Friday, January 23, 2015

Empty shelves and rhetoric


THE queue is perhaps a thousand people long. It snakes around the dusty, rubbish-strewn back lot of a giant supermarket in the heart of Caracas, Venezuela’s capital. The store is the flagship of the government-run Bicentenario chain, part of a project started by President Hugo Chávez, who died in 2013, and continued by his successor, Nicolás Maduro, to seize control of the production, import and distribution of food. Never again, they swore, would opponents of the government be able to limit access to food, as they did during a business-led strike in 2002-03. Instead, it is the regime’s hare-brained policies that are plucking food from citizens’ mouths. More…

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