NewsWidespread blackout paralyzes Venezuela, sparks increased tensions

Widespread blackout paralyzes Venezuela, sparks increased tensions

President Nicolas Maduro and Minister Freddy Ñañez
President Nicolas Maduro and Minister Freddy Ñañez
Images source: © Getty Images | Jesus Vargas
Przemysław Ciszak

31 August 2024 15:52

Friday's blackout hit a sensitive spot. The Minister of Communication, Freddy Nanez, stated that all 24 states of Venezuela were completely or partially deprived of electricity. The regime accused the opposition of sabotage but presented no evidence to support this claim.

Nicolas Maduro, who is in power in Venezuela and, according to the opposition, rigged the recent presidential elections, frequently accuses political opponents of "attacks" on the power grid. The opposition rejects these accusations.

We have been victims, once again of electrical sabotage – stated Nanez on Friday morning, without showing any evidence for this assertion.

A few hours later, Reuters, citing local sources, reported that the power supply began to be restored in some areas of the capital, Caracas, as well as in the cities of Maracaibo, Valencia, and Puerto Ordaz.

Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said on state television that power would be gradually restored, starting with Caracas.

Oil export paralyzed

The blackout disrupted the operations of the state oil company PDVSA, including its largest oil tanker loading terminal in Puerto Jose, through which about 70% of Venezuela's oil exports pass, reported Reuters.

In response to the power outage, residents began stockpiling fuel and food. Alexa Rivas, a resident of Barquisimeto in the western part of the country, told Reuters that five-kilometre (about 3-mile) lines of vehicles formed outside local gas stations.

The authorities in Caracas declared Maduro the July 28 presidential election winner but did not present evidence in the form of voting documents. The opposition, however, published records suggesting that their candidate, Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, won by an overwhelming majority.

Following the elections, protests broke out across the country, which were brutally suppressed by the police. According to official data, at least 27 people were killed during the protests, and about 2,400 were detained.

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