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Bodyguards: A status symbol amid Venezuela's crime and poverty

In a rich neighborhood east of Caracas, a bodyguard flashes his rifle as a private armored car with dark tinted windows speeds away under his intimidating watch.

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Bodyguards: A status symbol amid Venezuelas crime and poverty

BAG CARRIERS

Outside restaurants and shopping malls, it is common to see dozens of bodyguards waiting by their bosses' cars.

Some accompany their clients to the shops or hairdresser, even carry their bags.

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Bodyguards: A status symbol amid Venezuelas crime and poverty

With civilians legally prohibited from carrying firearms since 2019, the booming security trade has been a boon for police and soldiers who work part-time as bodyguards, using their service pistols -- which is legal.

They can earn "six, seven times their salary," according to Gorrino.

At the tender age of 21, Angel Pinto left behind a paramedic career to become a bodyguard.

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Bodyguards: A status symbol amid Venezuelas crime and poverty

"I come from a family of police officers," he told AFP, and therefore "felt comfortable" with the transition that allowed principally "to earn more."

Sarkis Sako, an instructor who has been working in private security for 14 years, said a bodyguard can earn between $300 and $500 a month, compared to a beginner cop salary of about $114.

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Bodyguards: A status symbol amid Venezuelas crime and poverty

For the privilege, a bodyguard "has to be prepared to give his life for his client," said Sako, who teaches hand-to-hand combat, target shooting and other skills.

A basic protection service, with two bodyguards, will cost a client about $3,000 a month, said Sako, in a country where three in four people live in extreme poverty.

The official minimum salary in Venezuela is about $30 a month.