Lines of police officers blocked thousands of protesters from advancing in the capital city of Caracas. White-haired demonstrators with raspy voices berated officers for not letting them through.
"Respect the elderly!" one yelled at the young officers standing shoulder-to-shoulder with plastic shields.
The protest organized by the country's opposition coalition was billed as the "March of the Grandparents" and comes on the heels of six weeks of demonstrations against the embattled government of President Nicolas Maduro. Many of the elderly marchers said it made them angry to see a once prosperous nation devolve into a country with triple-digit inflation, shortages of basic necessities like food and medicine and one of the world's highest homicide rates.
Health workers have been warning about rises in infant and maternal deaths, but the data were the first official statistics to be released publicly since 2012.
More From This Section
Vice President Tareck El Aissami announced late Thursday that Health Minister Antonieta Caprole was being replaced by Luis Lopez, previously secretary of health in the state of Aragua. Officials gave no reason, though opposition figures alleged Caprole had been fired for releasing the data.
Maduro has vowed to resolve the crisis by convoking a special assembly to rewrite the nation's constitution, a proposition that has further infuriated the opposition.
Some of those attending Friday's marches in cities around the nation said they have barely enough food to eat. Others said they were marching for their children and grandchildren. One man with a full white beard wore a Santa Claus cap.
"We are their fathers and grandfathers and we are going to get there," said Arnoldo Bentiez, an opposition lawmaker. Other elderly Venezuelans dressed in red to support the government marched to the presidential palace.