Saturday 20 April 2024

Bodies Piling Up in Caracas: Venezuela’s High Cost of Burials

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Burying their dead relatives puts families heavily into debt. The cheapest burials cost VEB 180,000, including only the grave and a body bag
Burying their dead relatives puts families heavily into debt. The cheapest burials cost VEB 180,000, including only the grave and a body bag

TODAY VENEZUELA NEWS – The critical economic situation Venezuelan families are facing has led to dead bodies piling up on the Bello Monte morgue, the main morgue in Caracas, due to lack of funds to foot burial bills. José Gregorio Chávez’s case is one such example. Chávez (18) died last Tuesday in northeast Caracas after Scientific, Penal, and Criminal Investigative Corps (CICPC) personnel shot him during an alleged scientific police operation.

See: Venezuelan currency crashes to all-time low on black market

His relatives demand justice. “He was a young man who didn’t mess with anyone. He had just left his mother’s house to go to his aunt’s. He wasn’t in any trouble whatsoever. And they killed him mercilessly,” explained his aunt Mildred Gonzalez and his sister Masiel Medina.

The victim’s father is demanding justice as well. “They killed him mercilessly,” he concurs.

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Overpriced death

Five days into Chávez’s death and still his relatives have not been able to raise the money to pay for his burial. “We’re being charged VEB 280,000 [USD 422.13 at the exchange rate of VEB 663.29 per US dollar] for the service. We’ve been raising money, but we’re VEB 60,000 [USD 90] short,” they say.

A cemetery in Guarenas, a town east of Caracas, was charging them VEB 180,000 for a burial service that did not include a coffin. “Just a body bag and the pit,” they say.

Sources at the forensic investigation center said that this is currently the case at the morgue. “Many corpses stay longer than we legally require, which is up to three days in cases where it is necessary to do special tests, or when corpses require to be identified by non-traditional methods, but that is not the usual practice. They now remain in the morgue for two additional weeks because the relatives do not have the means to pay for burial services.”

“It takes so long for the victim’s relatives to collect the corpse, and usually they are handed over a badly decomposed body that no funeral parlor will accept. The relatives can barely afford the trip to the cemetery in the cheapest coffin.”

Article originally appeared at TodayVenezuela.com. Reposted with permission.

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Q24N
Q24N is an aggregator of news for Latin America. Reports from Mexico to the tip of Chile and Caribbean are sourced for our readers to find all their Latin America news in one place.

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