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Don't Look for Presents From Santa, Venezuelans Tell Children


Santa Claus walks during a visit to residents of the slum of Petare in Caracas, Venezuela, Dec. 11, 2016.
Santa Claus walks during a visit to residents of the slum of Petare in Caracas, Venezuela, Dec. 11, 2016.

As a harrowing economic crisis makes food scarce for millions of Venezuelans, many families cannot buy their children Christmas presents, decorate their homes or even host holiday dinners.

The oil-rich country is suffering through the third year of a recession that has sparked product shortages and galloping inflation. With a recent currency depreciation pumping up prices even higher, some parents are simply canceling Christmas.

"Last year I bought everything for my daughter," said Dileida Palacios, 40, a hairdresser dressed in black to mourn for her son, who was killed in crime-rife Venezuela a few weeks ago. "This year I had to tell her everything is tough and Santa Claus isn't coming."

Like Palacios, about 38.5 percent of Venezuelans think this Christmas will be worse than last year's, and 35 percent think it will be the worst ever, according to a poll by consultancy Ecoanalitica and Catholic University Andres Bello.

Several days of unrest over a national cash shortage have added to the grim national mood.

Nothing festive

Once merrily decorated during the holidays, Caracas looks shabby. Many stores are empty, closed or selling cruelly expensive toys, Christmas trees and holiday treats like hallacas, a cornmeal dish wrapped in plantain leaves.

FILE - This photo shows the inner ingredients of a hallaca, a corn dough tamale, during its preparation at a Christmas fair in a state-owned market in Caracas, Venezuela, Nov. 23, 2013.
FILE - This photo shows the inner ingredients of a hallaca, a corn dough tamale, during its preparation at a Christmas fair in a state-owned market in Caracas, Venezuela, Nov. 23, 2013.

Eight-year old Helen Ramirez, who lives in Caracas' sprawling Petare slum, asked Santa for food for her family and pink roller skates from the Disney show "I'm Luna."

But those skates are far out of reach for Ramirez's family. They cost about 400,000 bolivars — roughly $100 at the black market rate and about 14 times the monthly minimum wage.

"This year we didn't decorate the house or anything," said Ramirez's grandmother, Nelys Benavides, during a charity-organized present giveaway in Petare. "We have nothing."

President Nicolas Maduro's leftist government accuses businessmen and rival politicians of seeking to stoke anger and ruin Christmas.

State media have feted the arrival of 200 containers of toys and food in Venezuela's otherwise largely deserted ports, and Maduro lit a cross on Caracas' Avila mountain in November to usher in early holidays.

His government confiscated 3.8 million toys from importer Kreisel, accusing the company of hoarding and price gouging.

Two Kreisel executives have been jailed, and Socialist Party committees have been distributing the toys to children.

"That's what you call a reinforcement for Father Christmas, right?" the president laughed, stroking his mustache during a recent speech on state TV. "Saint Nicolas without a beard; Saint Nicolas with a mustache!"

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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