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Venezuela: Thousands of People on the Street to Demand Higher Wages and Pensions

On Thursday, in Venezuela, several thousand employees and retirees went down the streets to demand the upgrading of wages and pensions. The minimum wage is now equivalent to 30 cents of dollars. In a country that has changed rapidly since the US intervention, workers demand an increase in their incomes.

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On Thursday, in Venezuela, several thousand employees and retirees went down the streets to demand the upgrading of wages and pensions. The minimum wage is now equivalent to 30 cents of dollars. In a country that has changed rapidly since the US intervention, workers demand an increase in their incomes.

·Paris, France
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Lean Right

Emboldened by the new process of the oil country and by the poverty of salaries and pensions they receive, the protesters managed to access to the vicinity of the Legislative Palace, the seat of the National Assembly Read

·Madrid, Spain
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Hundreds of workers in Caracas overcame police barriers to demand a decent wage before the National Assembly, showing the economic crisis affecting the Venezuelan labor force.

In the main cities of Venezuela the active and retired workers, accompanied by other unions and students, demanded a wage increase according to the situation of the country. Caracas. The citizens responded to the call of the active and retired workers, and they left this Thursday, March 12, in cities throughout the country to protest for [...] The Workers entry managed that their claim for salary increase reached the Parliament aparece primero e…

For the first time in almost a decade, Venezuelan workers marched this Thursday through downtown Caracas to demand a real minimum wage, on a historic day that would have been unthinkable months ago when Chavista groups deterred any protest and most of the trade unionists remained in prison. The mobilization, convened by unions that survived the regime’s repressive apparatus, brought together teachers, public employees, administrative staff, reti…

The unions, active workers, retirees and pensioners of the public and private sectors peacefully mobilized on Thursday, March 12, in several states of the country to demand a wage increase from the Chavista regime, which has not been revised since 2023 and remains at 130 bolívares, which currently amounts to just a few cents a month. A cordon of the Bolivarian National Police (PNB) prevented them from reaching the Chavista National Assembly. How…

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Caraota Digital broke the news in on Thursday, March 12, 2026.
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