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.

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

August 29, 2017


International Trade

Venezuelan exports to the US drop to US$ 9.202 billion, which is a 75% decrease since 2006, according to a report from the Latin American Economic System (SELA). US exports to Venezuela dropped down to US$ 5.009 billion, a reduction of 41% since 2006. More in Spanish: (El Universal; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/exportaciones-venezolanas-estados-unidos-descienden-9202-millones_667523)

Recent cargo arrivals:
  • 88,000 tons of white corn and rice, at Puerto Cabello, aboard the ERHAN, AEC ABILITY II and the
  • y UBC TARRAGONA
  • 557 containers bearing oatmeal, beef, beans, white rice, vehicle tires, toothpaste, corn flour, wheat flour, milk, medicine, shampoo and diapers, arriving from Colombia on the NIKOLAS, at Puerto Cabello.
  • 140 tons of fertilizer for state agency AGROPATRIA, aboard the SUDKAP, at Puerto Cabello.
  • 2477 pieces of steel tubing, aboard the QING HUA SHAN, also at Puerto Cabello
  • 6,101 tons of food packages for the government’s CLAP food distribution program have arrived at La Guaira port in 289 containers aboard MV VIKING MERLIN from Veracruz – México. Food items received include pasta, rice, beans, cooking oil, canned tuna, and powdered milk.
  • 2.878 tons of food, medicine and personal care products arrived at La Guaira port aboard the CONTSHIP PRO from Jamaica, and the MELBOURNE STRAIT, from Curazao. The products received include rice, milk, pasta, tuna, beans, kits for dialysis, disinfectants, cosmetics, detergents, soap and children’s products.
More in Spanish: (Bolipuertos, http://www.bolipuertos.gob.ve/noticia.aspx; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/economia/arribaron-2800-toneladas-alimentos-productos-higiene-medicinas_200865; http://www.bolipuertos.gob.ve/noticia.aspx; Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/economia/aduana-principal-de-puerto-cabello-recibe-100-mil-toneladas-metricas-de-maiz-y-arroz; El Universal; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/llegan-puerto-guaira-mil-800-toneladas-productos_667689; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/alrededor-millones-alimentos-para-los-clap-llegaron-guaira_667188;  El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/mas-de-6-mil-toneladas-de-alimentos-clap-arribaron.aspx#ixzz4qlgcty2l)

 

Oil & Energy

Oil Minister and state oil firm chief switch roles, Del Pino heads for Russia ahead of OPEC meeting

Venezuelan oil minister Nelson Martinez and state oil company president Eulogio Del Pino will switch roles as the country’s production wanes and money dries up. Del Pino will soon go on a series of foreign trips to strengthen alliances ahead of a meeting of heads of state which will seek accords on oil and gas prices, President Nicolas Maduro said on state television. Maduro’s moves come after the almost 90% drop in profits at Petroleos de Venezuela SA last year amid declining output and a plunge in oil prices. Venezuela and PDVSA are under intense scrutiny from investors as U.S. sanctions against key government officials and a power grab by President Nicolas Maduro threaten to disrupt financial flows. Maduro said Martinez as head of PDVSA will seek to strengthen partnerships with foreign companies operating in the Orinoco Belt by improving their stakes, while increasing refining capacity and boosting production. Del Pino will visit Russia and Saudi Arabia ahead of a joint OPEC, non-OPEC monitoring ministerial committee meeting in Vienna set for Sept. 22, the TASS news agency cited the minister as saying on Monday. During his meeting with Russian counterpart Alexander Novak, the Venezuelan oil minister will discuss the implementation of the OPEC+ global oil output cut deal, and “the introduction of changes, if need be”, the agency reported, giving no detail. (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-25/venezuela-oil-minister-pdvsa-head-to-switch-roles-maduro-says; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-opec-meeting-venezuela-russia-idUSKCN1B80PP)

 

PDVSA negotiating Curacao refinery lease, open to China partners

Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA on Thursday said on Friday it was negotiating the continuation of its lease of Curacao’s Isla refinery but was open to Chinese partners following a preliminary deal between the island and China’s Guangdong Zhenrong Energy to operate the complex. PDVSA has for decades operated the refinery, which opened in 1918, under a lease agreement. But the cash-poor company has been reluctant to invest some US$ 1.5 billion that Curacao authorities requested several years back to modernize the 335,000 barrels-per-day facility. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-refinery-curacao-idUSKCN1B52GM)

 

OP-ED: Why the oil market should not misread Venezuela

For trading markets every tragedy is a business opportunity. That is the spirit in which parts of the oil market are viewing the continuing trauma in Venezuela. The country is on the verge of becoming a failed state. But are these events likely to trigger the rise in oil prices that bulls in the market have long been hoping for? Will the implosion of the regime of President Nicolas Maduro and the open civil conflict that could follow push oil prices up to US$ 60, US$ 70 a barrel or even more? I don’t think so. There are good reasons, however, why the reality might be rather different. First, a complete cessation of production and exports is extremely unlikely. Venezuela depends on oil for 95% of its export revenues. Protecting that trade and maintaining production will be the absolute priority for any government. Oil installations will be guarded by troops if necessary and production will continue. If any of the producing facilities do grind to a halt the impact is likely to be limited. There could be a spike in prices but that is likely to be temporary. Venezuela is no longer the power in the oil market it was a decade ago, when it produced and exported around 2.5m b/d. Its crudes were an important part of the mix for refineries on the US Gulf coast. A loss of production of say half a million barrels a day would be inconvenient for the refiners accustomed to relying on the country’s supplies and damaging to the international companies involved, such as REPSOL and CHEVRON, but globally, any such shortfall could soon be matched by increased supplies from elsewhere. Nor would production stay cut off. Any government will need the export revenue and those who have invested in Venezuela or made loans in return for oil supplies also have a direct interest in seeing production maintained. That includes both China, which has stopped lending Venezuela new money but in 2016 still had a reported US$ 20 billion of loans outstanding, and Russia, which has recently increased its lending through the state-controlled oil company ROSNEFT. That debt is secured against the trading subsidiary of PDVSA, Citgo. No government can afford to alienate such powerful creditors. Venezuela could easily sustain production of 3m b/d or more and, given the existing infrastructure and the experience in what remains of the PDVSA, could probably reach that level within 18 months of a new administration. In countries dependent on oil revenue, production and exports become the imperatives of an incoming government — the way new leaders can secure power. Venezuela today is a sad and miserable place, its population the victims of dictatorship and mismanagement of the economy. But the market would be wrong to see what is happening on the streets of Caracas as a leading indicator of the next upward wave in oil prices. (By Nick Butler: Financial Times: https://www.ft.com/content/38c15c42-74e6-3410-9c70-eacc4b0fd449)

 

