Gulf Today

US asks Venezuela for access to Citgo officials

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CARACAS: Washington has asked the government of leftist President Nicolas Maduro for access to Venezuelan-american Executives of US-BASED reiner CITGO detained in Caracas this week, a STATE Department OFICIAL SAID on Thursday.

Five of six Citgo executives arrested on graft allegation­s are US citizens, a source familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

All six men are being held in the headquarte­rs of Venezuela’s military counterint­elligence department in Caracas, the country’s state prosecutor said in a statement on Thursday.

Socialist Maduro has said that the United States, his ideologica­l foe, had requested the men be freed, but he vowed on Wednesday they would be tried as “corrupt, thieving traitors” for allegedly seeking to personally proit From A inancial DEAL that was detrimenta­l to the nation.

“The US Embassy in Venezuela has asked that (Venezuelan) authoritie­s grant consular access to all US citizen detainees in Venezuela. We call on the (Venezuelan government) to do so immediatel­y in accordance with the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations,” the STATE Department OFICIAL SAID.

Relations between Caracas and Washington have long been tense. They have further soured under President Donald Trump since his administra­tion imposed sanctions on Venezuelan oficials INCLUDING Maduro, AND Economic sanctions that have impeded the OPEC nation’s access to internatio­nal banks.

Us-based Citgo Petroleum Corp (CITGO) Is A Venezuelan-owned reiner and marketer of oil and petrochemi­cal products and the arrests come amid a wider anti-corruption sweep in Venezuela’s oil industry.

Around 50 managers at state oil company PDVSA have been arrested since August.

Sources in the energy sector say the arrests owe more to Maduro’s move to sideline rivals and increase his control of money-making companies as the country struggles in a devastatin­g recession.

The political opposition says PDVSA is rife with corruption, and a congressio­nal investigat­ion concluded that at least $11 billion went “missing” between 2004 and 2014.

“The legacy of socialism: To have destroyed PDVSA and the oil industry and turned it into a den of corruption and nepotism,” opposition lawmaker Jose Guerra said on Twitter.

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