Thousands of people streamed to anti-government demonstrations in Caracas and other Venezuelan cities, despite a heavy police presence and a new round of blackouts that closed the metro in the capital and shut down social media.
In Caracas, black-helmeted police blocked streets and attempted to halt marchers headed to Avenida Victoria, a downtown boulevard where opposition leader Juan Guaidó held a rally. Nonetheless, thousands swarmed the site to cheer Guaidó, who has been recognised by more than 50 countries as Venezuela's interim president. The crowd stretched for eight blocks.
"We are so tired of everything happening here," said Leidy Medina, 31, a nurse who said she walked two hours to reach the demonstration.
"It was really difficult to get here because there was no metro," said Jorge Araiy, 22, an employee of the private TV channel Venevision. He said he walked four hours and took a bus before hitting the police barricade. He eventually got through.
President Nicolás Maduro's Government has largely ignored Guaidó, apparently hoping the opposition movement will exhaust itself, as previous such efforts have. Maduro has maintained the backing of the powerful armed forces and controls paramilitary groups known as "colectivos."