BFF-10 US warns off Venezuela allies as Lima meeting opens

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BFF-10

VENEZUELA-US-PERU-DIPLOMACY-POLITICS

US warns off Venezuela allies as Lima meeting opens

LIMA, Aug 7, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Washington warned China and Russia on Tuesday
to avoid doing business with the Venezuelan regime of Nicolas Maduro, as
delegates from some 60 countries met in Lima to discuss ways of ending the
crisis in the South American nation.

The admonition came a day after President Donald Trump ordered a freeze on
all Venezuelan government assets in the United States and barred transactions
with its authorities.

“We are sending a signal to third parties that want to do business with the
Maduro regime: Proceed with extreme caution,” said Trump’s National Security
Advisor John Bolton, speaking in Lima.

“There is no need to risk your business interests with the United States
for the purposes of profiting from a corrupt and dying regime.”

He aimed a specific warning at Maduro allies China and Russia, telling them
their “support to the Maduro regime is intolerable.”

Bolton urged Russia not to “double down on a bad bet,” and told China that
“the quickest route to getting repaid” for its loans to Venezuela was by
supporting “a new legitimate government.”

The Trump administration is determined to force Maduro from power and
support opposition leader Juan Guaido’s plans to form a transitional
government and set up new elections.

But Russia’s foreign ministry said there was “no legal basis” to freeze
Venezuelan assets and added that “no state has the right to dictate its
desire to another through economic repression.”

– ‘Committed to failure’ –

The sanctions have drawn an angry response from Caracas, which denounced
the US move as “another serious aggression by the Trump administration
through arbitrary economic terrorism against the Venezuelan people.”

Crisis-wracked Venezuela has been mired in a political impasse since
January when Guaido, speaker of the National Assembly, proclaimed himself
acting president, quickly receiving the support of more than 50 countries.

Tuesday’s meeting was called by the Lima Group, which includes a dozen
Latin American countries and Canada, most of which support Guaido.

The Lima meeting comes as representatives of Maduro and Guaido are involved
in “continuous” negotiations mediated by Norway.

The first round of talks was in Oslo in May, and three further rounds have
taken place in Barbados.

Caracas claims the US sanctions show that Washington and its allies are
“committed to the failure of the political dialogue” because “they fear the
results and benefits.”

Bolton, who is in the US delegation alongside Commerce Secretary Wilbur
Ross, said Maduro was “not serious” about talks.

He said Trump’s move “authorizes the US government to identify, target and
impose sanctions on any persons who continue to provide support” for Maduro’s
“illegitimate regime.”

He said it would “deny Maduro access to the global financial system and to
further isolate him internationally.”

However Guaido and his officials are exempt from the sanctions, as are
“transactions related to humanitarian activity,” US Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo said in a statement.

“This is not an embargo,” he added.

– ‘Dictatorship must end’ –

Venezuela’s opposition considers Maduro an usurper over his re-election
last year in a poll widely viewed as rigged.

They want him to stand down so new elections can be held — but Maduro,
with support from the country’s powerful military, refuses to go.

He says the talks must lead to “democratic coexistence” and an end to what
he describes as an attempted US-orchestrated “coup.”

But on Tuesday the White House was emphatic: The “dictatorship must end for
Venezuela to have a stable, democratic, and prosperous future.”

The United States would “use every appropriate tool to end Maduro’s hold on
Venezuela,” White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham said in a
statement.

Oil-rich but cash-poor Venezuela has been in a deep recession for five
years. Food and medicine shortages are routine, and public services are
progressively failing.

Around a quarter of Venezuela’s 30 million people are in need of aid,
according to the United Nations, while close to 3.3 million have left since
the start of 2016.

The International Monetary Fund says inflation will hit a staggering one
million percent this year while the economy will shrink by 35 percent.

The Lima Group invited around 100 countries to the meeting but many —
including Venezuela’s allies China, Russia, Cuba and Turkey — did not
attend.

Germany, Britain, France and Japan are among those at the meeting, as well
as representatives for the European Union and Inter-American Development
Bank.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0904 hrs