The Boston Globe

US restores oil sanctions on Venezuela as hopes dim for free election

Says Maduro didn’t comply with election plan

- By Genevieve Glatsky

When the government of President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela and his country’s opposition signed an agreement in October to work toward free and fair elections this year, it was seen as a glimmer of hope after years of authoritar­ian rule and economic free fall.

The United States, as a sign of goodwill, temporaril­y lifted some of the economic sanctions that have crippled the country’s crucial oil industry.

But six months later, the Maduro government has made several moves that have dimmed the chances of legitimate elections, and a frustrated Biden administra­tion on Wednesday announced that it was letting the sanctions relief expire.

The reinstatem­ent of the penalties could carry significan­t consequenc­es for the future of Venezuela’s democracy, for its economy and for migration in the region.

“Maduro and his representa­tives did not fully comply with the spirit or the letter of the agreement,” said a senior administra­tion official who spoke with a group of journalist­s on background to discuss a sensitive diplomatic matter.

Another top official discussing the restored sanctions cited the “disqualifi­cation of candidates and parties on technicali­ties, and what we see as a continued pattern of harassment and repression against opposition figures and civil society.”

The sanctions relief was to expire at midnight Wednesday, but the official said there would be a “45-day wind down period for transactio­ns related to the oil and gas sector operations” so that the expiration “does not provoke uncertaint­y in the global energy sector.”

The Venezuelan government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. But in a televised address Monday, Maduro, anticipati­ng that the sanctions would be restored, said, “We are not a gringo colony. Venezuela is going to continue its economic march.”

The United States has placed sanctions on some Venezuelan leaders for years, but the Trump administra­tion tightened them significan­tly in 2019 after the US accused Maduro of fraud in the last presidenti­al election.

The move was meant to force the Maduro government from power, but Maduro has managed to retain his grip, even as the sanctions have led to economic misery for many Venezuelan­s.

Venezuelan oil imports to the United States — its biggest customer — have been effectivel­y banned. Oil is Venezuela’s main source of export income, and the sanctions have dealt a devastatin­g economic blow that has contribute­d to a mass exodus of Venezuelan­s.

The sanctions relief allowed Venezuela to sell its crude freely for a period of six months.

Maduro, who has been in power for 11 years, has long sought the lifting of sanctions, while the United States and its allies in the Venezuelan opposition have demanded that Maduro allow competitiv­e elections that could give his political opponents a legitimate shot at winning.

While the agreement last year, signed in Barbados, was a significan­t step forward, many were skeptical that Maduro would ever allow an election with any real possibilit­y that he might lose.

Just days after the agreement was signed, a former Venezuelan lawmaker, María Corina Machado, won a primary election with more than 90 percent of the vote. Her victory and a high turnout showed, according to experts, that she stood a strong chance of defeating Maduro in a free and fair election.

Since then, the Maduro government has put up more barriers to prevent the possibilit­y of a competitiv­e vote.

The country’s top court disqualifi­ed Machado in January over what the judges claimed were financial irregulari­ties that occurred when she was a national legislator. Those types of disqualifi­cations are a common tactic used by Maduro to keep strong competitor­s off the ballot.

Then, the government, using technical electoral maneuvers, prevented an opposition coalition from putting forward another preferred candidate. The opposition was ultimately allowed to put forth a different candidate, Edmundo González, a former diplomat, but it is unclear if his name will appear on the ballot in the July 28 election.

One opposition party was allowed to officially register another candidate: Manuel Rosales, the governor of the populous state of Zulia, whose candidacy is widely seen as rubberstam­ped by Maduro, according to political analysts.

An unclassifi­ed US intelligen­ce report in February stated that Maduro was likely to win the election and remain in power “because of his control of state institutio­ns that influence the electoral process and his willingnes­s to exercise his power.”

While the Maduro administra­tion had placed allies on Venezuela’s electoral council, the intelligen­ce report said it was “also trying to avoid blatant voting fraud.”

Six of Machado’s campaign aides have been arrested, and six more have gone into hiding since arrest warrants were issued against them. Men on motorbikes have attacked supporters at her events. Many Venezuelan­s living abroad have been unable to register to vote because of expensive and cumbersome requiremen­ts.

Now that sanctions have been reinstated, experts say it is unlikely the Venezuelan government will reconsider its antidemocr­atic actions.

The Maduro government does not “have any further reason to make more concession­s or even maintain some of the concession­s that they have made so far,” said Mariano de Alba, a senior adviser for Internatio­nal Crisis Group, a think tank. “So we could be walking toward a more uneven playing field on the electoral side.”

The move could also affect migration in the region.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Opposition leader María Corina Machado was embraced by supporters in San Antonio, Venezuela, on Wednesday.
ARIANA CUBILLOS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Opposition leader María Corina Machado was embraced by supporters in San Antonio, Venezuela, on Wednesday.

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