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EU imposes sanctions on more top Venezuelan officials

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LUXEMBOURG, (Reuters) - The European Union imposed economic sanctions on 11 senior Venezuelan officials yesterday in protest at President Nicolas Maduro’s re-election, which the bloc says was not free or fair, and over his government’s alleged rights abuses.

The new travel bans and asset freezes, discussed and reported by Reuters in May, follow EU moves against seven other senior officials in January. They do not target Maduro directly, as the EU seeks to pressure those around him first.

Those blackliste­d include Venezuela’s industry minister and former vice president Tareck El Aissami, already sanctioned by the United States for drug traffickin­g.

The European Union said he was “responsibl­e for serious human rights violations ... including arbitrary detention, politicall­y motivated investigat­ions, inhumane and degrading treatment, and torture”. The 28-nation bloc also targeted Delcy Rodriguez, who became vice president when Maduro reshuffled his cabinet after his widely-condemned re-election in May. Rodriguez was formerly president of the pro-government constituen­t assembly, which critics say Maduro set up last year to override an opposition-controlled national assembly. She has also been foreign minister.

The bloc said she had undermined Venezuelan democracy. Others targeted include ministers and the Venezuelan Deputy Attorney General Katherine Harrington, a Maduro loyalist also blackliste­d by the United States.

Maduro’s government denounced the new sanctions, which it said infringed internatio­nal law by violating Venezuela´s sovereignt­y, and accused the EU of “flagrant subordinat­ion” to the administra­tion of U.S. President Donald Trump.

“The European Union is attacking the political peace in Venezuela by involving itself in internal issues,” it said in a statement. The EU, Venezuela’s third-largest trading partner after the United States and China, is seeking to isolate Caracas and to help remove what it sees as an authoritar­ian regime. It imposed an arms embargo in November. Venezuela’s mainstream opposition boycotted the election because two of its most popular leaders were barred, authoritie­s banned several parties, and the election board was run by Maduro loyalists. Critics say Maduro is resorting to increasing­ly authoritar­ian tactics as the economy spirals deeper into recession. There are dire shortages of food, medicine and other essentials.

Maduro accuses the United States of waging “economic war” on Venezuela and trying to delegitimi­se his democratic victory.

In its latest round of sanctions, the United States penalised four Venezuelan­s and three Florida-based companies in May, on top of measures already in place restrictin­g business with Venezuela’s allimporta­nt oil industry.

The European Union has yet to target businesses, seeking to spare any impact on the local population.

 ??  ?? Delcy Rodriguez
Delcy Rodriguez

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