Stabroek News Sunday

Venezuela’s frozen funds to be gradually released for humanitari­an aid

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(Reuters) - Venezuela’s government and opposition have asked the United Nations to manage a fund for billions of dollars now held in foreign banks, which will be gradually unfrozen to combat a humanitari­an crisis in the oil-rich nation, delegates announced in Mexico City on Saturday.

Sources told Reuters last month the frozen funds amount to more than $3 billion.

The money, held in Venezuelan-owned accounts overseas, was frozen by U.S. and European banks after the United States ramped up sanctions under the administra­tion of President Donald Trump, designed to pressure President Nicolas Maduro to take steps toward free elections.

Talks between Maduro’s government and its political opponents resumed in Mexico City on Saturday, mediated by Norway, after being on ice for more than a year.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken welcomed the talks as “an important step toward restoring democracy to Venezuelan­s.

“We will look to the parties to achieve lasting agreements that set the course for free and fair presidenti­al elections in 2024,” he said on Twitter.

Maduro also posted a statement on Twitter, saying: “We will always strive for dialogue with all Venezuelan society. We continue to take important steps for the wellbeing of our country.”

Following the announceme­nt for a U.N.-adminis- tered fund, the U.S. Treasury Department issued a license for Chevron , the second largest U.S. oil company, to expand operations in Venezuela, allowing it to import Venezuelan crude into the

United States.

The government’s delegation was led by congressio­nal leader Jorge Rodriguez of Venezuela’s ruling United Socialist Party (PSUV), and the opposition group was headed by politician Gerardo Blyde.

Maduro had said the aim of the talks was to recover the “kidnapped” resources for public investment: “Then we will see what other issues can be discussed.”

The funds are set to help stabilize the country’s electric grid, improve education infrastruc­ture and deal with the impact of this year’s deadly rains and flooding.

It is part of a broad agenda that covers U.S. sanctions on Venezuela, conditions

for the next presidenti­al elections and the status of hundreds of political prisoners though these issues will not be discussed in this round of talks.

“This agreement provides the template for how further progress can be secured,” the European Union said in a statement.

More than 7.1 million Venezuelan­s have left their country according to U.N. estimates this year, many migrating to other Latin American countries or the United States, as Venezuela battles high inflation, and food and medicine shortages. More than half of Venezuelan migrants do not have access to three meals a day, U.N. estimates showed.

 ?? ?? Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard, head of the opposition delegation of Venezuela Gerardo Blyde Perez, Representa­tive of Norway government Dag Nylander, and President of the National Assembly of Venezuela Jorge Rodriguez, hold a news conference about the political talks between Venezuela’s government and the opposition, in Mexico City, Mexico November 26, 2022. (REUTERS/Henry Romero photo)
Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard, head of the opposition delegation of Venezuela Gerardo Blyde Perez, Representa­tive of Norway government Dag Nylander, and President of the National Assembly of Venezuela Jorge Rodriguez, hold a news conference about the political talks between Venezuela’s government and the opposition, in Mexico City, Mexico November 26, 2022. (REUTERS/Henry Romero photo)

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