Clusters of National Guardsmen yesterday patrolled Plaza Altamira and the principal streets extending from it while dozens of green-vested workers swept up debris that protesters used to block streets in the middle- and upper-class neighbourhoods of eastern Caracas.
Other troops patrolled surrounding neighbourhoods on motorcycles, and officials were making the takeover public relations event. At least four Venezuelan government ministers were present giving interviews about the plaza's "liberation."
"We're deployed since 3 am (local time) in the entire municipality," Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez Torres said in an interview with state television from the plaza. "We're re-establishing the right of thousands of citizens of Chacao who have been forced to stay inside their homes by violent actions."
Earlier in the day, some student leaders vowed they would continue until the government meets their demands, the first of which is releasing those arrested during protests.
"You're going to have to get 60 million soldiers for us to abandon the streets of Venezuela," said Juan Requesens, president of the Central University of Venezuela, at a news conference.
Only a small segment of the demonstrators stick around for the skirmishes, but the damage wreaked by an even smaller subgroup has been highly publicised on state television. Maduro has used the disorder for weeks to jab at opposition Mayor Ramon Muchacho for not having control of his area.
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