Stabroek News

Venezuela opposition extends committee to protect overseas assets by one year

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CARACAS, (Reuters) - Venezuela’s opposition politician­s yesterday extended the functions of a committee administer­ing the country’s overseas assets, which replaced the now-eliminated interim government, for 12 more months.

Via this legal reform, the opposition National Assembly will maintain its function to safeguard Venezuela’s assets abroad, also because it is the body recognized by the United States, opposition politician­s - who oppose the government of President Nicolas Maduro - added.

Venezuela’s assets held abroad include bank accounts, gold held in the Bank of England, and oil refiner Citgo Petroleum, a subsidiary of state-owned PDVSA, which is protected by the United States government from being auctioned to pay creditor debts until Jan. 18.

“We’re committed to being coherent in the fight to completely escape and leave behind the entire system of what the dictatorsh­ip of Nicolas Maduro’s regime signifies,” Dinorah Figuera, president of the opposition National Assembly, said from Spain, where she has lived in exile for years.

The opposition national assembly has appointed a committee to govern the country’s foreign assets since it voted to remove interim President Juan Guaido and dissolve his government in 2022.

The opposition national assembly’s session was transmitte­d over Zoom, which it says is due to the majority of its members living in exile due to harassment from the government. The meeting of the ruling party-dominated assembly in Venezuela took place in central Caracas.

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