美国有线新闻 CNN 委内瑞拉停电停水 瓜伊多或被剥夺豁免权(在线收听

 

Next today, people in Venezuela need healthcare, medicines, water, electricity, education and access to food. That's what an internal United Nations draft report says about conditions in the South American country. Around 32 million people used to live there, but several million have fled in recent years as the economy crumbled and political instability followed. The UN says it's trying to work with Venezuela's government to get help to its people, but the government says there is no crisis and it’s blocked or restricted aid deliveries.

DAVID MCKENZIE, CNN CORRESPONDENT: The alarming UN draft report says that up to 94 percent of Venezuelans are living in poverty — 94 percent for a country that has arguably the largest oil reserves on the planet. The report also says that almost 2 million people are expected to leave this country just this year because of the ongoing crisis. Across Venezuela, there are still blackouts and also water shortages. We saw people here in Caracas on the mountainside collecting water for their daily needs. This is how one person saw the situation.

INTERPRETER: Us Venezuelans — we're very upset. Listen brother. We don't have power. We don't have water. Services work badly. It's — I don't even know how to explain. If it was for me, we would have forced this government out. Five people come forward, they get killed and nothing is achieved.

MCKENZIE: Schools have been closed and workers have been told to go home early. Here in the capital the subway system isn't working and people are having to cram on buses just to get to and from work. The president of the country, embattled Nicolas Maduro is standing by the promises to bring back the power and says schools will open next week. In a live television broadcast with cabinet members and other government officials, he blamed the power outages on the terrorist attacks, something he's done before even though experts say the main issue has been investment and allegations of corruption against the regime.

Despite anger on the street, the regime is trying to maintain its grip on power. The Loyalist Supreme Court saying that they want the opposition leader Juan Guaido's immunity to be stripped from him and so that they can move with potential allegations and even arrests in the coming days.

Guaido is calling for intervention from countries around the region and across the globe but at this stage, Maduro isn't going anywhere. David McKenzie, Caracas, Venezuela.

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/cnn2019/5/478446.html