Stabroek News Sunday

Venezuela’s Maduro entreats Latin America not to isolate him

-

HAVANA (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro called upon Latin America yesterday not to give in to “brutal pressure” from the United States to isolate his government, which is battling intensifyi­ng opposition at home and abroad.

The head of the Organizati­on of American States (OAS), that Venezuela views as a pawn of US policy, this week called for an emergency meeting to discuss a possible censure of the country for violating democratic norms.

Meanwhile on Thursday a senior Brazilian official said Brazil may help block Venezuela from taking the rotating presidency of the Mercosur trade group this month, in a bid to prevent Maduro from strengthen­ing his power.

“I call upon the government­s of the continent to maintain solidarity, cooperatio­n and understand­ing and not to submit to ... brutal pressure to isolate Venezuela,” Maduro entreated other Caribbean leaders gathered for a summit in Havana.

As Venezuela falls deeper into an economic crisis that includes food and medicine shortages, spiraling inflation and sporadic looting, opposition protests for a recall referendum against Maduro are also growing.

Maduro has denounced this as part of an undercover US-backed coup against his socialist government.

“Venezuela will not give in, it will not kneel down, we will fight with the same force we have fought against coups and any type of interventi­onism these last 17 years,” he said.

In the speech opening the summit, Cuban President Raul Castro gave Maduro his “robust and unconditio­nal support” and denounced the “imperialis­t counteroff­ensive” against progressiv­e government­s throughout Latin America.

A generation of leftist leaders took power in the region around 2000, leveraging a boom in commodity exports to pursue ambitious and transforma­tive social policies.

Venezuela also used its oil to wield influence abroad. A majority of the 25 states that are members of the Associatio­n of Caribbean States, or ACS, receive subsidized Venezuelan fuel.

But commodity prices have plunged in recent years and support for these leftist government­s has crumbled.

Argentina’s Peronists lost the presidency in elections last November after 12 years in power, while the 13-year rule of the Workers Party in Brasil ended dramatical­ly with the suspension of President Dilma Rousseff in May.

Castro, who was part of the revolution­ary group that overthrew a US-backed dictator in Cuba in 1959, expressed his support for Rousseff who was facing a “parliament­ary coup promoted by the oligarchic and neoliberal right-wing”.

He also underscore­d that Cuba would never return to the OAS, which it deemed “an instrument of imperialis­t domination”.

 ??  ?? Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro (C) attends the opening of the 7th Summit of Heads of State for the Associatio­n of Caribbean States in Havana, Cuba, June 4, 2016. (Reuters/Alejandro Ernesto/Pool)
Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro (C) attends the opening of the 7th Summit of Heads of State for the Associatio­n of Caribbean States in Havana, Cuba, June 4, 2016. (Reuters/Alejandro Ernesto/Pool)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana