Non-Aligned summit opens in crisis-torn Venezuela
PORLAMAR, Venezuela: The Non-Aligned Movement opens a summit yesterday in Venezuela, seeking relevance in a post-Cold War world as the crisis-torn host country seeks to lessen its growing isolation.
Leaders from the 120-nation group will gather for two days on the Caribbean island of Margarita, where Venezuela will take over the movement’s rotating presidency from Iran.
Venezuela, an OPEC member and home to the world’s largest proven oil reserves, will notably be seeking backing for its campaign to slash abundant global crude production in a bid to raise prices.
“We hope to reach important agreements with other countries that we want to have a fair price for our hydrocarbons,” said Venezuelan Oil Minister Eulogio del Pino on the eve of the summit.
“We don’t want prices to be in the hands of speculators, as has been happening for the past two years.”
The oil crunch has triggered an economic crisis in Venezuela, causing food shortages, out breaks of looting and riots.
The crisis is the biggest threat yet to President Nicolas Maduro and the socialist “revolution” launched in 1999 by his late predecessor, Hugo Chavez.
The government has not said how many leaders will be at the summit, the movement’s 17th.
Del Pino highlighted the fact that representatives from fellow oil-producing countries in the Middle East and Latin America would attend.
Founded in 1961 to represent countries resentful of being squeezed in the power-struggle between the United States and the Soviet Union, the Non-Aligned Movement has struggled in recent years to remain relevant in a post-Cold War world.
Venezuelan opposition leaders condemned the summit as a marginal event that will cost millions of dollars the government can ill afford.
The speaker of the oppositionmajority legislature, Henry Ramos Allup, dismissed it as a ‘meeting of dictators,’ while fellow opposition leader Henrique Capriles called it ‘a joke to hungry Venezuelans.’ — AFP