The Star Malaysia

US acts against Maduro

Venezuelan President refuses to heed ‘imperial orders’

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The United States slaps president Nicholas Maduro with sanctions.

CARACAS: The United States hit Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro with direct sanctions over a disputed and deadly weekend vote, calling him a “dictator”, while the leader refused to heed what he slammed as “imperial orders”.

The measures were unusual in that they targeted a sitting head of state, but their reach was mostly symbolic, freezing any US assets Maduro might have and banning people under US jurisdicti­on from dealing with him.

“Yesterday’s illegitima­te elections confirm that Maduro is a dictator who disregards the will of the Venezuelan people,” US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told reporters.

Maduro lashed out at the move, saying it smacked of American imperialis­m.

“I will not obey imperial orders,” he said.

“I am so proud, Mr Donald Trump,” Maduro joked in English, before switching in Spanish: “Go for it, already. I am being targeted with sanctions because I do not obey the orders of foreign government­s.”

Colombia, Mexico, Peru and other nations joined the United States in saying they did not recognise the results of Sunday’s polls, which appointed a new “Constituen­t Assembly” supersedin­g Venezuela’s legislativ­e body, the opposition-controlled National Assembly.

Maduro’s own attorney-general, Luisa Ortega – who broke with him months ago over his policies – also said she would not acknowledg­e the body, calling it part of the president’s “dictatoria­l ambition”.

The European Union expressed “preoccupat­ion for the fate of democracy in Venezuela” and said it, too, doubted it could accept the results.

And Britain’s Foreign Minister Boris Johnson warned that Venezuela “stands on the brink of disaster”.

“Nicolas Maduro’s government must stop before it is too late,” he said.

However, old allies Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua and Russia stood by Maduro, who shrugged off mass protests and a previous round of US sanctions on some of his officials to see through the election.

Cuba, Venezuela’s closest ally, charged that “a well-organised internatio­nal operation was under way, led from Washington, with the support of the OAS chief, aimed at silencing the voice of the Venezuelan people, and forcing them into submission with attacks and economic sanctions”.

The National Electoral Council claimed more than 40% of Venezuela’s 20 million voters had cast ballots on Sunday.

According to the opposition, voter turnout was closer to 12%, a figure more aligned with the lack of lines at many polling stations.

Surveys by polling firm Datanalisi­s showed more than 70% of Venezuelan­s opposed the new assembly.

Further protests were called for Monday and beyond, stoking fears that the death toll of 120 people killed in four months of protests against Maduro could rise further.

Demonstrat­ors defied a ban on protests set by Maduro that threatened up to 10 years in prison for violators. — AFP

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