Commodities

35,000 hectares of citrus are endangered by spreading bacteria
The National Agriculture Producers Federation has called for a sanitary emergency due to the spread of a bacteria named HLB, which is endangering around 35,000 hectares of citrus. Carlos Romero, President of the National Fruit Growers Federation says the bacteria needs to be controlled through fumigation every 25 days, but it cannot be donet due to lack of pesticides at state agency AGROPATRIA. More in Spanish: (Ultima Hora Digital, http://ultimahoradigital.com/2017/08/una-bacteria-pone-en-riesgo-35-mil-hectareas-de-citricos-en-venezuela/)

ALCASA says it has been allocated US$ 403 million for projects

State company ALCASA reports the Maduro regime has given them US$ 403 million that it has invested in transforming, distributing and rolling aluminum, and will soon become the first transformation facility in Latin America. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/industrias/alcasa-recibio--403-millones-para-seguir-desarroll.aspx#ixzz4r91pzzBv)

 
SIDOR says it has completed a second delivery of tin foil for canning tuna and sardines

The state run SIDOR steel complex says it has delivered 1804 tons of tin foil to be processed into cans for tuna and sardines. It made a previous delivery in March to 27 processing companies. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/industrias/sidor-realiza-segunda-entrega-de-hojalata-para-env.aspx#ixzz4r92VnCNt)

 

Economy & Finance

Maduro now owns Venezuela’s economy—and its collapse
Venezuela’s socialist regime has consolidated near-total political control after installing an all-powerful constituent assembly. Resolving the economic crisis and coming up with US$ 3.5 billion for bond payments through November however will prove trickier. President Nicolas Maduro has thrived in the face of vicious street demonstrations, talk of military force by the U.S. and several rounds of sanctions. His new constituent assembly is bypassing congress and is expected to start rewriting the nation’s charter this week. But the result may be that Maduro has sole ownership of the once-rich nation’s terminal financial collapse. Maduro has been hunting for new financial lifelines in Russia as he’s slashed imports, called in debts and sold or mortgaged assets at a deep discount. As of July 31, the government had amassed US$ 2.8 billion for its November payments, according to Caracas-based consultancy ECOANALITICA. Beyond this year, however, director Asdrubal Oliveros was skeptical the government could make good if it continues to alienate investors and regional leaders. “The government remains trapped in the same dynamic,” he said. “It’s sustaining an unsustainable system.” The noose keeps tightening. Last week, the Trump administration barred trading of new debt issued by the Venezuelan government and state oil company PDVSA, and blocked dealing in some existing bonds owned by the country’s public sector. The ban is meant to keep Venezuelan government entities from selling bonds into the secondary market. As Venezuela has become economically isolated, inflation has spiked and the nation has been wracked by shortages of everything from car parts to basic medicines. Infant mortality and diseases like malaria have soared, while shaky services and unreliable food programs have fueled violent unrest among those once loyal to Maduro. Maduro has been vague about how he will improve Venezuela’s penury. He has hinted he may be tapping his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin -- whom he referred to as the world’s principal leader -- for even more financing, saying he would visit Russia soon to discuss accords. Still, Moscow’s aid hasn’t been enough. Venezuela’s ruling socialists have turned to printing money to maintain spendthrift policies. The nation’s money supply increased almost 30% in July alone, pushing prices even higher. Jose Manuel Puente, an economist at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Administration in Caracas, said Venezuela could be approaching hyperinflation. “It’s impossible to have a coherent macroeconomic policy while internal politics are in chaos,” he added. (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-29/defying-logic-and-sanctions-venezuela-s-economy-slumps-alongI

 
White House sanctions may scare off Venezuela vulture investors
The Trump administration’s ban on new Venezuelan debt could scare off so-called vulture investors by making it nearly impossible for the country to restructure its obligations. That means in the event of default -- which investors view as pretty much a certainty within the next five years -- the country and its creditors may struggle to come up with an agreement that would assign any value to its outstanding bonds. It also will make smaller debt swaps much more difficult to get done, possibly hastening the day of reckoning. Such restrictions may throw a wrench into the tried-and-true methods of so-called vulture investors, typically hedge funds that swoop into a country’s distressed debt shortly before or in the aftermath of a default with the goal of extracting value from bonds too toxic for most investors. These funds may now demand a much lower price if there’s no regime change that would prompt the U.S. to lift restrictions, largely because of the complications in negotiating a restructuring.  Because a default with no hope of restructuring would expose the country to international lawsuits and seizures of its assets, it could increase the chances of a regime change in the aftermath of a missed payment. The same day the new sanctions were announced, Maduro asked holders of Venezuelan bonds to meet with Economy Minister Ramon Lobo this week to discuss the effects of the U.S. sanctions. U.S.-based holders of Venezuela bonds will be hurt the most by the penalties. The additional penalties strengthen Maduro’s argument that his nation is under attack from outside interests, likely pushing him toward lenders of last resort in China and Russia. The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Asset Control has traditionally interpreted sanctions broadly, so any attempt to circumvent their objective by clever structuring of a debt deal would be risky. The odds of a sovereign credit event over the next five years rose to 96% and Petroleos de Venezuela’s default probability hit 99%. (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-28/white-house-sanctions-may-scare-off-venezuela-vulture-investors)


US sanctions to pile misery on moribund Venezuelan economy
While President Nicolas Maduro celebrates having calmed Venezuela’s streets after months of deadly protests, the country’s imploding economy poses an ever more severe threat. And the misery is likely to get even worse due to financial sanctions imposed by the Trump administration in efforts to isolate Maduro for taking the country down an increasingly authoritarian path. But while daylong bread lines have eased, the newest scourge is the way galloping inflation has reached even the basic staples whose prices were long controlled by rigid price and currency restrictions. In recent months authorities have started allowing companies to import everything from canned food to new cars and letting them pass the dollar prices on to consumers at the black-market exchange rate, where the greenback is worth 1,685 times more bolivars than it as at the strongest of three official exchange rates. The result of the de-facto dollarization has been a devil’s bargain: Shelves are fuller than Venezuela has seen for months, but with prices that are out of reach for the poor Venezuelans. Inflation, which has been running in the triple digits for more than two years, hit a record last month and has risen to 650% over the past 12 months. That’s not to say shortages have gone away. Most shelves contain a single variety of any given product, much of it imported from China. Former Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez, leader of the pro-government constitutional assembly whose creation triggered the U.S. action, said Sunday that the “financial blockade” means Venezuela won’t be able to pay for essential imports like food and medicine. The Trump administration denies it is seeking to punish ordinary Venezuelans. The sanctions, enacted by executive order last week, prohibit American banks from providing new money to the government or state-run oil company PDVSA. They also bar PDVSA’s U.S. subsidiary, CITGO, from sending dividends back to Venezuela. But they don’t affect financing for most commercial trade, including the shipment of crude oil, of which the U.S. is the OPEC nation’s biggest buyer. Still, by depriving Maduro of badly needed hard currency, the sanctions make it more likely that Venezuela will stop payment on its debt, or reduce what few goods it still imports at the official rates. Worse, if Maduro doesn’t yield to Trump’s demand to disband the constitutional assembly and call elections, even tougher sanctions are likely to follow. To cope, Maduro says he will look to increase commercial ties with China and Russia, although it’s not clear how generous its allies will be, given Venezuela’s growing reputation as an international outlaw in the mold of Cuba, Syria and North Korea. (AP: https://apnews.com/97841a2444b544fca6b4b3803f0e7d2c/US-sanctions-to-pile-misery-on-moribund-Venezuelan-economy)


