Officials confirmed that a 17-year-old had died in a hospital yesterday in the restive mountain town of Merida after being shot Tuesday during disturbances there.
Also yesterday, security forces stepped up their presence in the coastal city of Cumana after more than 20 businesses were violently ransacked in another day of unrest across the crisis-wracked country.
Luis Acuna, the socialist governor of Sucre state, said that more than 400 people, some of them minors, were detained during protests on Tuesday that witnesses said were sparked by food shortages.
A series of lootings and food riots has left at least four people dead in the last week. At least 10 looting incidents, many of them dispersed by tear gas and riot batons, are occurring daily across Venezuela, according to the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence.
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On Tuesday, dozens of residents of a working-class Caracas neighborhood blocked a major thoroughfare less than 2 miles (3 kilometers) from the presidential palace to protest a lack of food. They chanted: "We want food, not mangos," a reference to the increasing dietary dependence on Venezuela's tree-grown tropical fruits when basic staples like flour and milk are impossible to come by.
To avoid the threat of unrest associated with long food lines, it has assigned neighborhood committees linked to the ruling socialist party to distribute food.
The move has angered some residents and the opposition, who equate it to rationing and an attempt to force loyalty among Venezuela's poor, traditionally the government's most steadfast constituency but one hard hit by triple-digit inflation and a tanking economy.
"The looting is going to continue because there's hunger," Roberto Briceno Leon, director of the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence, told the AP. "The government's response appears to be insufficient or politicized, so people are resorting to robbery."