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US blacklists Venezuela’s vice president as drug trafficker

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States blackliste­d Venezuela’s Vice President Tareck El Aissami for drug traffickin­g, the first crackdown by the Trump administra­tion against a top official in President Nicolas Maduro’s government for money laundering and the drug trade.

The US Department of Treasury said it designated El Aissami for sanctions under the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designatio­n Act. His associate, Samark Jose Lopez Bello, was targeted for providing material assistance and financial support for El Aissami’s activities, Treasury said in a statement.

Treasury also targeted 13 companies owned or controlled by Lopez Bello or other parties that comprise an internatio­nal network spanning the British Virgin Islands, Panama, Britain, the United States and Venezuela.

“El Aissami facilitate­d shipments of narcotics from Venezuela, to include control over planes that leave from a Venezuelan airbase, as well as control of drug routes through the ports of Venezuela,” a senior US administra­tion official told a conference call with reporters.

The Treasury Department said El Aissami oversaw or partially owned narcotics shipments of more than 1,000 kilogramme­s from Venezuela on multiple occasions, including shipments to Mexico and the United States.

Another US administra­tion official estimated the value of property blocked in Miami was worth “tens of millions of dollars.” Another official suggested the value of the property seized was not commensura­te with the salary of a public official.

US officials called Lopez Bello a “key frontman” used by El Aissami to handle financial matters and purchase assets.

The Venezuelan government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Maduro frequently accuses US officials of trying to smear his administra­tion.

US officials denied that yesterday’s designatio­ns had anything to do with El Aissami’s prominent political role. He is a former minister of interior and of justice.

“The designatio­n is a result of a years-long investigat­ion of narcotics traffickin­g by OFAC. The designatio­n is not aimed at Venezuela or any specific sectors of the Venezuelan economy,” the senior official said.

As a result of these actions, Americans are generally prohibited from engaging in transactio­ns or otherwise dealing with individual­s and entities, and any assets they have under US jurisdicti­on are frozen.

The move is a departure from the so-called “soft landing” approach taken by former president Barack Obama’s White House, which at times had clashed with efforts by the US Justice Department and Drug Enforcemen­t Agency, working with informants in Venezuela to nab influentia­l government officials for money laundering and drug traffickin­g.

Since 2015, the Obama administra­tion had sought to use behind-the-scenes diplomacy to ease acrimony with Caracas and the fallout of a string of US drug indictment­s against Venezuelan officials, such as Nestor Reverol, the head of Venezuela’s National Guard.

Senior administra­tion officials declined to say whether President Donald Trump had personally signed off on the sanctions or whether he was involved in the decision.

Typical drug traffickin­g designatio­ns would not normally rise to the level of the president for approval, but the blacklisti­ng of a top government official of another country is far more sensitive than typical designatio­ns.

The sanctions are the first test of how the rocky relationsh­ip between the ideologica­l foes evolves under Trump. The unpopular Venezuelan president has so far treaded carefully with Trump.

While he blasted the Republican as a “thief” and “bandit” during the US election campaign, Maduro later cooled his rhetoric and said Trump deserved to be given a chance and in any case “won’t be worse than Obama”.

El Aissami, whom local media report is of Syrian and Lebanese extraction, grew up poor in the Andean state of Merida and went on to study law and criminolog­y. He has been both a lawmaker and a state governor for the ruling Socialist Party before being tapped vice-president last month.

Venezuelan opposition groups have long accused El Aissami of repressing dissent, participat­ing in drug traffickin­g rings, and supporting Middle East groups such as Hezbollah.

Thirty-four Republican and Democratic members of the US Senate and House of Representa­tives sent a letter to Trump on Feb 8 urging him to act against Venezuelan officials.

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Tareck El Aissami

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