Stabroek News

France urges more EU sanctions on Venezuela over “shift to authoritar­ianism”

-

PARIS, (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron called yesterday for further European Union sanctions on Venezuela, days after the 28-nation bloc agreed a travel ban and asset freezes on seven senior Venezuelan officials.

The West accuses President Nicholas Maduro’s government of violating democracy and human rights in the oilproduci­ng nation, which is in the grip of a major economic and social crisis with millions suffering food and medicine shortages.

Venezuela’s pro-government Supreme Court late on Thursday excluded the opposition coalition from registerin­g for this year’s presidenti­al election, possibly splinterin­g Maduro’s foes by pushing political parties to put forward competing candidates.

“Sadly things are going in the wrong direction,” Macron told a joint news conference with the visiting president of Argentina, Mauricio Macri.

“We’ll have to see at the European level whether we want new sanctions. I am in favour of having them... I want us to go further given the recent decisions and the shift to authoritar­ianism.”

On Monday the EU announced measures targeting people in charge of security forces accused of widespread abuses, particular­ly during the 2017 antigovern­ment protests.

Earlier yesterday Spain, a prominent supporter of the new EU sanctions, declared Venezuela’s ambassador to Madrid ‘persona non grata’ following an equivalent move by the Caracas government on Thursday.

Critics of the 55-yearold Maduro, who succeeded Hugo Chavez in 2013, say he has ruined a once prosperous oil economy, turned Venezuela into a dictatorsh­ip and skewed the election system to perpetuate power for his Socialist Party.

Maduro’s government

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana