Jamaica Gleaner

Pressure on Biden to review diesel sanctions on Venezuela

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AUNITED States senator urged the Biden administra­tion on Tuesday to lift a ban on diesel fuel swaps with Venezuela, adding to pressure from some Democrats and aid workers who argue sanctions are worsening the South American country’s dire humanitari­an crisis.

The Trump administra­tion in November barred non-US companies from sending diesel to Venezuela in exchange for the country’s crude oil. Previously, such swaps had been exempted from US sanctions aimed at ousting President Nicolás Maduro because of the critical role diesel plays in public transport and helping farmers move food supplies to market in diesel-powered trucks.

Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticu­t, a Democratic member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, sent a letter to Secretary of State Anthony Blinken calling for the US to end what he called the “misguided” policy. He said that immediatel­y restoring diesel swaps would “provide life-saving relief for millions of Venezuelan­s”, as current diesel reserves are expected to run critically low by April.

The ban “has created no real political leverage with Maduro, who was able to manoeuvre around the unilateral sanctions, and, instead, threatens to severely worsen the already-dire humanitari­an situation in the country,”Murphy wrote in the letter, a copy of which was provided to The Associated Press.

Murphy’s request comes as the Biden administra­tion reviews US policy towards Venezuela with the goal of building a multilater­al front against Maduro and ensuring humanitari­an aid gets to Venezuelan­s in need. It also would seem to reinforce tentative steps by Maduro and the US-backed opposition to work together to jointly address Venezuela’s crisis, beginning with a deal to import badly needed coronaviru­s vaccines.

It’s an approach favoured by many in the Democratic party as well as aid workers in Venezuela, who are seeking a recalibrat­ion of US sanctions policy. Last fall, a group of

115 organisati­ons and individual­s in the US and Venezuela wrote then Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, warning of “devastatin­g consequenc­es” for regular Venezuelan­s as a result of the diesel ban.

Neither the Biden administra­tion nor opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who the US recognises as Venezuela’s rightful leader, have said whether they support lifting the diesel ban.

US officials have insisted that current sanctions allow for the delivery of humanitari­an goods, though many observers say there is a risk of overcompli­ance by companies and organisati­ons fearful of doing business with Maduro’s government.

Companies that frequently engaged in the crude-for-diesel swaps with US government authorisat­ion include India’s Reliance Industries Limited, Spain’s Repsol SA, and Italy’s Eni SpA.

Guaidó and his allies blame Maduro’s mismanagem­ent of the oil-based economy for the fuel shortages, pointing out that his government, despite mounting hunger, continues to ship thousands of barrels of diesel daily to ally Cuba. About 4 per cent of total diesel supplies in Venezuela were shipped to Cuba since January 2020, all of it domestical­ly produced and of a poorer quality than the imported fuel, according to consultanc­y Gas Energy Latin America. Feliciano Reyna, head of the Caracas-based aid group Accion Solidaria, which focuses on HIV/AIDS treatment and medical relief activities, said lifting the ban would hopefully unfreeze realtions between the Maduro government and the opposition. He Hopes that lifting the diesel ban would eventually lead Maduro to yield on another key demand of aid groups: that te Rome-based World Food Program be Allowed to operate in Venezuela. "This would be a very strong sign from Biden that he's thinking first of the Venezeulan people," said Reyna, who testified about the fuel swaps this months before the house Foreign Affairs Committee.

 ?? AP ?? In this March 3 photo, youths who cull through trash for items to resell ride on the back of a garbage truck entering the Pavia landfill on the outskirts of Barquisime­to, Venezuela.
AP In this March 3 photo, youths who cull through trash for items to resell ride on the back of a garbage truck entering the Pavia landfill on the outskirts of Barquisime­to, Venezuela.

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