Venezuelan Daily Brief

Published in association with The DVA Group and The Selinger Group, the Venezuelan Daily Brief provides bi-weekly summaries of key news items affecting bulk commodities and the general business environment in Venezuela.

Thursday, November 22, 2018

November 22, 2018


International Trade

Customs Brokers Chamber reports Christmas season imports are down 98% from 2012 due to exchange restrictions and red tape. It adds that high impact imports are carried out by the government. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/economia/camara-de-aduaneros-asegura-que-importaciones-navidenas-cayeron-98)

 

Oil & Energy

PDVSA resumes work at Jose oil port's dock

Venezuela’s state-run PDVSA has reopened a dock at the country’s main oil terminal of Jose that had been closed for almost three months due to a tanker collision, a PDVSA source and a shipper said on Tuesday. Dozens of tankers waiting to load Venezuelan oil were diverted to other PDVSA’s terminals since Jose port’s South dock was shut in late August, causing delays in deliveries to customers and cutting export revenue. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-oil-ports/venezuelas-pdvsa-resumes-work-at-jose-oil-ports-dock-sources-idUSKCN1NP24K)

 

Maduro claims US$ 100 is the “fair price” for a barrel of oil

He made his statement at a funeral ceremony honoring for former Oil Minister, PDVSA President and OPEC Secretary General Alí Rodríguez Araque. Year-to-date 218, Venezuela’s oil basket price has averaged US$ 61.74. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/el-universal/26375/maduro-estima-que-100-dolares-es-el-precio-justo-para-el-barril-de-petroleo)

 

Commodities

Zulia state governor declares emergency due to drinking water scarcity

Zulia state governor Omar Prieto has declared a state of emergency in the statewide distribution of drinking water and will set “a sales price cap on water casks". More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/nacional/gobernador-del-zulia-declaro-emergencia-por-escasez-de-agua-potable)

 

Economy & Finance

Chavez’s ex-treasurer will give up houses, horses and watches

A former national treasurer of Venezuela who admitted taking bribes from a billionaire television mogul will give up the trappings of his fabulous life in south Florida, including real estate, show horses, luxury watches and foreign bank accounts. Alejandro Andrade Cedeno, the treasurer from 2007 to 2010 under late socialist leader Hugo Chavez, pleaded guilty to a US$ 1 billion money-laundering plot in which wealthy Venezuelans converted bolivars to dollars through a rigged exchange system. They then moved money out of the country, which is suffering a crippling economic crisis. The Justice Department detailed the extent of Andrade’s corrupt wealth in unsealing his case Tuesday and revealing his cooperation with prosecutors. They also announced the indictment of Raul Gorrin Belisario, the billionaire who owns the GLOBOVISION television network and has been charged with paying bribes to Andrade and others as well as helping to launder the payments; and the guilty plea of Gabriel Arturo Jimenez Aray, a Venezuelan who owned BANCO PERAVIA in the Dominican Republic. Andrade, once a bodyguard to the late President Hugo Chavez, admitted he took bribes as treasurer to steer contracts to brokerage houses that conducted bolivar exchanges. Andrade chose which brokerages would sell bonds from the treasurer’s portfolio that were denominated in U.S. dollars. His conspirators could then “obtain substantial profits on the exchange transactions,” according to court documents. Even after Andrade moved in 2012 to Wellington, Florida, the bribes continued until last November, he said in pleading guilty. His plea deal requires him to forfeit the Palm Beach County real estate empire and horses. Andrade will give up a six-acre estate in a gated community and 17 horses with names like Tinker Bell, Bonjovi and Anastasia Du Park. He’ll give over his 2017 Mercedes Benz GLS 550 and nine other cars, as well as three dozen watches from makers like Rolex, Hublot and Franck Muller. He’s forfeiting Swiss accounts at BSI Bank and EFG Bank, and at three large U.S. banks. Andrade, 54, was a close ally of Chavez and helped him in a 1992 coup d’etat. Andrade faces as long as 10 years in prison when he’s sentenced on Nov. 27, but he’s likely to get less time as a cooperator. Prosecutors also relied on Jimenez, 50, who spent three years cooperating in “an international criminal investigation against highly dangerous individuals” that “put him in a dangerous position,” prosecutors said in an Oct. 1 filing unsealed Tuesday. “The government of Venezuela’s complicity in this conspiracy renders victim status inappropriate,” prosecutors said in a July 27 court filing. Gorrin, who also owns insurance firm Seguros La Vitalicia, was charged in an indictment unsealed on Monday with violating U.S. anti-corruption laws in efforts to win contracts to carry out currency exchange operations for the government. Between 2008 and 2017, Gorrin facilitated more than US$ 150 million in bribe payments to officials in Venezuela’s treasury for access to currency deals, with funds wired from Swiss bank accounts to accounts in Florida, U.S. prosecutors said. Gorrin allegedly also bought jets, yachts, “champion horses” and luxury watches in Florida and Texas for a government official as a bribe, according to the indictment. GLOBOVISION, once a virulently anti-government station, overhauled coverage and softened criticism of Chavez's successor, Nicolas Maduro, after Gorrin purchased the channel in 2013, reporters said at the time. (BLOOMBERG: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-21/venezuela-s-ex-treasurer-will-give-up-houses-horses-and-watches; https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-20/venezuelan-tv-mogul-charged-in-u-s-bribery-laundering-case; REUTERS: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-corruption/venezuelas-former-treasurer-took-1-billion-in-bribes-u-s-prosecutors-idUSKCN1NP1K1; https://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-corruption/u-s-prosecutors-accuse-venezuela-media-mogul-of-bribery-money-laundering-idUSL2N1XV05P; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2469926&CategoryId=10717; Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-21/venezuela-s-ex-treasurer-will-give-up-houses-horses-and-watches)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Maduro’s poll ratings dropped six points this month.

