Latin America
Related: About this forumA supermarket opened in Caracas on Thursday - not normally a newsworthy event.
August 03 2020 11:33 PM
Bloomberg/Caracas
A supermarket opened in Caracas on Thursday not normally a newsworthy event.
But it is the first one owned by a company in Iran, one of the few countries helping Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro evade US sanctions. And it comes equipped with a kind of high-tech Covid shield an airport-scanner-like booth that measures shoppers temperatures and sprays them with disinfectant mist.
Megasis, as it is called, fills a massive warehouse in eastern Caracas, a cross between Home Depot and Costco, with tires, tractors and edibles, some of which appear mysterious to the Venezuelan palate and bear labels in Persian and English, but no Spanish.
Eliza Merchan, a 52-year-old accountant, one of the stores first shoppers, stuck to local vegetables, staying away from the Varamin corn oil ($2) and Eram cola (82 cents), even though they were much cheaper than their local versions.
I dont even understand what the labels say, she said. My budget is too tight to start being creative. In June, the monthly basket price for goods needed to support a family of five rose, Merchans grocery shopping drew the censure of the US government.
Michael Kozak, an assistant secretary of state, gave a telephone press briefing in which he said that the store represents an alliance of pariah states. Irans Ambassador to Venezuela, Hojjatollah Soltani, put it differently, saying, Despite the sanctions, despite the threats, we are two sister nations.
The store has a bit of everything clothes, SUV tires, diapers, canned food, cleaning products and dog food made in the US.
There are a lot of weird things, but I dont care, as long as the prices are good, said Juan Escalona, a 45-year-old construction worker, while buying a package of Iranian black beans. Toward the back of the store, where giant Iranian blankets are hung, there is also a large poster with the flags of Iran and Venezuela together. In May, Iran sent five gasoline tankers, easing the severe gas shortage, and a ship with food in June, most of it for the new supermarket.
The two countries began close cooperation two decades ago after the election of Hugo Chavez with Iranian companies building apartments and vehicles in Venezuela.
People wearing face masks as a preventive measure against the spread of the novel coronavirus do their shopping at Megasis, the first Iranian supermarket in Venezuela in Caracas on July 31. Megasis, as it is called, fills a massive warehouse in eastern Caracas, a cross between Home Depot and Costco, with tires, tractors and edibles, some of which appear mysterious to the Venezuelan palate and bear labels in Persian and English, but no Spanish.
https://www.gulf-times.com/story/669842/A-supermarket-opened-in-Caracas-on-Thursday-not-no
(Sounds like Sam's Warehouse, owned by Sam Walton, in the U.S.)
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)As a retired grocery guy always find new stores and new store designs of interest. Thanks for posting. You always find such cool articles.
Judi Lynn
(160,450 posts)UpInArms
(51,280 posts)Its rather telling that US sanctions mean so little ....
We (the US government) have a hate on for Iran and Venezuela... and yet they find a workaround to feeding and supplying their peoples in a much safer way (the temperature booth with disinfectant)
Judi Lynn
(160,450 posts)so they will overthrow their president and let the US chose their next president for them. Very dirty way to go!
Had never heard of those booths, personally.
Thanks for commenting.