Electricity Goes out Across Much of Venezuela
A power plant failure knocked out electricity across a big swath of
Venezuela on Friday, darkening the lights at a nationally televised
presidential ceremony and forcing a suspension of subway and train
services around the country
The outage affected at least 14 of the South American country's 23
states and caused several hours of traffic snarls and darkened homes and
offices in the capital, Caracas.
A power plant that supplies electricity to Venezuela's central and
western regions failed in early afternoon, Electricity Minister Jesse
Chacon said. Electricity was mostly restored in Caracas by nightfall,
but remained out in other parts of the country, where power failures are
more common.
The outage disrupted a televised celebration of journalists that
President Nicolas Maduro was holding in the governmental palace in
Caracas. The city's sidewalks filled up with pedestrians, forcing some
people to walk in the streets.
While some middle class neighborhoods were without power for the
afternoon and evening, Caracas' center experienced only intermittent
outages.
As always, officials prioritized Caracas as they restored power. The
last time Caracas lost power, in March, electricity was not fully
restored for 12 hours.
The socialist country suffered major blackouts in 2012 and 2013. The
administration blamed those power outages on sabotage, while opponents
said they were the result of government incompetence.
The government has also occasionally pointed to wildlife, including
gnawing iguanas and possums, as causes for the continuing power outages.
On Friday, inconvenienced Venezuelans posted iguanas on their social
media profiles in protest of the blackout.
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