 Yet the villagers of Tocorón are lucky.
They have an ally in their desperate daily scramble for food: the local prison.
This facility has all the products big cities don’t: sugar and shampoo, diapers
and deodorant, toothpaste and toilet paper—all of it for sale in a bizarre
black market behind bars, which has citizens—at least those who can afford
it—trying to enter prison for food.“Locals come here to do their shopping,”
says Julio, an inmate at Tocorón, who like most inmates Newsweek interviewed
asked only to be identified by his first name because of security reasons.
“Sometimes we can’t even buy products because visitors always come first.” More…
Yet the villagers of Tocorón are lucky.
They have an ally in their desperate daily scramble for food: the local prison.
This facility has all the products big cities don’t: sugar and shampoo, diapers
and deodorant, toothpaste and toilet paper—all of it for sale in a bizarre
black market behind bars, which has citizens—at least those who can afford
it—trying to enter prison for food.“Locals come here to do their shopping,”
says Julio, an inmate at Tocorón, who like most inmates Newsweek interviewed
asked only to be identified by his first name because of security reasons.
“Sometimes we can’t even buy products because visitors always come first.” More…Friday, January 13, 2017
For Some Venezuelans, a Failing Economy Means Shopping in Prison
 Yet the villagers of Tocorón are lucky.
They have an ally in their desperate daily scramble for food: the local prison.
This facility has all the products big cities don’t: sugar and shampoo, diapers
and deodorant, toothpaste and toilet paper—all of it for sale in a bizarre
black market behind bars, which has citizens—at least those who can afford
it—trying to enter prison for food.“Locals come here to do their shopping,”
says Julio, an inmate at Tocorón, who like most inmates Newsweek interviewed
asked only to be identified by his first name because of security reasons.
“Sometimes we can’t even buy products because visitors always come first.” More…
Yet the villagers of Tocorón are lucky.
They have an ally in their desperate daily scramble for food: the local prison.
This facility has all the products big cities don’t: sugar and shampoo, diapers
and deodorant, toothpaste and toilet paper—all of it for sale in a bizarre
black market behind bars, which has citizens—at least those who can afford
it—trying to enter prison for food.“Locals come here to do their shopping,”
says Julio, an inmate at Tocorón, who like most inmates Newsweek interviewed
asked only to be identified by his first name because of security reasons.
“Sometimes we can’t even buy products because visitors always come first.” More…
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