The Star Malaysia

Colombia: Isolate Venezuela

Duque calls for diplomatic siege to restore democracy

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NEW YORK: Colombia’s new president Ivan Duque called for the diplomatic isolation of neighbouri­ng Venezuela, urging pressure to restore democracy in what he labelled a dictatorsh­ip.

At the annual UN General Assembly on Monday, the right-leaning leader said Caracas should be barred from talks called to support countries that have taken in migrants from the country grappling with a severe political and economic crisis.

Colombia has accepted more than one million Venezuelan­s.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza has said he wants to gate crash the meeting, which will include representa­tives of the World Bank and other financial institutio­ns, and seek US$500mil (RM2bil) for his own country’s needs so it can repatriate its nationals.

“I want to be very clear on this – what we have in Venezuela is a dictatorsh­ip.

“And what we are going to have there is a forum of countries that are defending democra- cy and want freedom for Venezuela,” Duque told reporters when asked about Arreaza’s hope of attending.

“The world needs there to be a real and effective diplomatic siege so that we can end this dictatorsh­ip and return freedoms and democracy to Venezuela,” Duque said.

“This statement is not bellicose, but we are calling on the internatio­nal community to denounce and apply all necessary sanctions.”

Some 2.3 million Venezuelan­s, or 7.5% of the population, live abroad with the number sharply growing in the past several years as hyperinfla­tion slashes the worth of salaries and makes necessitie­s prohibitiv­ely expensive, according to the UN.

Colombia has been joined by Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and Peru in calling on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to investigat­e alleged crimes against humanity by Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s hard-left government.

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