Caracas: Venezuelans were hit with a prolonged nationwide blackout that capped a week of continued strife between the ruling socialist party and the right-wing opposition and its international backers.
The power outage, which the government blamed on sabotage at a central hydroelectric plant, brought cities around the country to a standstill, including the capital Caracas. Schools and offices were closed. Only vital services such as airports and hospitals kept functioning with emergency generators.
Electricity was restored Friday afternoon in at least 10 Caracas districts after 20 hours’ outage, and also in several eastern states. However, the capital was hit by another blackout on Saturday.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Saturday denounced the new attack on Venezuela’s electricity system at a massive rally in Caracas.
He said the government has stepped up efforts to free the national electric company from infiltrators and coup plotters and protect the company from cybernetic and electromagnetic attacks directed by the United States.
The power outage is amid the country’s ongoing political tensions, as the West continued to prop up the opposition in a bid to oust Maduro from power.
Political tensions between the government and opposition groups in Venezuela came to a head after Maduro was sworn in to a new term on Jan. 10.
On Wednesday, Venezuela declared German ambassador Daniel Martin Kriener persona non grata and gave him 48 hours to leave the country after the envoy demonstrated his allegiance to the opposition.
Kriener was among a handful of ambassadors who went to the airport on Monday to welcome opposition leader and self-proclaimed “interim president” Juan Guaido on his return from a tour of Latin American countries that support Venezuela’s Washington-backed opposition.
A day later, the White House’s special representative for Venezuela, Elliott Abrams, announced the U.S. plans to “expand the net” of sanctions designed to choke off the government’s access to financial resources, targeting banks handling transactions for the state.
Military intervention in Venezuela poses quite a challenge, at least initially, according to Reinaldo Iturriza, Venezuela’s former minister of culture. While “the scenario of a U.S. military intervention or one carried out through the government of Colombia has lost momentum, the option is not off the table yet,” he warned.
One of the reasons why direct military intervention lost steam was that the fracture within the Lima Group of hemispheric countries advocating regime change in Venezuela.
“The Lima Group has been rapidly unraveling ... as it is now public that some of the countries that had a very interventionist stance have since distanced themselves from the option of a direct military intervention,” said Iturriza.
Still, the Lima Group will probably cooperate with the imposition of economic sanctions. “It is quite likely that they are going to continue to strangle the national economy in this way,” he said.
Venezuelan political analyst Luis Quintana, who teaches at the Bolivarian Military University of Venezuela, said the key to breaking the impasse would be to give voice to those willing to compromise and mediate.
Quintana highlighted the Montevideo Mechanism for mediation promoted by Uruguay, Mexico and Bolivia, a “regional initiative the government is betting on” to forge a peaceful way out of the crisis.
“The important thing now is to return to the path of democracy, the path of political dialogue and, fundamentally, let Venezuelans themselves resolve their internal affairs,” he added.