Life in Venezuela with the possibility of a US attack: ‘What worries me most is the food’

A collection of photos of three Venezuelans interviewed by BBC News Mundo, the BBC's Spanish-language service.
Image caption, BBC News Mundo spoke to some Venezuelans about the threat of a US attack in recent weeks

    • author, Nicole Colster
    • scroll, From Caracas to BBC News Mundo

While the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro lives in a state of suspense due to United States President Donald Trump’s threat to carry out military actions in Venezuela, many Venezuelan citizens continue with their lives trying to solve basic challenges like putting food on their plates.

It’s Wednesday morning in the famous Quinta Crespo market, in the center of Caracas, Venezuela’s capital. There, the potential escalation of the conflict does not seem to bother the majority.

“There will be no intervention, nothing like that. What has hurt us is the rise in the value of the dollar,” Alejandro Orellano, who drinks coffee while waiting for customers who have not arrived, told BBC News Mundo, the BBC’s Spanish-language service.

Since September, the Trump administration has concentrated military forces and resources just a few kilometers from Venezuela. The device includes more than 15,000 military personnel and the largest aircraft carrier in the world, the USS Gerald R. Ford.

As of Monday morning (11/24), at least seven international airlines have canceled their outbound and inbound flights to Venezuela after a warning from the US Aviation Authority regarding the dangers of flying over the country’s airspace.