Scraping the bottom of the barrel: Disposable reserves down to US$ 700 million; Capriles calls emergency
International reserves available for imports, debt service, contingencies and FOREX stabilization were down to US$ 9.855 billion on August 22nd, the lowest level in 15 years. And the situation is even worse because the nation is now more dependent on imports and has a heavier debt burden. Central Bank sources say disposable reserves are only US$ 700 million because most reserves are being held in gold bullion: This means even fewer imports and increased scarcity. The is not much chance disposable reserves can increase in the short term because PDVSA must pay US$ 2.900 billion in debt service during October and November. The government is considering using gold bullion to leverage additional resources. The ECOANALÍTICA think tank estimates gold reserves to be around US$ 7.8 billion, some of which it has reexported to the Bank of England. The government could sell some of this gold, or use it as collateral for loans, but this would liquidate available options, or as ECOANALÍTICA describes it: “scraping the bottom of the barrel”. Miranda state governor and opposition leader Henrique Capriles Radonski says “we are in an emergency. We are reaching a crossroads where we either pay debt or get embargoed; and if they pay debt, what will we do for imports?” More in Spanish: (Notiminuto: http://www.notiminuto.com/noticia/reservas-liquidas-caen-a-700-millones/#; http://www.notiminuto.com/noticia/segun-capriles-venezuela-entre-el-defaul-o-importar-alimentos/)

 

Venezuelan bonds drop sharply after sanctions

Venezuelan bonds dropped severely in secondary markets after new financial sanctions were announced by the Trump administration. PDVSA bonds were the hardest hit, dropping an average 4.3%. The PDVSA 21 bond fell by 6.37%, Sovereign bonds also receded an average 4%, with the Venezuela 2022 dropping 5.4%, The bonds were also hurt by an additional drop in oil prices. More in Spanish: (El Nacional: http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/economia/bonos-venezolanos-cayeron-mas-luego-sanciones-estados-unidos_201005)

 

Walls close in on Venezuela with U.S. bond sanctions

Fresh restrictions on trading Venezuelan debt have drawn the financial noose more tightly around the neck of the struggling nation. The Trump administration on Friday barred the purchase in U.S. markets of new securities issued by the government and its state oil company and blocked dealing in some existing bonds owned by the country’s public sector to further clamp down on President Nicolas Maduro’s autocratic regime. Trump imposed sanctions designed to prevent Maduro from carrying out a "fire sale" of government assets. "We will not stand by as Venezuela crumbles," White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Friday. "These measures are carefully calibrated to deny the Maduro dictatorship a critical source of financing to maintain its illegitimate rule, protect the United States financial system from complicity in Venezuela's corruption and in the impoverishment of the Venezuelan people, and allow for humanitarian assistance." That move won Trump bipartisan praise on Capitol Hill. The U.S., which will still allow the continued import of Venezuela’s lifeblood oil, acted in response to Maduro’s moves to consolidate authority amid a crippling recession and months of violent protests. The measures follow sanctions on top officials, and decrease maneuvering room for a nation fast running out of money. Venezuela has US$ 3.5 billion in bond payments coming due by November, which the government will struggle to pay as reserves dwindle. The Trump administration’s ban on new Venezuelan debt could scare off so-called vulture investors by making it nearly impossible for the country to restructure its obligations. That means in the event of default -- which investors view as pretty much a certainty within the next five years -- the country and its creditors may struggle to come up with an agreement that would assign any value to its outstanding bonds. It also will make smaller debt swaps much more difficult to get done, possibly hastening the day of reckoning. Such restrictions may throw a wrench into the tried-and-true methods of so-called vulture investors, typically hedge funds that swoop into a country’s distressed debt shortly before or in the aftermath of a default with the goal of extracting value from bonds too toxic for most investors. These funds may now demand a much lower price if there’s no regime change that would prompt the U.S. to lift restrictions, largely because of the complications in negotiating a restructuring. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-venezuela-sanctions-idUSKCN1B5216; http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-venezuela-sanctions-market-idUSKCN1B52BD; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2442308&CategoryId=10718; Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-25/with-u-s-bond-sanctions-walls-close-in-on-venezuela-s-regime; https://www.bloomberg.com/gadfly/articles/2017-08-25/it-s-hard-to-quit-venezuela-s-debt-when-it-pays-so-well; https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-28/white-house-sanctions-may-scare-off-venezuela-vulture-investors;)

 

.... and Goldman's hunger bonds dodge U.S. sanctions that bypass traders

The U.S. levied additional sanctions on Venezuela on Friday, but one of the nation’s largest bondholders may be breathing a sigh of relief. Goldman Sachs Asset Management, which bought US$ 2.8 billion of notes issued by the state oil company in May, has faced sharp criticism for a deal that appeared to supply fresh funds to President Nicolas Maduro. While observers thought the securities would be a prime target for new penalties, they were exempt from the order. In fact, the only bonds covered by the trading ban are notes due in 2036 that appear to never have been sold outside Caracas. “That was somewhat surprising,” said Francisco Rodriguez, the chief economist at Torino Capital in New York. “I guess the logic is that those bonds are already in the hands of bondholders, so you wouldn’t be really blocking new financing.” (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-25/goldman-s-hunger-bonds-dodge-u-s-sanctions-that-bypass-traders)

 

Hausmann says Venezuela needs US$ 100 billion to begin recovery
Economist Ricardo Hausmann, Venezuela’s former Planning Minister and currently teaching at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, estimates Venezuela will require US$ 100 billion to begin recovery. Following the nation’’s unprecedented collapse, with almost 40% reduction in GDP over the past 4 years and an 88% reduction in purchasing power, and a severe health crisis: “To get the country moving we must restore the ability to import, to a level of US$ 35 billion; and to do so we need to restructure sovereign debt, there is no other way. Besides, we of course will need specific international support.  We believe the documented debt is around US$ 118 billion, with another US$ 60 billion in unpaid commitments and delayed payments. All totaled, it is near US$ 170 billion. And our exports have dropped by US$ 26 billion. We are the most indebted nation in the world, as per the balance of debt and exports. We believe we will need around US$ 100 billion, half because of liquidity shock and the other half to restructure and reprogram our debt.  Venezuela has unfortunately been devastated and when the time to reconstruct comes it will be a terribly poor country”. Hausmann says that thanks to sanctions such as those implemented by the Trump administration US$ 500 million were located in accounts controlled by Vice President Tareck El Aissami. Also, “the latest sanction makes a lot of sense. Venezuela cannot now go to financial markets and that gives the international community leverage it has not had.” More in Spanish: (Clarin: https://www.clarin.com/mundo/venezuela-necesitara-100-000-millones-dolares-ponerse-marcha_0_rkvo6ryKZ.html)

