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Venezuelans hunker down, apprehensive about what comes next

Kraig Pakulski 0 37 Article rating: No rating
Wilman Gonzalez stands at his home

By Tim Lister, CNN

(CNN) — Venezuela is entering a new and very uncertain era after the sudden capture and removal of Nicolas Máduro, the country’s president for the last 12 years.

Amid widespread apprehension about what comes next, the streets of the capital Caracas and other cities have been quiet. People are apprehensive about being out and about, with the security forces on edge. But there has been little sign of the government-backed paramilitary groups known as colectivos on the streets.

Those that have ventured out have one priority: Stocking up on basic supplies in case the capital sees clashes or looting. There’s no sign of panic buying but Venezuelans are used to stocking up whenever there is a crisis.

Videos obtained by CNN on Saturday showed mostly empty streets, but long lines as people gathered at supermarkets and pharmacies.

“You can’t hear anything on the streets except the birds singing,” reported journalist Mary Mena Sunday.

Opposition supporters are celebrating in private, but there have been no rallies supporting the US action. Mena said they are likely to keep their heads down unless leading opposition figures can show they have support among Venezuelan officials or military commanders.

Little information is trickling in from other cities. Reuters reported long lines for groceries in the city of Maracaibo, an oil hub. Jairo Chacin, 39, a mechanic and workshop owner there, said he had “gone out to check on my business because I was afraid of looting, but the street is deserted.”

“I wanted to fill up my gas tank, but the service stations are already closed, so I took the opportunity to buy food because we don’t know what’s coming,” Chacin told Reuters. “Honestly, I have a mix of fear and joy.”

“I’ve just taken the dog out and it feels like an abandoned city, people are shut inside,” said Alejandra Palencia, 35, a psychologist in the city of Maracay. “There is fear and ⁠uncertainty,” she told Reuters.

That uncertainty is pervasive.

“I want to know what will come next,” said Nancy Pérez, a 74-year-old woman who went out to a bakery near her home in Valencia, central Venezuela.

Some Venezuelans are unhappy at the prospect of decisions for Venezuela being taken at the White House. As she stocked up on groceries in Caracas, Jenny Salazar told CNN: “I don’t agree with another president, outside of Venezuela, taking control of us Venezuelans.”

Trump said at a news conference Saturday that his administration will govern Venezuela “until there can be a transition.”

Teo Tilin, who lives in Miami and had traveled to Venezuela to visit his mother, was also apprehensive about how Venezuela would be governed. “How is it that (Donald Trump) is going to have control? What kind of control will you have? Where are the people who are going to control that? (…) I don’t know.”

A doctor in the capital who declined to give his name said the role of the military would be crucial.

“The position of the Venezuelan Armed Forces is fundamental. We have to wait and see how they are going to define themselves,” he said. He hoped for a rapprochement between the US and the Venezuelan opposition.

Under the Venezuelan Constitution, the acting president, Delcy Rodriguez, is meant to call fresh elections within 60 days.

Trump dijo que tomará el control del petróleo de Venezuela: ¿qué riquezas tiene el país que podrían interesarle a EE.UU.?

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating

Por Gonzalo Zegarra, CNN en Español

“Vamos a hacer que nuestras grandes compañías petroleras estadounidenses, las más grandes del mundo, entren, inviertan miles de millones de dólares, reparen la infraestructura petrolera”, afirmó el mandatario Donald Trump en la conferencia sobre la captura del presidente de Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro.

El jefe de la Casa Blanca confirmó el sábado que planea tomar el control de las enormes reservas de petróleo del país sudamericano, su principal riqueza natural, y consideró que el negocio petrolero en Venezuela ha sido un “fracaso total” durante mucho tiempo, con énfasis en los bajos niveles de extracción.

La falta de inversiones en Venezuela afecta la explotación, en una recurrente maldición latinoamericana que se maximiza en este país. El nivel de infraestructura, en algunas partes sin mantenimiento y en otras directamente inexistente, está lejos de aprovechar el potencial de sus yacimientos y minas.

La inversión privada retrocedió a partir de la nacionalización de empresas durante la presidencia de Hugo Chávez, y cayó a mínimos desde que Trump implementó algunas sanciones en 2017 y las reforzó con medidas sectoriales en 2019, con la excepción de algunas licencias. Ante este escenario, un plan como el sugerido por Trump marcaría un giro radical para la economía del país.

