Jamaica Gleaner

Maduro halts talks with opponents over US asset freeze

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VENEZUELA’S GOVERNMENT late Wednesday halted negotiatio­ns with the opposition in protest of the Trump administra­tion’s freezing of its US assets, thrusting into crisis the country’s best chance of peacefully resolving a political stand-off that has kept the nation on the edge for more than six months.

The decision surprised representa­tives of opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who were already on the Caribbean island of Barbados awaiting what was to be the start Thursday of the sixth round of talks that began in May under the auspices of Norway.

“We Venezuelan­s have watched with profound indignatio­n how the chief of the opposition, Juan Guaidó, celebrates, promotes and supports

these harmful actions against our nation’s sovereignt­y and our peoples’ most basic human rights,” the government said in a statement Wednesday night.

The government stopped short of abandoning the talks altogether, saying only that it would “review the mechanisms of this process to ensure its continuati­on is truly effective and harmonious with the interests of the people”.

For weeks, representa­tives of Maduro and his would-be successor have been shuttling back and forth to Barbados trying to agree on a common path out of the country’s prolonged political stand-off. The meetings have been slow-going and shrouded in mystery, with neither side disclosing details.

But Maduro’s supporters have

accused the United States of trying to blow up the fragile process with sweeping new sanctions announced this week that freeze all of the government’s assets in the US and even threaten to punish companies from third countries that keep doing business with his socialist administra­tion.

“They’re trying to dynamite the dialogue,” Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza said Tuesday at a news conference to denounce comments by US National Security Adviser John Bolton defending the asset freeze. “But nobody, not even 1,000 Trumps or 500 Boltons ... will make us abandon the negotiatin­g table”.

Maduro said Wednesday night that while he favours dialogue, he will not stand by idly as his opponents cheer on punitive measures by the US that he believes will worsen hardships in a country already suffering from sixdigit hyperinfla­tion, medicine shortages and a recession now deeper than the US Great Depression.

“Under these conditions, no,” he said in a telephone call to a programme on state TV hosted by socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello.

Maduro promised to lead a “counteroff­ensive” from the constituti­onal assembly – a rubber-stamp body set up to undermine Venezuela’s opposition-controlled congress – to “bring justice to the sellouts and traitors”.

Opposition leaders reacted to Maduro’s withdrawal from the talks with a mix of disbelief and toldyou-so admonishme­nts.

“They’ve been saying for days they believe in peace and the Oslo

mechanism, but at the first sign of change they fear the possibilit­y of a real political change in the country,” lawmaker Stalin Gonzalez, the head of Guaidó’s negotiatin­g team in Barbados, said on social media.

Speculatio­n has swirled in political and diplomatic circles that Maduro’s envoys have expressed a willingnes­s to call an early presidenti­al election under a revamped electoral board and foreign observatio­n. The US has insisted Maduro must give up power before any elections can be deemed credible.

Three people involved in the talks from different sides had described the environmen­t as serious and cordial, with each delegation dining and travelling back and forth to the island from Caracas separately. All three insisted progress has been made, even if the thorny topic of elections is being left for last and an all-encompassi­ng deal based on a six-point agenda is some way off. The people agreed to speak to The Associated Press only on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorised to divulge details of the talks.

Such insider accounts differ sharply from the assessment of Bolton and other hardliners inside the Trump administra­tion who have accused Maduro of using the talks to buy time.

“We will not fall for these old tricks of a tired dictator,” Bolton declared Tuesday at a meeting in Peru of more than 50 government­s aligned against Maduro. “No more time for tap, tap, tapping. Now is the time for action.”

To be sure, nobody in the Trump administra­tion has disavowed the talks, and some analysts believe Bolton’s “bad cop” persona and his threats of more punitive actions to come may even provide a boost to the mediation effort.

Guaidó, who heads the opposition-controlled congress, has shown no willingnes­s to ditch the talks despite pressure to do so from hawks inside his coalition who accuse him of turning a blind eye to Maduro’s alleged torturing of opponents.

Maduro, although severely weakened by the US sanctions and increasing­ly isolated internatio­nally, still enjoys the support of powerful allies like Russia and China. He also has the backing of the military, the traditiona­l arbiter of disputes in Venezuela. Neither the military nor the US has been a party to the talks, even though Maduro’s main goal is the removal of US sanctions.

Meanwhile, Guaidó’s momentum has stalled since he declared himself interim president in January over what the US and some 50 other nations saw as Maduro’s fraudulent re-election last year. Demonstrat­ions that at the start of the year filled the streets of Caracas have thinned to a trickle, and a military uprising called for by Guaidó in April ended with several opposition lawmakers on the run or in exile.

“As long as each side pursues a winner-take-all approach, they are less willing to make concession­s and a deal will remain elusive,” said Phil Gunson, a Caracas-based analyst for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

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 ?? AP ?? Opposition leader and self-proclaimed interim President of Venezuela Juan Guaido speaks during a protest asking for the freedom of opposition lawmaker Juan Requesens, in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, August 7. Requesens has spent a year in prison and is accused in an assassinat­ion attempt on President Nicolas Maduro.
AP Opposition leader and self-proclaimed interim President of Venezuela Juan Guaido speaks during a protest asking for the freedom of opposition lawmaker Juan Requesens, in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, August 7. Requesens has spent a year in prison and is accused in an assassinat­ion attempt on President Nicolas Maduro.

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