 

Ramírez claims the US wants Venezuela to default, faults regime’s FOREX policy

Venezuela’s Ambassador to the UN, Rafael Ramírez, a former Vice President for Economic Affairs, has said that US sanctions on Venezuela are seeking to bring about a default, but he said sanctions are not the root of the crisis the nation has been undergoing for the past 3 years, but that restrictions on letters of credit will have an economic impact. He said the nation’s economy is afflicted by “serious” structural exchange rate problems. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/ramirez-eeuu-busca-que-venezuela-caiga-estado-default_667727)

 

Pro-regime legislator claims Venezuela is negotiating bond sales to China

Juan Carlos Alemán, a member of the pro-regime “Constitutional Assembly” has claimed that the Maduro regime is negotiating with China for the resale of Venezuelan bonds, and that there soon will be an announcement in this. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/mercados/negocian-recompra-de-bonos-con-china.aspx#ixzz4r91jsi6A)

 

Cash scarcity now hits banks

Cash shortages hurting Venezuela over the past few months have now left the banking system with scarce tender available for clients, and in some cases with no cash at all. Employees at six government held banks report that ATM operations are now limited due to the cash shortage, and daily withdrawals at tellers are now limited to 50,000 bolivars per person.  The banking superintendent’s office (SUDEBAN) is denying it has ordered banks to cap withdrawals and cash transfers. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/economia/escasez-de-efectivo-deja-a-bancos-con-pocos-billetes-a-sus-usuarios; http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/economia/sudeban-desmintio-que-se-haya-limitado-los-montos-para-retirar-o-transferir-dinero; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/banca/hasta-bs-50-000-es-el-limite-de-retiro-en-agencias.aspx#ixzz4r926ONp2; http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/banca/sudeban-afirma-que-no-han-limitado-los-retiros-o-t.aspx; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/sudeban-desmiente-limites-retiros-banca_667612)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Venezuelan lawmaker says hunger, not politics, will drive Maduro from power
National Assembly member Gaby Arellano has travelled to Bogotá to warn local lawmakers about a looming humanitarian crisis across the border, as tens of thousands of Venezuelans continue to head to Colombia every day looking for food and refuge. She says the route to change will come through measures that “asphyxiate” the government, diplomatically or economically. Arellano believes that President Nicolás Maduro and the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) are on borrowed time. “The dictatorship is incredibly weak,” she said. “It’s only being propped up by the military, which has lost its legitimacy, and the errors of the political class — myself included — that opposes it. We had the dictatorship cornered,” Arellano said of the recent demonstrations. In the middle of the bloodshed and mass detentions, though, Maduro called for a National Constituent Assembly (ANC) to draft a new constitution — superseding all other branches of government. “It became clear that they were going to impose the [ANC] whether they had one vote or 100, whether there was one-person dead, or 1,000,” she says, adding that the opposition didn’t plan for how to confront the assembly once it was functioning. Even as Venezuela has quit seething with daily protests, Arellano says they’re lurking just beneath the surface, waiting for a new outrage to fan them back to life. She predicted the next “detonator” might come when the administration realizes it will lose October’s regional elections and postpones them or cancels them altogether. “Regardless of what the opposition does, or the dictatorship does, these protests are a product of the people’s needs,” she explains, and adds: “The barbarity is at the end, the worst is at the end, the most shocking is at the end.” (The Miami Herald: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/venezuela/article169903307.html)

 
ANC plans to begin rewriting Constitution this week, claim it is subject to referendum
Delcy Rodríguez, who heads the so-called National Constituent Assembly (ANC) says the group will begin rewriting Venezuela’s 1999 Constitution this week, focusing primarily on the justice and welfare systems. She announced that the group’s key operating rules have been approved, and that their work will be subject to approval by referendum, More in Spanish:  (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/politica/anc-empezara-a-redactar-capitulos-de-la-nueva-constitucion-la-semana-proxima; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/politica/anc-empezara-el-lunes-a-redactar-una-nueva-carta-m.aspx; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/anc-aprobo-realizacion-del-referendum-aprobatorio-nueva-constitucion_667240)

 
Maduro regime eyes censoring social media after public shaming wave
The Maduro regime is considering banning messages that promote “hate” and “intolerance” on social media and messenger services, according to Delcy Rodriguez, the president of the country’s all-powerful constituent assembly. Rodriguez told reporters on Monday she is looking to limit messages that fuel bigotry and confrontation between Venezuelans in a so-called anti-hate law, which is currently being debated by the legislative super body, known as the “constituyente”. Rodriguez didn’t provide details on how the government plans to monitor social media and on penalties for offenders. The new assembly will meet again tomorrow. The anti-hate law comes as the government of President Nicolas Maduro has intensified a clampdown on the media, blocking the transmission of Colombian networks CARACOL and RCN last week. In a bid to consolidate power amid a crippling recession, Maduro installed the “consituyente” earlier this month with the mandate to rewrite the country’s constitution. The new legislative body has since bypassed the opposition-led congress and has been targeting the last strongholds of dissent in public institutions. Rodriguez singled out a growing practice among Venezuelan expats of publicly heckling top-ranking government officials on trips outside of the country. The practice, known locally as “escrache”, is filmed on smart phones and is wildly shared on services like Instagram, Twitter and WhatsApp. (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-28/venezuela-eyes-censoring-social-media-in-wake-of-public-shaming)

 
Exiled Attorney General says contract killers set after her
Venezuela's exiled attorney general, Luisa Ortega, accused the government Monday of hiring contract killers to go after her and other justice officials denouncing alleged abuses committed under President Nicolas Maduro. "I have come specifically to lodge a complaint before the Costa Rican justice ministry and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights," she told a news conference in Costa Rica's capital of San Jose alongside that country's chief prosecutor, Jorge Chavarria. "I have information that the persecution is continuing against me and that the government has contracted hitmen to end my life." Ortega, 59, is a fugitive from Venezuela. She fled with her husband on August 18, two weeks after a new loyalist assembly established by Maduro booted her from office. (AFP: https://www.yahoo.com/news/venezuela-ex-attorney-general-says-contract-killers-set-201550045.html)

 
MUD pro-democracy coalition supports US Sanctions, warns of unapproved transactions

