Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Saturday ordered troops to temporarily seize control of all rice processing plants to ensure they produce at full capacity amid soaring inflation and persisting reports of food shortages.
Chavez told the National Guard to “take control of and intervene in all of these businesses that process rice in Venezuela,” including at least half a dozen local and foreign private companies.
“This government is here to protect the people, not the bourgeoisie or the rich,” Chavez said, accusing some companies of slowing production to evade price caps that have slashed their profit margins.
He did not say what the takeover would involve or how long it would last.
Chavez imposed price caps on scores of basic foodstuffs, such as chicken, rice and sugar in 2003 to combat rising inflation, which at 31 percent is now Latin America’s highest.
Chavez last raised rice prices a year ago to just over US$1 per kilogram.
Venezuelan Agriculture Minister Elias Jaua said troops would occupy company installations as “the first measure” in an unspecified takeover process, beginning with a rice plant owned by Empresas Polar, the country’s largest food producer.
Polar’s Primor-brand rice plant, located in the western state of Guarico, has been operating at less than 50 percent capacity in violation of federal regulations, Venezuelan Vice Minister of Agriculture Richard Canan said. He said the government would guarantee maximum output at the plant.
Guillermo Bolinaga, the legal director at Polar, could not be reached for comment on Saturday, but he strongly denied similar claims made by Venezuela’s consumer protection agency on Friday. The agency suspended operations at the Guarico plant last week, accusing it of hoarding rice, Caracas’ El Universal newspaper reported.
Other major rice producers operating in Venezuela include Minneapolis-based Cargill, which owns the Santa Ana Rice Plant in Portuguesa state.
Jaua said Caracas-based Corporacion Mary, which produces four types of rice under the brand name “Arroz Mary,” will be affected.
Chavez often threatens food suppliers he has accused of hoarding goods to sell on the black market for higher prices or waiting until price caps are raised.
He first set his sights on Polar last year, calling it a “clear example” of the kind of business that is ripe for takeover.
On Saturday, Chavez warned that any rice processing company that threatened to halt output would be permanently seized by the government.
“I don’t have any problem expropriating,” he said. “And I’ll pay them with paper, too. Don’t think I’ll pay them with hard cash.”
In the past two years, Chavez has nationalized four major oil projects and some of the country’s biggest electricity, telecommunications, steel and cement companies.
One of Japan’s biggest pop stars and best-known TV hosts, Masahiro Nakai, yesterday announced his retirement over sexual misconduct allegations, reports said, in the latest scandal to rock Japan’s entertainment industry. Nakai’s announcement came after now-defunct boy band empire Johnny & Associates admitted in 2023 that its late founder, Johnny Kitagawa, for decades sexually assaulted teenage boys and young men. Nakai was a member of the now-disbanded SMAP — part of Johnny & Associates’s lucrative stable — that swept the charts in Japan and across Asia during the band’s nearly 30 years of fame. Reports emerged last month that Nakai, 52, who since
EYEING A SOLUTION: In unusually critical remarks about Russian President Vladimir Putin, US President Donald Trump said he was ‘destroying Russia by not making a deal’ US President Donald Trump on Wednesday stepped up the pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin to make a peace deal with Ukraine, threatening tougher economic measures if Moscow does not agree to end the war. Trump’s warning in a social media post came as the Republican seeks a quick solution to a grinding conflict that he had promised to end before even starting his second term. “If we don’t make a ‘deal,’ and soon, I have no other choice but to put high levels of Taxes, Tariffs, and Sanctions on anything being sold by Russia to the United States, and various other
‘BALD-FACED LIE’: The woman is accused of administering non-prescribed drugs to the one-year-old and filmed the toddler’s distress to solicit donations online A social media influencer accused of filming the torture of her baby to gain money allegedly manufactured symptoms causing the toddler to have brain surgery, a magistrate has heard. The 34-year-old Queensland woman is charged with torturing an infant and posting videos of the little girl online to build a social media following and solicit donations. A decision on her bail application in a Brisbane court was yesterday postponed after the magistrate opted to take more time before making a decision in an effort “not to be overwhelmed” by the nature of allegations “so offensive to right-thinking people.” The Sunshine Coast woman —
PINEAPPLE DEBATE: While the owners of the pizzeria dislike pineapple on pizza, a survey last year showed that over 50% of Britons either love or like the topping A trendy pizzeria in the English city of Norwich has declared war on pineapples, charging an eye-watering £100 (US$124) for a Hawaiian in a bid to put customers off the disputed topping. Lupa Pizza recently added pizza topped with ham and pineapple to its account on a food delivery app, writing in the description: “Yeah, for £100 you can have it. Order the champagne too! Go on, you monster!” “[We] vehemently dislike pineapple on pizza,” Lupa co-owner Francis Wolf said. “We feel like it doesn’t suit pizza at all,” he said. The other co-owner, head chef Quin Jianoran, said they kept tinned pineapple