Miami Herald

Amid confusion and silence, Venezuelan political talks continue

- BY JIM WYSS

Amid rumors and confusion about the status of talks aimed at ending Venezuela’s grinding political crisis, the government of Norway on Thursday said that negotiatio­ns in Barbados are ongoing and cautioned the parties from muddying the waters.

“We announce that the representa­tives of the main political actors in Venezuela are continuing the negotiatio­ns that were initiated in Oslo,” Norway’s foreign ministry said in a press release. “We emphasize the importance of the parties showing utmost caution in their comments and statements about the process.”

Late Wednesday, Venezuelan Communicat­ions Minister Jorge Rodríguez announced in a tweet that “this round of talks has finished,” casting doubt on whether they had ended altogether.

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó — who is considered the country’s legitimate president by Washington and more than 50 other nations — has not addressed the issue, but one of his representa­tives at the talks, congressma­n Stalin González, said the delegation was “in consultati­ons to end the suffering of Venezuelan­s.”

Talks began in Barbados on Monday, under the auspices of the Norwegian government, with hopes that the Nicolás Maduro regime and Guaidó’s representa­tives can find a a way out of the political crisis that has both men claiming to be the country’s rightful leader.

While negotiator­s have been tight-lipped, there are persistent rumors that one of the ideas being floated is new elections early next year, in which Maduro — who has been in power since 2013 — would not be a candidate.

Diosdado Cabello, a close Maduro ally and the head of the National Constituti­onal Assembly, however, said new elections weren’t negotiable

“We won’t have presidenti­al elections,” he said Wednesday, according to El Nacional newspaper. “The only president here is Nicolás Maduro Moros, who is just six months into his new term.”

Guaidó, 35, rose to prominence on Jan. 23 when he announced that it was his constituti­onal duty, as head of congress, to assume the presidency, arguing that Maduro had clung to power through fraud. Despite having broad internatio­nal support he has little real power in the country.

Maduro, 57, says elections in May 2018, gave him the right to rule through 2025 and that Guaidó is trying to illegally seize power with Washington’s backing.

The talks are occurring as Washington continues to try to drive wedges within Maduro’s party. On Thursday, the U.S. Secretary of Treasury sanctioned Venezuela’s Military Counterint­elligence Agency (DGCIM) after it was accused of torturing a Venezuelan naval officer to death early this month.

“The politicall­y motivated arrest and tragic death of Captain Rafael Acosta was unwarrante­d and unacceptab­le,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement. “Treasury is committed to ending the former Maduro regime’s inhumane treatment of political opponents, innocent civilians, and members of the military in an effort to suppress dissent.”

The ongoing political crisis is exacerbati­ng an economic collapse featuring hyperinfla­tion and food and medicine shortages. The United Nations says more than 5 million people have fled the country in recent years, the hemisphere’s largest migratory crisis.

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