Venezuela's Mesa de Unidad (MUD) pro-democracy coalition spoke out Sunday in a statement in which it set its sights on the decisions of President Donald Trump's government over Venezuela. Following is the MUD statement:
1. Sanctions for violators of human rights and looting of public resources will always have our support, in the absence of impartial justice in Venezuela. 2. We will also support and solicit all the world's diplomatic support that contributes to the constitutional and democratic restoration in Venezuela. 3. We urge the entire international community to warn all citizens and companies in their respective countries that they should refrain from carrying out financial transactions or contracts of national interest with the Venezuelan government that are in violation of the National Constitution because they have not been approved by the only Constitutional body to authorize them as the National Assembly. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2442371&CategoryId=10717)

 
US sanctions against Venezuela won’t work, warns Beijing
On Friday, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order prohibiting Americans from dealing with new debt and equity issued by the Venezuelan government and by its state oil company PDVSA. Beijing says the sanctions won't work. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said on Monday at a daily news briefing that: “The experience of history shows that outside interference or unilateral sanctions will make the situation even more complicated and will not help resolve the actual problem”. China and Venezuela have extensive business links; oil being the largest, where the countries have a loan-for-oil deal. Venezuela owes China more than US$ 62 billion and is behind in the oil shipments. (RT: https://www.rt.com/business/401167-us-sanctions-against-venezuela-wont/; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-venezuela-sanctions-china-idUSKCN1B811D)

 
Russia: US setting stage for Venezuela invasion
Russia accused President Trump's team of trying to set the stage for an invasion of Venezuela, in a condemnation of the latest U.S. sanctions on the Maduro dictatorship. "We are strongly against unilateral sanctions against sovereign states," Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said Monday. "We will carefully analyze the implications of the sanctions imposed by the United States, and their possible effect on the interests of Russia and Russian businesses. We can already say that they will not affect our willingness to expand and strengthen cooperation with the friendly nation of Venezuela and its people." That was just one salvo in an extended rebuke of U.S. policy, after Trump issued an executive order imposing new sanctions designed to cripple dictator Nicolas Maduro's regime. The Russians suggested that Trump is trying to destabilize Venezuela to provide a pretext for a U.S. invasion of the struggling country. "In these circumstances, the announced sectoral sanctions against Venezuela's financial and oil sectors are clearly aimed at further unbalancing the situation in the country, and exacerbating its economic problems," Zakharova said. Russia has now joined Cuba in defending Maduro and arguing that international powers should allow the new assembly to rewrite the constitution. (The Washington Examiner: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/russia-us-setting-stage-for-venezuela-invasion/article/2632759#!)

 
Congressman reports the government spent US$ 22 billion on pending ODEBRECHT contracts
Congressman Juan Guaidó, Chairman of the National Assembly’s Comptroller Committee, reports that the Venezuelan government has expended around US$ 22 billion on unfinished ODEBRECHT projects that are 11 years overdue. He says that these contracts point to extensive corruption with officials who cannot account for the funds. Guaidó adds that the Committee, along with the exiled Attorney General, are promoting investigations and legal action in Brazil. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/economia/guaido-asegura-que-el-gobierno-gasto-22-mil-millones-de-dolares-en-contratos-de-odebrecht; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/politica/gobierno-malgasto-millardos-dolares-contratos-sobornos_200443)

 
Ortega’s revelations could implicate Spain’s Zapatero in Venezuelan shipbuilding surcharge
One of the files that Venezuela’s exiled Attorney General Luisa Ortega has delivered to the CIA and INTERPOL, refers to a case of possible corruption in surcharges on a sale conducted in 2005 by Spain’s former Defense Minister José Bono to Venezuela’s Navy. The operation took place under the administration of former Spanish President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, who is now leading mediation efforts between the Maduro regime and the democratic opposition. The sale involved the construction of 4 coastguard vessels and 4 ocean patrols, for a total documented cost of 1.207 billion Euros. The Chavez regime in fact paid 1.246 billion euros, a 38.6 million overprice to an intermediary named RABAZVEN HOLDING, which took 3,5% of the total money paid. The shipping company commissioned was NAVANTIA, an 100% publicly owned company and it was Bono who directly conducted the negotiations, as a result of a deal struck by Zapatero and Venezuela’s deceased President Chávez. More in Spanish: (ES Diario: http://www.esdiario.com/amp/702199265/Un-documento-airea-un-posible-caso-de-corrupcion-de-Zapatero-y-Bono-en-Venezuela.html)

 
Almagro says Ortega and exiled Supreme Court justices will investigate corruption
OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro reports that exiled Venezuelan Supreme Court justices will assist Attorney General Luisa Ortega Díaz, in investigating corruption charges made against President Nicolas Maduro and members of his regime. In 2004, the late President Chavez established an information sharing agreement with the United States designed to share “all cases and information in either country related to drug trafficking, money laundering, corruption, organized crime, illegal immigration, and all that which is inimical to the governments of both nations”, The flow of information was active up through 2007, when Luisa Ortega became Attorney General and no one advised her of the agreement. When she learned of it last year, information was gathered on government figures and business deals starting in 2004 and this is how the Attorney General’s office acquired all the information on ODEBRECHT, through the District Attorney and Federal Court in Brooklyn, N.Y. Information provided included accounts, front men, artificial schemes and cash deliveries for campaigns in each country. She was provided additional information in Brazil, and thus has ample information on Maduro’s imprisoned nephews and hundreds of other cases, including accounts with HSBC, and PDVSA and CITGO contractors. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/almagro-ortega-diaz-magistrados-venezolanos-investigaran-corrupcion_667244; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/runrunes_667772)

 
Venezuelan army, civil militias hold exercises after Trump threat

Venezuela held nationwide armed forces exercises on Saturday, calling on civilians to join reserve units to defend against a possible attack after U.S. President Donald Trump warned that a “military option” was on the table for the crisis-hit country. “Against the belligerent threats of the United States, all Venezuelans between the ages of 18 and 60 are required to contribute to the integral defense of the nation,” said an announcement broadcast early on Saturday on state television. Maduro used Trump’s threat to try to energize his political base, broadcasting images of rifle-carrying civilians negotiating obstacle courses and learning hand-to-hand combat. The government created the hashtag #EsHoraDeDefenderLaPatria, which translates as “It’s Time To Defend The Homeland,” to promote the exercises. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-idUSKCN1B60KA)

 

Colombia protests what it says was Venezuelan military incursion over border
Colombia has sent a letter of protest to Venezuela after it said security forces from the socialist country crossed the border into the Colombian province of La Guajira over the weekend. Sources told Reuters the Colombian Foreign Ministry had given the letter to Venezuela’s embassy in Bogota, although the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro denied on Sunday that the crossing into Paraguachon, La Guajira, took place. The governor of La Guajira criticized the crossing on Twitter over the weekend, saying the security forces came over the border on Saturday night and stole money and cellphones from residents. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-colombia-idUSKCN1B82HZ)
 

