Venezuela’s Maduro halts talks with opposition after US sanctions

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CARACAS, Aug 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro
blamed Washington on Wednesday in cancelling scheduled talks with the
political opposition, as his embattle regime struggles under the weight of US
sanctions.

The oil-rich leftist regime has been hurt especially hard since US
President Donald Trump on Monday ordered a freeze on all Venezuelan
government assets in the United States and barred transactions with its
authorities.

Maduro “has decided to not send the Venezuelan delegation” for talks
Thursday and Friday mediated by Norway in Barbados with representatives of
opposition leader Juan Guaido, a government statement read.

Maduro attributed the cancellation to “the grave and brutal aggression”
being “continuously… carried out by the Trump administration against
Venezuela, which includes the illegal blocking of our economic, commercial
and financial activities,” the statement read.

Trump’s measures were just the latest in a string of sanctions imposed on
the Maduro regime in a bid to force the socialist leader from power.

The crisis-wracked country has been mired in a political impasse since
January when Guaido, speaker of the National Assembly, proclaimed himself
acting president. He is now recognized as Venezuela’s leader by more than 50
countries.

In the talks Guaido has called for new elections, while Maduro, who
retains support from Venezuela’s military, is calling for a “democratic
cohabitation” and refuses to leave office.

– ‘Yankee go home!’ –

In Caracas, thousands of government supporters dressed in red and waving
Venezuelan flags marched against the US sanctions.

Washington has threatened to “use every appropriate tool” to oust Maduro,
and warned Venezuelan allies Russia and China on Tuesday against doing
business with the regime.

China responded to the sanctions by telling the US to stop “bullying”
other countries.

Made up mostly of civilian militia and public sector employees, the crowd
chanted: “Yankee go home!” and “Hands off Venezuela!” “We’re struggling
against this war that’s making life impossible,” Elena Flores, a 62-year-old
government worker, told AFP.

Trump “is nervous, he’s anxious, he’s power-hungry, he wants to get his
hands on Venezuela,” she added.

Speaking at a small meeting in the east of Caracas, Guaido insisted the US
sanctions would affect only top regime officials and not the general
population.

“They’re against the regime, against Maduro, the product of arrogance,” he
said as he called for the release of opposition legislator Juan Requesens,
who was arrested a year ago and is accused of being behind an alleged drone
attack against Maduro.

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