recall Maduro The Guardian Archived from the original on 9 December 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2016 Almagro Maduro se transforma en dictador por negarles a venezolanos derecho a decidir su futuro CNN en Espanol 24 August 2016 Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2016 Venezuela Swears in an illegitimate President Financial Times 10 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Herrero Ana Vanessa Specia Megan 10 January 2019 Venezuela Is in Crisis So How Did Maduro Secure a Second Term The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 11 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Peru Paraguay recall diplomats over Maduro inauguration Aljazeera com Archived from the original on 10 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Asamblea Nacional arranca proceso para Ley de Transicion Archived from the original on 9 January 2019 Retrieved 10 January 2019 Smith Scott 10 January 2019 Isolation greets Maduro s new term as Venezuela s president AP News Archived from the original on 11 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Corruption perceptions index 2018 Transparency International 29 January 2019 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Aumenta percepcion de corrupcion en America Latina y el Caribe Transparencia Internacional in Spanish Reuters 9 October 2017 Archived from the original on 7 April 2019 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Informe Latinobarometro 2018 Latinobarometro Retrieved 6 April 2019 Tinoco Cesar 30 November 2018 Venezuela y Latinobarometro 2018 in Spanish El Nacional Retrieved 6 April 2019 Martinez Jessica 20 February 2014 Venezuelans in US march against their country s violent corrupt government Christian Post Retrieved 15 April 2018 The crisis in Venezuela was years in the making Here s how it happened The New York Times 23 January 2019 via ProQuest Venezuela once had Latin America s richest economy buoyed by oil reserves larger even than Saudi Arabia s and Iran s Yet under Mr Maduro and his predecessor and mentor Hugo Chavez who died in 2013 Venezuela s economy spiraled into mismanagement corruption and backbreaking debt After he inherited a collapsing economy Mr Maduro granted the military control of lucrative industries and printed money to dole out patronage worsening the crisis but retaining power Also available online a b c d e f g h i j k l Perez Santiago 25 March 2019 Venezuela s economic collapse explained in nine charts Venezuela s decline is now deeper than that of the Soviet Union after its breakup and comparable only to Zimbabwe s in the late 1990s economists say The Wall Street Journal via ProQuest a b c d e Nichols Michelle 29 March 2019 Venezuelans facing unprecedented challenges many need aid internal U N report Reuters Retrieved 6 April 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Venezuela s humanitarian emergency Large scale UN response needed to address health and food crises Human Rights Watch 4 April 2019 Retrieved 7 April 2019 Also available in Spanish a b c d e Venezuela military controls food as nation goes hungry aljazeera com 1 January 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2017 a b c The devolution of state power The Colectivos Insight Crime 18 May 2018 Retrieved 28 February 2019 Also available in Spanish Sheridan Mary Beth and Mariana Zuniga 14 March 2019 Maduro s muscle Motorcycle gangs known as colectivos are the enforcers for Venezuela s authoritarian leader Sun Sentinel The Washington Post Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b c Sanchez Fabiola 8 June 2016 As hunger mounts Venezuelans turn to trash for food Associated Press Retrieved 12 July 2016 Why are Venezuelans posting pictures of empty shelves BBC 8 January 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2015 Cawthorne Andrew 21 January 2015 In shortages hit Venezuela lining up becomes a profession Reuters Retrieved 17 June 2015 MacDonald Elizabeth 26 May 2016 Exclusive Harrowing Video Shows Staenezuelans Eating Garbage Looting Fox Business Archived from the original on 7 July 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2016 Mangoes fill the gaps in Venezuela s food crisis Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Reuters 7 June 2016 Retrieved 12 July 2016 a b Ocando Gustavo 10 February 2017 Hungry Venezuelans killing flamingos and anteaters for food biologists say Miami Herald Retrieved 1 May 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Venezuela UN should lead full scale emergency response Human Rights Watch 4 April 2019 Retrieved 7 April 2019 Kohut Meridith and Isayen Herrera 17 December 2017 As Venezuela collapses children are dying of hunger The New York Times Retrieved 8 April 2018 a b Sequera Vivian 21 February 2018 Venezuelans report big weight losses in 2017 as hunger hits Reuters Retrieved 23 February 2018 Landaeta Jimenez Maritza et al February 2018 Encuesta Nacional de Condiciones de Vida Venezuela 2017 Alimentacion I Annual Survey of Living Conditions Venezuela 2017 Food 1 PDF Universidad Catolica Andres Bello in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2021 Retrieved 23 February 2018 a b c d e Hernandez Arelis R and Mariana Zuniga 4 April 2019 Why are you crying Mami In Venezuela the search for water is a daily struggle The Washington Post Retrieved 9 April 2019 Rojas Indira 12 March 2019 Jose Maria de Viana El Sistema Tuy en Caracas necesita 600 megavatios de potencia para funcionar de nuevo Jose Maria de Viana The Tuy System in Caracas needs 600 megawatts of power to function again Prodavinci in Spanish Retrieved 13 March 2019 Ellsworth Brian and Vivian Sequera 11 March 2019 Desperate Venezuelans swarm sewage drains in search of water Reuters Retrieved 9 April 2019 In pictures Seeking water amid power cut BBC 13 