Colombia sets up refugee camps due to the arrival of thousands of Venezuelans

Juan Carlos Restrepo, President Juan Manuel Santos’ National Security Advisor, has been put in charge of organizing refugee camps for thousands of Venezuelans fleeing the crisis here, and is seeking assistance from the government of Turkey, due to their experience with Syrian refugees. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/gobierno-colombiano-levanta-campos-refugiados-para-venezolanos_667687)


French President Macron says he is worried by Venezuela 'dictatorship'
French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday he was worried by events in Venezuela where he said that a “dictatorship” was trying to survive. He said he was ready to work with regional actors to prevent further escalations, including across the region. (Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-france-diplomacy-venezuela-idUSKCN1B915F?il=0)

 
OP-ED: A military option in Venezuela is not really an option for the U.S. military
Let’s leave aside the near unanimous repudiation from U.S. allies in the region and the near-consensus view among analysts that Trump’s unfortunate suggestion of a military option was not only reckless but counterproductive. Instead, let’s focus on whether it makes sense for an over-extended military to use its finite resources to resolve Venezuela’s political turmoil. First, the Pentagon does not consider the Western Hemisphere a theater for planning and conducting conventional military operations.  There are simply no military threats or competitors to the U.S. in a region considered to be a “zone of peace.” The 2017 Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) engagement statement highlights as part of its main efforts the need to counter threat networks, prepare for and respond to disasters and crises, build relationships to meet global challenges, and conduct detention operations—none of those involve or foresee direct military intervention in the region.  Although it can certainly plan for one, SOUTHCOM is not in the business of planning military interventions or occupations in the hemisphere. There are only two goals for which the military instrument of power could be used: regime change or forcing a change in the behavior or policies of the Maduro government.  If the goal is regime change, and assuming U.S. forces will not encounter much resistance, the Pentagon will have to plan for at least a force of 150,000 that can quickly overwhelm any conventional and irregular resistance during the intervention and subsequent occupation. The Maduro government is very likely to collapse almost immediately, leaving no government in place to assume the responsibilities of law and order.  As a result, U.S. forces will have to remain until at least stability and a legitimate government is restored.  Significant naval, air and ground forces and capabilities will have to be transferred from active theaters that are real threats to U.S. and global security, such as Syria, Iraq, North Korea and Afghanistan. If the political objective is to change the Venezuelan dictatorship’s behavior such that it will allow for elections and the restoration of the rule of law, it will at a minimum require a show of force that still requires the transfer of forces and equipment from much more vital conflict zones. Of course, when you go down this path, one must be ready to use force if the regime doesn’t change its behavior.  Surgical air strikes are sure to create chaos, violence among competing political actors and a collapsed state, leaving the U.S. with no other option than to intervene. In short, from a strictly military standpoint, the last thing the U.S. armed forces want, already over-stretched and on high levels of alert in key conflict zones, is to have to plan and execute a military intervention and likely occupation of a country that does not represent a grave threat to U.S. security and that is likely to lead to strong anti-U.S. sentiment across a region where the US military has done much to build goodwill in the last decade or so. The last thing this administration needs is another empty threat. (By Frank O. Mora: The Global Americans: http://theglobalamericans.org/2017/08/military-option-venezuela-not-really-option-u-s-military/)

 

OP-ED: Who’s Saving Venezuela? The U.S.? The UN? The Pope? No. But They Could. Here's How. The list of international players that have wrung their hands about Maduro’s tyranny, but failed to take effective action, is long and shameful. The U.S. policy of incrementalism, gradually turning the screws on the dictatorship with ever-broader unilateral sanctions is not enough. The EU needs to get on board with the U.S. and Latin America, backing up its words with actions. Few doubt the Maduro regime is heavily involved in drug trafficking, supporting terrorism, and looting the country’s economy. The international community must treat the regime as an active criminal enterprise, using criminal investigations to pierce the veil of banking secrecy in places such as Andorra, Switzerland, and the Cayman Islands to access the ill-gotten gains hidden there by Venezuelans made wealthy by their corrupt dealings. Publicize who they are and how they live in luxury abroad. Revoke their visas, freeze their assets and make it clear that a comfortable exile will not be an option if democracy does not return soon to Venezuela. That will drive a wedge among members of the regime in a way that will hurt them, not the Venezuelan people. (By Antonio Mora. The Daily Beast: http://www.thedailybeast.com/whos-saving-venezuela-the-us-the-un-the-pope-no-but-they-could-heres-how)

 

The following brief is a synthesis of the news as reported by a variety of media sources. As such, the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Duarte Vivas & Asociados and The Selinger Group.

Thursday, August 17, 2017

August 17, 2017


International Trade

Florida bans future investments in Maduro's Venezuela

Florida Gov. Rick Scott easily won approval Wednesday for a proposal to bar the state's US$ 150 billion pension plan from making future investments that directly support the regime of President Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela. Scott and the two other trustees who oversee the plan quickly approved the ban, which could be more symbolic than substantive, since the Florida Retirement System doesn't currently invest in any companies or securities controlled or owned by Venezuelan government interests. Scott, a likely Republican challenger of Democratic U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson next year, called the ban a "huge step in the right direction." But Nelson, another Maduro critic, accused Scott of backtracking from his original vows by banning only direct investments in Venezuela, but not sanctioning companies that do business there. Florida already has laws that prohibit the state from investing in companies that do business in Cuba, Iran and Sudan. And last year the State Board of Administration was ordered to divest from companies that boycott Israel. But the final proposal approved Wednesday doesn't target all companies that may be doing business in the country, nor would it affect the investment banking firm Goldman Sachs, which acquired US$ 2.8 billion in bonds initially issued by Venezuela's state-run oil company PDVSA at a steep discount last year, acting through a broker for a client. The bank manages some of Florida's investment portfolio, and the state owns stock in Goldman Sachs. Records obtained this week by The Associated Press show that the State Board of Administration prepared a document in mid-July indicating that parting ways with the firm could have a significant impact on the pension plan. That same document also showed that Florida own stocks in nearly two dozen companies doing business in Venezuela. Democratic state senator from Miami Jose Javier Rodriguez has already filed a bill for 2018 that would force the state to drop its business ties with Goldman Sachs. (US News: https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/florida/articles/2017-08-16/florida-may-ban-future-investments-with-venezuela)

 

White corn shipments continue to arrive at Puerto Cabello

The PROMISE 3 has arrived at Puerto Cabello, bearing another 30,000 tons of white corn. The container vessel NEW YORK TRADER is also offloading there, bringing 146 containers with material for the automobile industry, as well as diapers, light bulbs, sanitary napkins, toothpaste, and chemicals for agriculture. More in Spanish: (Bolipuertos, http://www.bolipuertos.gob.ve/noticia.aspx?id=37565; Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/economia/arribo-al-pais-30-mil-toneladas-de-maiz-blanco)

 

Commodities

The fall and collapse of Venezuela’s oil industry

Attached is a note on the state of the Venezuelan oil sector and how it got there. The note describes in detail the decline in production and the rearrangement of export markets. It also analyses in detail the income that Venezuela has foregone from its oil production, via subsidized internal consumption and exports to non-commercial destinations.

