Donnerstag, 23. September 2021

U.S. Shouldn’t Relax Venezuela Sanctions, Colombian Leader Says By Matthew Bristow 23. September 2021, 22:26 MESZ Colombian President Ivan Duque speaks in interview in New York More than 5 million Venezuelans have fled their homeland

 Politics

U.S. Shouldn’t Relax Venezuela Sanctions, Colombian Leader Says

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    Colombian President Ivan Duque speaks in interview in New York
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    More than 5 million Venezuelans have fled their homeland
Ivan Duque speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York on Sept. 23.
Ivan Duque speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York on Sept. 23. Photographer: Chris Goodney/Bloomberg

Colombian President Ivan Duque called for the U.S. to continue imposing sanctions on Venezuela’s government until there is “a clear transition to democracy” in that country. 

In an interview at Bloomberg’s New York headquarters on Thursday, Duque denied that U.S. policies, which greatly restricted Venezuela’s ability to sell its oil and import gasoline, have contributed to the migration crisis engulfing Colombia. 

“What has triggered migration, instead of the sanctions, is the absolute destruction of the private sector, the destruction of free institutions, the destruction of the access to basic goods and services,” in Venezuela, Duque said. 

Read More: Colombia Will Reject Extremists in 2022 Election, Duque Says

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Venezuela’s economy will contract for an 8th straight year in 2021, according to a forecast by the International Monetary Fund, in one of the deepest slumps in world history. Venezuelan economist Francisco Rodriguez, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, estimates that economic sanctions are responsible for about half of the drop in output since they were first imposed in 2017, worsening the humanitarian crisis without dislodging the government of President Nicolas Maduro.

Colombia is now home to about 2 million of the more than 5 million Venezuelans who have fled their country in recent years.  

Talks between the Maduro government and the opposition aimed at ending the country’s political and economic crises are set to resume Friday in Mexico. Duque said he is “not an optimist at all” that these talks will yield good results. 

Read More: Why Venezuela’s ‘Two Presidents’ Are Ready to Talk: QuickTake

“The only thing that can work at this moment is to make sure that there’s going to be a rapid call for a presidential election in Venezuela that has strong international scrutiny, so that it guarantees transparency, and the outcome is the transition to a vibrant democracy,” Duque said.

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