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Wednesday January 25, 2012
EL UNIVERSAL
PHOTO GALLERY | AGRICULTURE

Glaring deterioration in the agricultural sector


Growers claim that after the lands rescued by the National Lands Institute (INTI), many farms that used to be productive are now filled with bushes. They also worry about roads poor serviceability which hampers the haulage of crops

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Eleven months after the seizure, the Bolívar Bolivariana ranch remains under the military control (Photo: Ángel DeJesús)
Eleven months after the seizure, the Bolívar Bolivariana ranch remains under the military control (Photo: Ángel DeJesús) Bushes is all that grows in the Bolívar Bolivariana ranch (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) The National Lands Institute (Inti) rescued the Rancho Grande ranch to give it to the Yucpa indigenous community. David Romero, the owner of the farm, claimed that some days ahead of the action a group of Yucpas stormed into the farm and caused damages (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) The Rancho Grande farm is 766 hectares in length; formerly productive, at the time of the government action of rescue, it counted on 830 heads of cattle and produced on average 1,000 liters of milk on a daily basis (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) Glaring spoilage of agricultural roads. The bridge over River Catatumbo is reduced to a single lane (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) A hole at the bridge over River Catatumbo restricts the traffic and has damaged the whole pavement (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) Damages in the bridges over the Machiques-Colón freeway spread over the infrastructure (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) On the way to Santa Bárbara del Zulia, water has undermined almost all the pavement (Photo: Ángel Dejesús) Agricultural roads in central Aragua state have become a rubbish dump (Photo: Edsaú Olivares)
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