 

Economy & Finance

Regime expropriates food producing farm owned by vocal opponent

The National Land Institute (INTI) has ordered the occupation fo the “El Gólgota” food producing farm in Guárico state, which is owned by National Cattlemen Association (FEDENAGA) President Carlos Albornoz, who says the decision is part of a political vendetta. More in Spanish: (Ultima Hora Digital, http://ultimahoradigital.com/2017/08/medida-contra-predio-el-golgota-responde-a-orden-del-alto-gobierno/)

 

Venezuela has paid Gold Reserve another US$ 29.5 million

Venezuela has made another US$ 29.5 million payment to Canadian mining company Gold Reserve, bringing the total it has paid to US$ 99 million, out of US$ 1 billion the company was awarded. More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/economia/venezuela-pago-gold-reserve-295-millones_198899)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Venezuela's Socialist-run 'truth commission' to investigate opposition

Pro-democracy opposition candidates running in Venezuela's October gubernatorial elections will be investigated to make sure none were involved in violent political protests this year, the head of a new pro-government truth commission said on Wednesday. The panel was set up earlier in the day by the constituent assembly elected last month at the behest of socialist President Nicolas Maduro. Government critics say the commission is designed to sideline the opposition and bolster the ruling party's flagging support ahead of the October vote. Also before the assembly is a bill that would punish those who express "hate or intolerance" with up 25 years in jail. The opposition fears such a law would be used to silence criticism of a government that, according to local rights group Penal Forum is, is already holding 676 political prisoners. "Whoever goes into the streets to express intolerance and hatred, will be captured and will be tried and punished with sentences of 15, 20, 25 years of jail," Maduro said last week. Maduro loyalist Delcy Rodriguez was named as head of the truth commission, on top of being president of the assembly. She said she would ask the country's CNE elections authority for information about candidates running in October, stressing this would have a "cleansing effect" on Venezuela. "We have seen tweets, messages on social networks and photographs of opposition leaders responsible for convening and organizing violent events in Venezuela," Rodriguez told the commission on Wednesday. In its first session after being elected on July 30, the assembly fired Venezuela's top prosecutor Luisa Ortega and appointed a Maduro loyalist to replace her. The Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists said in a report on Wednesday that Ortega's dismissal "removes one of the last remaining institutional checks on executive authority." The country's new chief prosecutor, Maduro's ex-human rights ombudsman Tarek Saab, on Wednesday outlined corruption accusations against Ortega and her husband German Ferrer. They, and members of Ortega's former staff of prosecutors, are accused of running an "extortion gang" and funneling profits to an account in the Bahamas, the new chief prosecutor said. (Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-idUSKCN1AW2A1; http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-court-idUSKCN1AV2LN)

 

Maduro ally says next year's presidential election still on

Next year’s presidential elections in Venezuela will proceed as planned, according to a top ally of President Nicolas Maduro and former head of the country’s electoral council. Caracas Mayor Jorge Rodriguez, 51, denied claims leveled by Maduro’s opponents that the so-called constituyente, a legislative super body that has claimed supreme power, will upend the electoral schedule or cancel the 2018 vote altogether. “With the constituyente, the 1999 constitution is still valid,” Rodriguez said in an interview. “The time frames established in the 1999 constitution are still current.” According to the nation’s charter, the president must be inaugurated by Jan 10. of his first year in office. The election can be any time before, though they have typically been held in December. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-16/maduro-ally-says-next-year-s-presidential-election-still-on)

 

Pro-democracy opposition will hold primaries, accuses CNE of  promoting abstention

Miranda state governor Henrique Capriles has announced that the pro-democracy Democratic Unity (MUD) coalition will hold primaries on September 3rd, to select single unity candidates for gubernatorial elections. The MUD coalition has accused the National Elections Council (CNE) of promoting low turnout. CNE chairperson Tibisay Lucena has reported that 226 candidates have registered to run for governor in Venezuela’s 23 states. More in Spanish: (NOTIMINUTO: http://www.notiminuto.com/noticia/capriles-anuncio-que-primarias-de-la-mud-seran-el-3-de-septiembre/; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/oposicion-escogera-candidatos-unicos-para-regionales-octubre_666051; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/lucena-226-candidatos-inscribieron-para-las-elecciones-regionales_665987; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/oposicion/capriles-primarias-oposicion-podrian-hacerse-septiembre_199073; http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/oposicion/mud-cne-promueve-abstencion-baja-votantes_199127)

 

Intelligence agents raid the Attorney General’s home, husband charged with corruption

The Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN) conducted a raid on the home of Venezuela’s Attorney General Luisa Ortega Díaz. Ms. Ortega called the move “revenge for her battle against totalitarianism in Venezuela.” The raid came after the Constitutional Chamber of Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal declared that they would try Ms. Ortega’s husband, Congressman Germán Ferrer, of “flagrant” corruption, using a term intended to bypass the constitutionally mandated procedure for removing his immunity. The Tribunal acted at the request of Tarek William Saab, who days ago was named to replace Ms. Ortega by the fraudulent Constitutional Assembly (ANC). More in Spanish: Action against Ferrer was proposed by PSUV Vice President and ANC member, Captain Diosdado Cabello, who accused the couple of operating an “extortion network”, but did not show proof. (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/nacional/sebin-allano-residencia-de-luisa-ortega-diaz; http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/politica/ortega-diaz-califico-allanamiento-de-su-residencia-como-una-venganza; http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/politica/sala-plena-del-tsj-decidio-aprobar-orden-captura-contra-german-ferrer_199146;  http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/gobierno/anc-decidira-allanar-inmunidad-parlamentaria-german-ferrer_199147; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/sebin-allano-residencia-luisa-ortega-diaz_666034; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/cabello-denuncia-red-extorsion-que-operaba-desde-ministerio-publico_665973)

 

US Court throws out Venezuela's Diosdado Cabello lawsuit against Wall Street Journal

