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Maduro’s opponents thrust into fresh turmoil

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 02/09/20

Secret negotiations mediated by Turkey have thrust Venezuela's US-backed political opposition into disarray three months before parliamentary elections that are poised to strengthen the hand of President Nicolas Maduro.

The controversial Ankara-mediated overture by two opposition figures, former presidential candidate Henrique Capriles and National Assembly deputy Stalin Gonzalez, resulted in the release and official "pardon" of around 100 political prisoners in recent days. Hundreds of others remain behind bars or in forced exile.

The development is seen as another embarrassment for Juan Guaido, the speaker of the National Assembly who is recognized as Venezuela's interim president by scores of western countries. In the more than 18 months since he declared his interim administration with a vow to unseat Maduro, Guaido's popular support has waned.

For Turkey, a Nato country that is among the Maduro government's few international allies, the mediation effort provided an opportunity to push back against Washington with which it is at odds in Libya and the eastern Mediterranean — the US just yesterday approved arms sales to Ankara's rival Cyprus. Tehran has similarly exploited the Venezuelan crisis with gasoline shipments in May and June.

"We are pleased to see that a positive dialogue has developed between the government and the opposition in Venezuela with the impact of the initiatives we have been carrying out in coordination with the EU. We hope that this positive process will reflect on the elections in the upcoming period," Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Twitter yesterday.

Brussels welcomed the initiative. EU foreign affairs high representative Josep Borrell described the prisoner release as "good news" and a requisite condition to advance toward free and fair elections.

But in a sharp rebuke yesterday, Guaido's administration said "we absolutely do not recognize the negotiations carried out without consultation on a personal basis" by two Venezuelan opposition figures with Maduro.

"We don't see anything significant" in the prisoners' release, US assistant secretary of state Michael Kozak said, suggesting that the released prisoners could be re-jailed.

Breaking ranks

In the days before the Venezuelan prisoner release, Capriles had indicated a willingness to participate in the 6 December National Assembly elections, breaking publicly with the Guaido-led coalition that plans to boycott the process which it regards as a sham.

The US views the 6 December ballot as "neither free nor fair," secretary of state Mike Pompeo said today. The State Department previously said it would continue to recognize Guaido's claim to interim presidency regardless of the election results.

Another Guaido rival, Maria Corina Machado, has rejected his strategy of retaining the interim presidency indefinitely until free and fair elections can be carried out. She espouses a hardline strategy of encouraging an international invasion, even though US officials have repeatedly dismissed a military option.

The turmoil in the opposition ranks coincides with US efforts to tighten sanctions on Caracas by terminating an exception for diesel by the end of October, just ahead of the US general elections on 3 November.

Florida, a critical US electoral battleground state, hosts many voters of Venezuelan and Cuba descent who generally support a hawkish US stance against Maduro and his Cuban ally.

Another looming deadline is the 1 December expiry of a US sanctions waiver for Chevron and US oil services companies to preserve their Venezuelan assets.


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