“Es una carta poderosa. Venezuela tiene la mayor reserva de crudo extrapesado del mundo”, dijo a CNN el economista Manuel Sutherland, profesor del Centro de Estudios del Desarrollo de la Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV). La mayoría se ubica en la Faja del Orinoco, y la Administración de Información Energética (EIA) de EE.UU. estima que constituyen un 17 % de las reservas mundiales.

El país superó en septiembre el millón de barriles por día, el nivel más alto en más de cinco años, según reportó Reuters con base en documentos de la estatal PDVSA. Sin embargo, continúa lejos de la producción de 2,5 millones que rondó desde inicios de siglo hasta 2014.

De los 921.000 barriles diarios exportados en noviembre, el 80 % fue comprado por China, cerca del 16 % lo adquirió EE.UU. (en virtud de la licencia a Chevron) y un 2 % fue enviado a Cuba, informó Reuters. En diciembre el mercado fue afectado por el bloqueo ordenado por Trump a buques petroleros que entren o salgan de Venezuela.

Si bien Estados Unidos es el principal productor petrolero del mundo, igualmente tiene interés por el crudo venezolano. “Las refinerías de Estados Unidos se hicieron para este tipo de crudo pesado y extrapesado, que es parecido al petróleo mexicano”, explicó Sutherland.

“El caso del petróleo es relativamente sencillo” para un eventual acuerdo con Washington, dijo el economista Francisco Rodríguez, investigador sénior del Centro para la Investigación de las Políticas Económicas, con sede en Washington (CEPR, por sus siglas en inglés). “Venezuela le puede ofrecer lo que actualmente le vende a China, y sale más barato dárselo a Estados Unidos”, apuntó.

El analista remarcó que hay una serie de restricciones legales, pero consideró que ninguno sería un obstáculo que impida un entendimiento. Si bien se

Cal Poly loses at Long Beach State

Kraig Pakulski 0 52 Article rating: No rating
Cal_Poly_Mustangs_logo.svg
Mustangs fall to 2-2 in the Big West

LONG BEACH STATE, Calif. (KEYT). Sophomore guard Hamad Mousa finished with a team leading 19 points and junior guard Jake Davis (above) enjoyed a career high 15 Saturday evening, but the Cal Poly men’s basketball program sustained a 74-68 setback at Long Beach State. 

Mousa also grabbed a team high eight rebounds for Cal Poly (6-10, 2-2), which led just once (by a single point) and was kept to a 33.9 (19-for-56) percent field goal mark. Meanwhile, Long Beach State (5-10, 1-2) – which led by as much as 25 points in the second half before Cal Poly cut the gap to 11 with four minutes to go – finished with a 50.0 (29-for-58) percent mark. 

Held to a 5-for-17 shooting start, Cal Poly trailed 23-17 seven-and-a-half minutes before the break. The Mustangs though received a pair of free throws from freshman forward Ali Assran before Davis knocked down his second three-pointer of the night to cut the gap to one. 

Cal Poly, however, kept without a field goal the remainder of the half as Long Beach State – shooting 53.3 (16-for-30) percent in the opening period – took a 38-26 lead into the locker room. 

Davis opened the second half with another three-pointer to break Cal Poly’s drought, but Long Beach State countered with a 13-6 run out of the break to stretch the advantage to 51-32 with 15 minutes to play. 

Cal Poly still faced a 65-41 deficit with nine-and-a-half remaining before reeling off a 16-3 run to close within 11 points. Long Beach State, however, scored on its next two possessions to maintain a double-digit advantage.

Cal Poly Noteworthy (at Long Beach State)

Saturday’s matchup was played inside Long Beach State’s auxiliary facility – The Gold Mine – after rain in Southern California forced the closure of the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid. 

Up Next: Cal Poly stays on the road, visiting CSUN on Thursday, Jan. 8 at 7 p.m. on ESPN+. 

With Saturday’s setback, Cal Poly sits in a three-way tie for fourth place in the Big West standings alongside UC Santa Barbara and CSUN. 

Now a double-digit scorer in all 15 appearances, Hamad Mousa kept hold of the Big West lead at 20.9 points per game. 

(Article by Cal Poly Athletics)

The post Cal Poly loses at Long Beach State appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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