A slight gain in President Nicolás Maduro’s popularity registered in October, when he announced some economic initiatives, dropped again in November. The DATANÁLISIS Omnibus poll shows both the government and Maduro himself have again lost popularity. One out of four Venezuelans had rated Maduro favorably in October, probably due to the alleged murder attempt and new economic policy announcements. However, in November only one out of five registered a positive attitude toward the President. He lost 7 percentage points over the past 30 days due to continued hyperinflation and the murder of city councilor Fernando Alban. Overall, 78% of Venezuelans rate Maduro negatively now, although he retains 73.4% support among so-called “chavistas”. The feeling that his economic policy has failed seems to have taken root within the population. More in Spanish: (VENEPRESS: https://venepress.com/article/Evaluacion-del-presidente-Maduro-bajo-siete-puntos1542810004750)

 

U.S. weighs sanctions on Cuban officials over role in Venezuela crackdown

The Trump administration is considering imposing sanctions on Cuban military and intelligence officials who it says are helping Venezuela’s socialist government crackdown on dissent, according to a source with knowledge of the deliberations. Such sanctions would be the first time Washington has targeted a bloc of foreign officials allied with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. The potential human rights-related sanctions would target Cuban officials, possibly including generals, who Washington accuses of advising Venezuela’s government on how to monitor opponents and put down street protests, the source said. The number and identities of the potential targets was unclear. Asked about possible sanctions on Cuban officials, a senior U.S. government official told Reuters in early November: “We are looking at all the potential avenues to deter those who are really helping the Maduro regime stay afloat and giving them the tools they need for repression.” Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton said earlier this month Washington would take a tougher line against Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, calling them a “Troika of Tyranny.” (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-usa-cuba-exclusive/exclusive-u-s-weighs-sanctions-on-cuban-officials-over-role-in-venezuela-crackdown-idUSKCN1NQ2CV; NBC News: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/u-s-considering-sanctioning-cuban-officials-over-their-role-venezuela-n939111)

 

Police, students clash at protest in Venezuela

Hundreds of anti-riot police in Venezuela have clashed with students staging a protest calling for better conditions at universities as the nation’s economic crisis continues to worsen. Students held a rally at the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas on Wednesday before trying to march off campus. They were stopped by officers and members of the national guard who launched tear gas at them. A dozen students required medical treatment after exposure to the fumes. The anti-government movement has lost steam in recent months, and the march had drawn an unusually large crowd. The demonstrators were trying to leave the university, but the PNB officials blocked the exits of the institution with police fences. (National Post: https://nationalpost.com/pmn/news-pmn/police-students-clash-at-protest-in-venezuela; EFE: https://www.efe.com/efe/english/world/university-students-show-umpteenth-proof-of-polarization-in-venezuela/50000262-3820573)

 

NGO has registered over 10,000 protests this year in Venezuela

Human rights activist Marco Antonio Ponce, coordinator of the Social Conflict Observatory (OVCS), reports there is an average of 47 protests daily protests nationwide in Venezuela. He adds that there have been 10,773 protests here year to date in 2018, which he calls a record year.  More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/nacional/ong-asegura-que-se-han-organizado-mas-de-10-mil-protestas-en-2018)

 

