Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Global Warning: Our future in a warmer world
  • UK, US, NATO flew 12-hour patrol on Russian border amid Ukraine war
  • Bari Weiss and the Israel narrative in the US
  • North Korea shows off new intercontinental ballistic missile
  • Why Gaza still looks to the sea for true peace
  • Israeli strikes kill at least one, injure several people in south Lebanon
  • RSF drone strike kills dozens in Sudan’s war-ravaged el-Fasher: Activists
  • France lose Mbappe for Iceland after injury in Azerbaijan World Cup win
  • Intensive Israeli air strikes kill one, injure seven in southern Lebanon
  • Al Jazeera reporters follow Palestinians’ return to northern Gaza
  • First US flight with third-country deportees arrives in Guatemala
  • Seychelles votes in closely contested presidential run-off election
  • Video: Extreme rainfall in Mexico kills several, dozens missing
  • Tens of thousands return to shattered Gaza homes after ceasefire
  • Palestinians defined by “unwillingness to submit”
  • China offers cash bounties for information on Taiwanese military officers
  • Cameroon presidential election: As Paul Biya set to win, what’s at stake?
  • Did a South Korean study really claim that COVID-19 vaccines cause cancer?
  • ‘I felt silenced’: Meesha Shafi and Pakistan’s backlash against #MeToo
  • Palestinians search Gaza rubble for loved ones in ceasefire, return home
  • MVP A’ja Wilson scores 31 as Aces beat Mercury for third WNBA title
  • What children in Gaza are saying about the ceasefire
  • Six million people in Haiti face acute hunger as gang violence spreads
  • At least 28 killed in heavy flooding caused by tropical storms in Mexico
  • North Korea unveils ‘most powerful’ missile at 80th anniversary parade

Scavenging to survive in Venezuela

By Al Jazeera Published 2017-10-16 02:23 Updated 2017-10-16 02:23 Source: Al Jazeera

Caracas, Venezuela – The Guaire River is the sewer of the Venezuelan capital, Caracas. The city’s wastewater empties into the river, turning it brown and filling the air with a nauseating stench.

But since Venezuela‘s economic crisis began it is here, in this sewage-filled water, that some Venezuelans search for a means of survival, a way to earn a little money and to feed their families. 

Every day, groups of Venezuelans sift through the rubbish and excrement that has been dumped into the river in the hope of finding jewellery that may have fallen down somebody’s drain and ended up in the sewer.

It isn’t only in the river that people scavenge.

The Francisco Fajardo highway is just downstream. Six people live under its bridge amid the noise and fumes of the passing cars.

Like many other Venezuelans living in Caracas, they are forced to search for their daily food in the rubbish.

In the late afternoons, when supermarkets close and restaurants throw away their leftovers, they go in search of them, scavenging through bins in the hope of finding something to eat.

Find out about all the latest updates on the crisis in Venezuela