Venezuela talks on hold after
Maduro withdraws over US sanctions
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| Pro-government supporters rally in Caracas (AFP) |
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro has suspended
negotiations with the opposition over new US sanctions which forbid all
dealings with US assets and interests.
By James Blears
It's stalemate in Barbados, between the negotiators for
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and the Opposition led by Juan Guaidó.
The government side is using this latest US move to delay
rather than end the negotiations, claiming the inevitable backlash is totally
intolerable and untenable.
The latest and harsh sanctions prevent all dealings with
Venezuelan interests within the United States, on pain of sanctions for any
offenders, be they companies or nations.
The Venezuelan government representatives also insist
that the concerted economic tightening is a deliberate attempt by Washington
to purposely derail ongoing talks.
Juan Guaidó, who's welcomed this latest move as a just
action against Maduro, is insisting on a prompt presidential election, strictly
monitored by international observers.
Furthermore, the United States is demanding that Maduro step
down before this process even starts, something that he's most unlikely to
concede.
Guaidó is holding a strong political hand of cards, because
more than 50 nations including the United States, already support him as
Venezuela's legitimate President.
Maduro's ace plus steadfast wild card, is that the
Venezuelan military continues its unwavering support for him.

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