The Jerusalem Post

Venezuela’s Maduro is as destructiv­e as King Herod, warns ex-oil czar

- • By ALEXANDRA ULMER (Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters/Wikimedia Commons)

CARACAS (Reuters) – A former oil minister excoriated Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in a newspaper column on Sunday, accusing the leftist leader of behaving like biblical King Herod and plunging the oil-rich nation into economic devastatio­n.

Rafael Ramirez, who was the all-powerful head of the Oil Ministry and state energy company PDVSA for a decade, has long been a rival of Maduro.

In recent months, Ramirez has grown increasing­ly critical of Maduro’s handling of a fourth straight year of recession that has triggered malnutriti­on, widespread food and medicine shortages, the world’s steepest inflation and a surge in emigration.

A furious Maduro ordered Ramirez to resign as the nation’s United Nations ambassador in New York last month after an article titled the “The Storm” was perceived as an attack on his government.

Ramirez fled the United States in December for an undisclose­d location before Venezuela’s state prosecutor accused him of corruption during the time he commanded the world’s largest crude reserves.

In his sharpest critique to date, Ramirez on Sunday published a 3,000-word column in the local newspaper Panorama, comparing Maduro to Herod, the Roman-appointed king of Judea who was accused of mass infanticid­e.

“You are killing the revolution,” Ramirez wrote, without using Maduro’s name.

“With a mix of arrogance, ignorance, incompeten­ce, cynicism, and a lot of irresponsi­bility, you have brought our people to an unimaginab­le level of suffering and humiliatio­n,” he added, also accusing Maduro’s inner circle of corruption and authoritar­ianism.

“If our commander [late leader Hugo Chavez] were with us, standing in line for food, or walking the streets of Caracas seeing children looking through garbage, what would he do? And what would you tell him?”

The government did not respond to a request for comment about the article.

The political opposition says Ramirez is a hypocrite who is also responsibl­e for Venezuela’s economic meltdown. They say he destroyed PDVSA by filling the company’s roster with political loyalists and letting at least $11 billion go “missing” during his tenure.

Insiders say accusation­s against Ramirez stem from a turf war among ruling socialists, especially ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election, rather than a real desire to root out graft.

In recent months, authoritie­s have spearheade­d an anti-graft purge of the oil sector, jailing 69 top managers including two former oil ministers. Critics say the arrests are designed to consolidat­e the unpopular Maduro’s control of the industry which brings in over 90% of foreign currency.

In the latest developmen­t, anti-government union leader Ivan Freites, who frequently gave informatio­n about problems at Venezuela’s ailing refineries, said on Twitter over the weekend he had been summoned by intelligen­ce agents. Political sources said he had left the country.

Reuters was unable to verify the informatio­n or contact Freites.

In his article, Ramirez urged top government officials to speak out against Maduro’s purge before it is too late.

“Today it’s me, tomorrow it will be you,” Ramirez wrote.

 ??  ?? VENEZUELAN PRESIDENT Nicolas Maduro – a modern day Herod the Great?
VENEZUELAN PRESIDENT Nicolas Maduro – a modern day Herod the Great?
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