As they marched yesterday, local media carried a video showing people toppling a statue of the late President Hugo Chavez the day before in the western state of Zulia.
Thousands of women took over streets in major cities all around the South American country. Wearing the white shirts of the opponents of country's increasingly embattled government, the women sang the national anthem and chanted, "Who are we? Venezuela! What do we want? Freedom!"
As they have near-daily for five weeks, police in riot gear again took control of major roads in the capital city. Clashes between police and protesters have left some three dozen dead in the past month.
Local news media carried a video circulating on Twitter of the Chavez statue being pulled down. The media reported that students destroyed the statue as they vented their anger with the food shortages, inflation and spiralling crime that have come to define life here.
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Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez on Friday denounced the protest movement, and said opposition "terrorists" were attempting a kind of non-conventional warfare.
The protest movement has drawn masses of people into the street nearly every day since March, and shows no sign of slowing. Yesterday, some of the women marchers approached soldiers in riot gear to offer them white roses and invite them to join the cause.
"What will you tell your kids later on?" one woman asked.
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