The Freeman

Venezuela’s UN ambassador resigning at Maduro’s request

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CARACAS — Caracas' ambassador to the United Nations, Rafael Ramirez, said in a letter released yesterday he was standing down at the request of Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro, as a feud between the two worsened.

Ramirez had long been seen as a target of Maduro's aggressive push to consolidat­e power in the run-up to next year's presidenti­al elections in the crisis-wracked South American country.

"I have resigned from my role as ambassador at the request of the president of the republic ... I have been removed for my opinions and I will remain, whatever happens, loyal to Comandante Chavez!" Ramirez wrote in a resignatio­n letter posted on Twitter.

The note, addressed to Foreign Minister JorgeArrea­za, indicated he had been expecting the move.

"This decision is in line with the agreements reached in our conversati­on once we received the instructio­n of the president of the republic," he wrote.

Former foreign minister Samuel Moncada is set to replace Ramirez, who had previously been head of Venezuela's state oil giant, PDVSA, for a decade from2004-14.

Ramirez loyalists, including Eulogio Del Pino and Nelson Martinez, have recently been arrested and removed from key posts -- the former as oil minister and the latter as PDVSA chief -- in what analysts see as an ongoing purge.

They are the highestran­king officials to be arrested in the anti-corruption moves at PDVSA, which accounts for almost all the country's income.

Without specifical­ly mentioning Ramirez, Maduro said Tuesday that "anyone who becomes corrupt is a traitor."

Meanwhile, chief prosecutor Tarek William Saab denied the existence of rifts within the Socialist Party, and said the only fight is against "those who have harmed the country."

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