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Economic crisis bares hunger problem

Published:Monday | July 4, 2016 | 11:32 AM
Persons search a garbage bag for vegetables and fruit outside a supermarket in downtown Caracas, Venezuela. Unemployed people picking through food tossed out by nearby shops are frequently joined by small business owners, college students and pensioners, people who consider themselves middle class.
Alexa Vega eats a piece of bread at her home in the Petare shantytown in Caracas, Venezuela. Vega's mother Kelly moved to Venezuela from Barranquilla, Colombia 12 years ago, attracted by the dazzling boom of the oil country, but now their lives have been hit by runaway inflation and a severe food shortage.
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CARACAS (AP):

Kelly Vega said she lost 30 pounds in three months as she focused on feeding her six-year-old daughter rather than herself.

"We are eating two meals a day. If we eat breakfast, there's no lunch. If we have lunch, there's no dinner," she said.

This socialist country is suffering from severe food shortages that are making it hard to get enough to eat, even though Venezuela has the largest oil reserves in the world. Government officials blame the shortfalls on right-wing business owners hoarding products to sow chaos, while their detractors say it's the result of chronic economic mismanagement.

At the same time, food production and imports are down and inflation is high.

Some Venezuelans who had given up produce as an unaffordable luxury are now turning to urban farming to get vegetables back into their diets.

With the help of a government-sponsored urban-farming campaign, the head of the newly created Ministry of Urban Agriculture, Lorena Freitez, hopes home gardens will make up 20 per cent of the food supply by 2019.

"Urban agriculture will cushion the effects of the shortages. Cities will not be so dependent on imports, and we will make great strides in food sovereignty," she said.

Now, amid the narrow roads and crumbling shacks of one of South America's largest slums, a careful look yields something unexpected - a carefully tended tomato plant and a bush of basil leaves. The family members growing the plants hope that in a few months, they'll be eating vegetables again.

SKIPPING MEALS

A team of researchers from three leading local universities found that 12 per cent of the people in Caracas skip meals. Researchers say that is a sharp increase from a few years ago, when the price of oil had not yet crashed, and many Venezuelans still found it consistently easy to get the food they needed.

"The thing is, Venezuelans aren't used to this," said Central University professor Marianella Herrera.

Francisco Salazar, head of a community council that works in Caracas slums, said he and his neighbours are growing beets, black beans, lettuce and dozens of other vegetables in a large community garden.

But he worries it won't be enough.

"We don't have flour, we don't have pasta, we don't have rice," he said. "What we have is a Band-Aid that's not going to really solve the problem."