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Venezuelans clamour for gasoline as US weighs response to Iran fuel shipment
An oil worker walks past a drilling rig at an oil well operated by Venezuelau00e2u20acu2122s state oil company PDVSA in Morichal July 28, 2011. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

CARACAS, May 20 — With the United States weighing a response to a gasoline shipment from Iran to Venezuela, people waiting in line outside service stations in the country’s capital said they were eager to fill their tanks, regardless of how the fuel arrived.

Opec members Venezuela and Iran both are US adversaries. A Trump administration official said last week the shipment via five tankers — which are still underway to fuel-starved Venezuela — was "unwelcome.”

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Some Venezuelan opposition politicians have criticised the shipment due to concerns over socialist President Nicolas Maduro’s ties with Iran.

But Franklin Luzardo, a restaurant wait-staff manager who during the coronavirus-related quarantine has been making ends meet doing deliveries, said getting gasoline is what matters.

"I’m not interested in the origin,” Luzardo, 56, told Reuters yesterday at a gas station in eastern Caracas, where he arrived Monday night. "Without gasoline, the car stops, and that’s the bread on our table.”

Gasoline shortages have grown acute in recent months due to US pressure on suppliers, part of Washington’s "maximum pressure” campaign on Maduro, who has overseen an economic collapse and stands accused of corruption, human rights violations and rigging his 2018 re-election.

Shortages have plagued Venezuela for years due to the collapse of the country’s 1.3-million-barrel-per-day refining network thanks to underinvestment and mismanagement by state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela.

"We shouldn’t have had to end up importing gasoline from Iran,” said Coromoto Alvarez, 61, a retired nurse who arrived at a PDVSA gas station in Caracas’ La Bandera neighbourhood at 3am yesterday.

The shortages have hindered food delivery and left doctors struggling to reach hospitals.

"I don’t care if the gasoline comes from Iran, just that we get it,” said Carmen Rivero, a 35-year-old economist waiting at the La Bandera station. "Without gasoline, food distribution fails, people cannot work.” — Reuters

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