Rodriguez calls on Colombia to comply with agreements with FARC guerrilla

Venezuela’s Communications and Information Minister Jorge Rodríguez has calle don the Colombian government to comply with peace agreements reached by that nation’s government and the FARC guerrilla forces. Rodríguez said he spoke on behalf of President Nicolas Maduro given Venezuela’s role as “guarantor” of such agreements. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/politica/venezuela-exhorta-a-colombia-cumplir-con-acuerdos-de-paz-con-las-farc; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/politica/26334/rodriguez-el-gobierno-no-seguira-tolerando-las-mentiras-y-falsos-positivos-de-colombia; AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/colombia-remiti%C3%B3-36-solicitudes-venezuela-para-respaldar-di%C3%A1logos-paz)

 

Ali Rodriguez, Venezuela’s ambassador to Cuba and former OPEC official, dies

Venezuelan Ambassador to Cuba Ali Rodriguez Araque, who also served as secretary-general of OPEC and the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), died in Havana, President Nicolas Maduro said. He was 81. Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said in a statement on Tuesday that Rodriguez Araque was a politician “inseparable from Cuba.” (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2469903&CategoryId=10717)

 

Legislature rejects unconstitutional appointment of ambassadors abroad

Venezuela’s opposition-controlled National Assembly has rejected the appointment of ambassadors abroad by the Maduro regime, and calls them “null” and “unconstitutional”. Francisco Sucre, head of the Foreign Affairs Committee, says that the Constitution requires legislative approval for naming ambassadors, and that such appointments usurp legislative authority “and nullify treaties signed illegally”. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/politica/26294/an-rechaza-nombramiento-de-embajadores-en-el-exterior)

 

OAS member state delegation visits Colombia – Venezuela border to assess crisis

On November 19-20, 2018, seventeen OAS member states participated in a field visit to assess the humanitarian crisis along the Colombia - Venezuela border: Maicao, in the Rioacha province, and Cucuta in the Norte de Santander province. The visit was organized by the Colombian government and included representation from the governments of Argentina, Belize, Chile, Costa Rica, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Panamá, Paraguay, Perú, Saint Lucia, Uruguay and the United States represented by Ambassador Carlos Trujillo. The OAS Working Group on Venezuela migration also participated with representation from three experts on the situation. The purpose of the visit was to raise member state awareness of the extent of the humanitarian crisis, in anticipation of continued action in the Inter-American system regarding Venezuela and address the root causes of the crisis under the Maduro regime. The OAS Inter-American Council for Integral Development (CIDI) is scheduled to meet November 26 to discuss food security and migration impacts and Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) will convene a health ministerial meeting on Venezuela November 29. (US Mission to the OAS: https://usoas.usmission.gov/member-state-delegation-visits-colombia-venezuela-border-to-assess-crisis/)

 

Hunger grows in Venezuela

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO); the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO); the World Food Program (WFP); and the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) – joined forces to create a report on the undernourishment problem affecting Latin America and the Caribbean. This report – recently made public – shows that the number of undernourished people in Venezuela has increased in both absolute and relative terms: the rate of undernourished people in the country reached 9.8% over the three-year period from 2014 to 2016, while the rate increased to 11.7% over the next three-year period from 2015 to 2017. The first percentage corresponds to an absolute amount of 3.1 million undernourished people, while the second percentage corresponds to an amount of 3.7 million people. This represents an increase of 600,000 new Venezuelans within only a year. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2469996&CategoryId=10717)

 

WHO reports Venezuela registers greatest malaria increase worldwide

The World Health Organization’s yearly report on malaria shows Venezuela as the nation with the greatest increase in malaria worldwide and fears the disease will expand to neighboring countries. The report shows 773,500 confirmed cases in Latin America during 2017, a 72% increase over 2015, and 53% of those cases were registered in Venezuela, which is among 10 countries where malaria cases were over 300,000 in 2017. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/salud/oms-venezuela-registra-el-mayor-incremento-de-malaria-en-el-mundo)

 

Voluntad Popular calls for removal of UNDP representative in Venezuela

The Voluntad Popular opposition party led by imprisoned leader Leopoldo López has asked the United Nations to remove Peter Grohmann, UNDP representative in Venezuela, for “silencing” the serious situation here. The party says: “it is unacceptable that, having a budget and technical personnel, that they have not at least prepared a report on what is going on”.  A party spokesperson, legislator Manuela Bolivar, says the case will be taken to the National Assembly. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/politica/voluntad-popular-pide-a-onu-cambiar-al-representante-del-pnud-en-venezuela)

 