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Ciudadanos se banan en alcantarillas por falta de luz y agua en Lara Citizens bathe in sewers due to lack of light and water in Lara El Nacional in Spanish 10 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Caraballo Arias Yohama Madrid Jesus Barrios Marcial 25 September 2018 Working in Venezuela How the Crisis has Affected the Labor Conditions Annals of Global Health 84 3 512 522 doi 10 29024 aogh 2325 ISSN 2214 9996 PMC 6748246 PMID 30835391 UNODC Intentional Homicide Victims United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime UNODC Retrieved 20 February 2019 More dollars and fewer protests in Venezuela The Economist 18 December 2019 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 27 December 2019 Data The World Bank data worldbank org Retrieved 29 July 2019 a b c Venezuela s medical crisis requires world s attention The Boston Globe 28 April 2015 Retrieved 17 May 2015 a b c d e f Wilson Peter 27 April 2015 The Collapse of Chavezcare Foreign Policy Retrieved 17 May 2015 a b c Bajak Frank 6 November 2013 Doctors say Venezuela s health care in collapse Associated Press Archived from the original on 10 November 2014 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Doctors not allied with the government say many patients began dying from easily treatable illnesses when Venezuela s downward economic slide accelerated after Chavez s death from cancer in March Doctors say it s impossible to know how many have died and the government doesn t keep such numbers just as it hasn t published health statistics since 2010 Medicos del Hospital Universitario de Caracas suspenden cirugias por falta de insumos Globovision 21 February 2014 Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 Retrieved 21 February 2014 a b Beaumont Peter 27 February 2019 Infant mortality in Venezuela has soared during crisis UN says The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b Hider James 5 August 2015 Thousands dying early as medical system implodes in Venezuela The Times UK Retrieved 5 August 2015 In deteriorating Venezuela a kid s scraped knee can be life or death NBC News 5 October 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2016 Venezuela s Broken Health System DocFilm 2 March 2019 Deutsche Welle TV Archived from the original on 2 March 2019 Retrieved 4 March 2019 Politics this week The Economist 11 May 2017 Politics this week The Economist 11 May 2017 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 29 July 2019 Nicolas Maduro destituyo a la ministra de Salud que publico las cifras sobre los aumentos en mortalidad infantil y materna en Venezuela Infobae 11 May 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2017 a b c d e f Hodal Kate 5 April 2019 UN urged to declare full scale crisis in Venezuela as health system collapses The Guardian Retrieved 7 April 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Schreiber Melody 5 April 2019 Researchers are surprised by the magnitude of Venezuela s health crisis NPR Retrieved 7 April 2019 U S to pay for thousands of doses of HIV drugs for Venezuelan Reuters 29 August 2019 Retrieved 29 August 2019 a b c d e f g h DeYoung Karen 4 April 2019 Venezuela s health system in utter collapse as infectious diseases spread report says The Washington Post Retrieved 7 April 2019 Also available at The Independent Moloney Anastasia 4 April 2019 U N urged to scale up aid as Venezuela crisis deepens Reuters Retrieved 7 April 2019 Lugo Luis Alonso 4 April 2019 Report Full scale UN response needed in Venezuela AP News Retrieved 7 April 2019 Also available at The Globe and Mail Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Human Rights Library University of Minnesota Retrieved 5 April 2019 a b c Beaumont Peter 12 April 2019 Red Cross aid to Venezuela to triple as Maduro stance softens The Guardian Retrieved 12 April 2019 Maduro says Venezuela ready to receive international aid Al Jazeera 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 a b c d Torchia Christopher 29 March 2019 Red Cross ready to aid Venezuela warns against politics The Washington Post Associated Press via ProQuest Also available online a b c d Finnegan William 14 November 2016 Venezuela a failing state The New Yorker Retrieved 1 May 2017 Pardo Daniel 23 August 2014 The malaria mines of Venezuela BBC Retrieved 31 August 2014 Venezuela Faces Health Crisis Amid Shortage of HIV Aids Medication Fox News Latino 14 May 2014 Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Forero Juan 22 September 2014 Venezuela Seeks to Quell Fears of Disease Outbreak The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 24 September 2014 Lobo Guerrero Catalina 19 September 2014 Venezuela s Maduro denounces psychological war waged by opposition El Pais Retrieved 8 April 2019 Wade Lizzie 23 September 2014 In Venezuela doctor flees after being accused of terrorism amid fever outbreak Science Retrieved 28 September 2014 Pons Corina 19 March 2020 Cash strapped Venezuela hikes public service fees amid coronavirus outbreak Reuters Retrieved 20 March 2020 Mask gown gloves none of that exists Venezuela s coronavirus crisis The Guardian 17 March 2020 Retrieved 20 March 2020 Venezuela The Rise and Fall of a Petrostate Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved 19 February 2024 Venezuela files claim for the Bank of England to hand over 1 5bn of its gold Australian Broadcasting Corporation Reuters 21 May 2020 Retrieved 21 May 2020 a b Wintour Patrick 5 October 2020 UK court overturns ruling on 1 8bn of Venezuelan gold The Guardian Retrieved 4 August 2021 a b Ulmer Alexandra 9 May 2017 Infant mortality and malaria soar in Venezuela according to government data Reuters Retrieved 14 April 2018 a b link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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