OP-ED: What Options Are Left in Venezuela? by Félix Seijas Rodríguez

Nicolás Maduro is set to start a new term as Venezuela’s president on Jan. 10, and the country’s political, social and economic crisis is only becoming more profound. Far from correcting course, Maduro has taken steps to maintain control despite an imploding economy. His opposition is dispersed and lacking a coherent strategy. A solution through dialogue seems farfetched. How might things change for Venezuela? Here are three possibilities, and a look at the likelihood of any of them coming to fruition. Foreign military intervention: For some time now there has been talk of possible military intervention to depose Maduro’s regime. But there are several reasons why intervention is very unlikely. First, there is no consensus among the largest countries in the region on the need to take an active hand in changing Venezuela’s reality. Mexico, especially under Andrés Manuel López Obrador, would oppose such action. The U.S. could decide to act on its own, but a decision to invade Venezuela would need to be approved by the U.S. Congress and the UN Security Council. At the UN, both China and Russia, countries with important economic interests in Venezuela, would most certainly veto any resolution to intervene. But perhaps even more relevant is the precarious situation of the opposition forces in Venezuela. The political leadership in opposition to Maduro is weak and enjoys little support from civil society. Without an internal structure that can take the reins of the country if Maduro is deposed, the consequences of an intervention would be highly uncertain. Public support for Maduro’s regime is still around 20 percent, while the revolution proposed by his late predecessor Hugo Chávez has 35 percent approval. Military action in this circumstance is not a sensible idea. Recent reports that Trump may add Venezuela to the state sponsors of terrorism list shows that the administration still sees the possibility of adding pressure on Maduro without intervening militarily. Chavismo collapses: For Maduro’s political movement to collapse, external pressure would have to be such as to cause a fracture within its power structure. This could come through an explosion of public protest that exceeds the regime’s containment capacity and is big enough to compromise the loyalty of security forces tasked with putting it down. Another possibility is that international pressure asphyxiates the regime, rendering it incapable of maintaining the web of corruption and complicity it has had for the last 20 years. These two possibilities are not mutually exclusive, but a social explosion of the magnitude needed to cause a revolt in the security services is not likely. If popular pressure again starts building on the streets, there is no political leadership or organization with both the know-how and the credibility to use that energy effectively against the regime.  Once again, the weakness of the Venezuelan opposition is an obstacle to any solution to the crisis. Transition within Chavismo: As mentioned, international pressure could cause the power structures to flounder and there might not be a democratic alternative to take control of the situation. That could already be happening, and the international community should be concerned about where that might lead. If the absence of any possibility of a democratic transition, an intermediate alternative comes into view: a transition that leaves Chavismo in place but gets rid of Maduro and his inner circle. It’s possible that the early stages of such a transition are underway. But it would be a difficult path to follow. If successfully navigated by both the international community and domestic opposition, such a transition might eventually pave the way to a democratic opening. But the risks of further entrenchment are apparent. It would be a risky bet. (Americas Quarterly: https://www.americasquarterly.org/content/whats-left-venezuela)

 

OP-ED: More than 40 countries may cut diplomatic ties with Venezuela. Fine, but would it do any good? by Andres Oppenheimer

Venezuela’s dictator Nicolás Maduro may soon face bad news on the diplomatic front: More than 40 countries are considering cutting diplomatic relations or reducing their ties with Venezuela starting Jan. 10, when he is scheduled to start a new six-year term in office. Venezuelan opposition sources tell me that they expect at least 46 countries — including most members of the Group of Lima and the 28-member European Union — to downgrade or sever diplomatic ties with Venezuela. The big question is whether there will be any practical consequences of a formal decision by these countries to cut ties with Venezuela. Some Venezuelan exile leaders are lobbying the Trump administration and those of other countries to simultaneously cut diplomatic ties with Maduro and recognize a caretaker opposition-led government. Their plan would go like this: Since Maduro and his vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, would no longer be considered legitimate leaders once their current terms expire, there would be a power vacuum. The next in line of succession would be the head of the opposition-controlled National Assembly. Venezuela’s National Assembly was democratically elected in 2015 and is the last remaining democratic institution in Venezuela. Maduro stripped the Assembly of most of its powers and created a new Congress to rubber-stamp his decisions. But the international community could recognize the National Assembly’s president as Venezuela’s legitimate leader while new elections are convened, supporters of that plan say. But many countries would be reluctant to go that route for fear of opening a diplomatic can of worms. In addition, some diplomats note that, unlike last year, when more than 150 people died in Venezuela’s street protests, — there is no sense of urgency in the diplomatic community today that would justify taking such extreme measures. For now, the likely decision by many countries to stop recognizing Maduro as a legitimate president will be a mostly symbolic announcement. But if the opposition takes to the streets in January — as some anti-government parties are planning — to protest Maduro’s inauguration and the country’s humanitarian crisis, things could change. There would be a legal base for the next step — international recognition of a provisional opposition government. (The Miami Herald: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/andres-oppenheimer/article222012125.html)

 

No comments:

Post a Comment