A Federal Judge in Manhattan has dismissed a libel lawsuit brought by Venezuela political leader Diosdado Cabello against the Wall Street Journal. Captain Cabello, a Venezuela political leader and former military leader, is one of the most powerful politicians in Venezuela. He has served as Vice President, President of the country's parliament as well as in a variety of other positions. "Cabello alleges that Dow Jones published a defamatory article in the Wall Street Journal entitled 'Venezuelan officials suspected of turning country into global cocaine hub,'" wrote U.S. Federal District Court Judge Katherine B. Forrest, dismissing the suit. "For the reasons set forth below, Cabello has failed to adequately plead material falsity as to most challenged statements and actual malice as to all challenged statements." "Plaintiff has failed to make out a prima facie case of libel and his second amended complaint is therefore DISMISSED. The Clerk of Court is directed to close the motion ... and terminate this action," concluded Forrest. The article was published by the Wall Street Journal on May 18, 2015, citing 12 sources including prosecutors involved in the investigation, detailed that a group of Venezuelan officials were being investigated for turning Venezuela into a center for international drug trafficking. Cabello also sued 22 media executives in Venezuela for publishing variations reporting the story. (Latin American Herald Tribune: http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2441851&CategoryId=10717)

 

OP-ED: An off-the-cuff remark by Trump may have helped Venezuela’s slide ‘into dictatorship’

Within hours of President Donald Trump's assertion, the US had a "military option" in response to turmoil in Venezuela, governments in the region, which had been nearing consensus on confronting the Venezuelan government, repudiated the statement. Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and Argentine President Mauricio Macri — two of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's biggest critics — were quick to dismiss the idea of military intervention in their meetings with Pence. Just as Trump's remarks sent a chill through a region that was growing stronger in its condemnation of Maduro, the president's words have left the Venezuelan opposition in an unfavorable position. The main opposition coalition, Democratic Unity (MUD), said in a statement that it "rejected the use of force, or the threat to apply the same, on the part of any country on Venezuela." It didn't mention Trump specifically, but the need to make the statement put the opposition in an unfavorable position. The opposition has gained international support, and the harsh reaction by security forces — more than 120 people have been killed, many of them anti-government demonstrators — have brought condemnation on Maduro, but he has been able to ignore the protests. Now the opposition coalition appears to be fracturing over a decision to participate in regional elections in October. In addition to managing these internal divisions, the opposition will now have to work harder to avoid the appearance of favoring US military action, and it would also likely have to reduce contact with the US State Department and high-level meetings with US officials. Defense Minister General Vladimir Padrino, who called Trump's statement "an act of craziness," criticized the opposition's response as ambivalent. "This is a time of reflection," Padrino said. "You are either a Venezuelan patriot, or pro-Yankee." (Business Insider: http://www.businessinsider.com/trumps-bluster-changed-the-game-in-venezuela-2017-8)

 

Maduro makes surprise visit to Cuba

President Nicolas Maduro paid tribute to the late leftist icon Fidel Castro during a surprise visit to Cuba, state media reported Wednesday. The daily Granma said Maduro traveled Tuesday to Castro's tomb in Santiago de Cuba. Maduro was accompanied by his wife Cilia Flores, Cuban President Raul Castro -- Fidel's brother -- and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, according to the newspaper. Venezuela is Cuba's most important economic and political ally, and Havana has offered strong support for Maduro's embattled leftist regime. (AFP: https://www.yahoo.com/news/venezuelas-maduro-makes-surprise-visit-cuba-150221717.html; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-cuba-venezuela-maduro-idUSKCN1AW20E)

 

UN criticizes Trump's remarks on military action in Venezuela

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday criticized President Donald Trump's threat of military action to resolve Venezuela's political crisis, saying Latin America successfully got rid of foreign intervention and this must be safeguarded. The U.N. chief also implicitly criticized Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro for creating an all-powerful constitutional assembly that leaves the opposition powerless saying Latin America got rid of authoritarianism as well and this must be preserved. Guterres told reporters Wednesday that “it is very clear that Latin America has successfully struggled over the last decades to free itself from both foreign intervention and authoritarianism.” “This is a lesson that is very important, to make sure that this legacy is safeguarded - and namely in Venezuela, both aspects of it,” he told reporters. The secretary-general urged the government and the opposition to restart negotiations “because I believe the only solution is a political solution based on those negotiations.” Guterres said he strongly supports efforts by international facilitators and regional leaders to assist the Venezuelan government and the opposition in negotiating a solution. “I've been in close contact with all of them,” he said. (CP24: http://www.cp24.com/world/un-criticizes-trump-s-remarks-on-military-action-in-venezuela-1.3548679)

 

UN Committee against Torture pursues meeting with Venezuelan gov't

The United Nations Committee against Torture plans to request the Venezuelan government a meeting in Geneva to discuss “the deteriorated situation” in Venezuela and an urgent follow-up report after the claims of mistreatment, abuse of authority and torture. “In this session, we have tackled the deteriorated situation in Venezuela and have resolved to send a special reminder to the government, asking for the urgent delivery of a follow-up report,” the Committee chief, Jens Modvig, told reporters. According to Modvig, the step taken by the Committee “goes beyond, as it gets out from the usual procedures.” (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/committee-against-torture-pursues-meeting-with-venezuelan-govt_665861)

 

UN Special Rapporteur: Dialogue is of the essence in Venezuela

The United Nations expert on human rights and international sanctions, Idriss Jazairy, has advised the international community not to impose restrictive measures on Venezuela due to the democratic crisis in the country. Any sanctions, besides the sanctions imposed by the US government on President Nicolás Maduro and other top government authorities would endanger the ordinary people. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/special-rapporteur-dialogue-the-essence-venezuela_665744)

 

Russia says military intervention in Venezuela crisis is unacceptable

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov criticized the idea of any intervention, including military, in the Venezuela crisis, saying that the situation in the country must be resolved through peaceful means. “We are united in the need to overcome the existing disagreements in the country by peaceful means through a nationwide dialogue as soon as possible, without any external pressure, not to mention the unacceptability of the threats of military intervention in the internal affairs of this country,” Lavrov stated, after meeting with his Bolivian counterpart, Fernando Huanacuni. The minister added that most Latin American states also condemn the possibility of such actions. (RT: https://www.rt.com/news/399755-lavrov-venezuela-military-intervention/; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-russia-idUSKCN1AW0XQ; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2441849&CategoryId=10717)

 

China warns interference will not help Venezuelan crisis

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi reiterated his country’s neutral stand over the current Venezuelan political crisis, and said external pressure will not help resolving it. Wang stressed the Venezuelan government will have to resolve the crisis through dialogue. “History has shown outside pressure and interference do not help settle a crisis,” the Chinese foreign minister said on Tuesday in a meeting with his Bolivian counterpart, Fernando Huanacuni, while discussing the Venezuelan crisis. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2441833&CategoryId=10717)

 

Argentina warns US against military move on Venezuela

US Vice President Mike Pence heard more complaints from Latin American allies on Tuesday about President Donald Trump's warning of a possible US military option to deal with the crisis in Venezuela. "The use of force is not the way", but rather political pressure, Argentine President Mauricio Macri said at a news conference alongside Mike Pence, who is on a tour of Latin American countries. Pence moved to soften the impact of Trump's announcement, stressing that peaceful pressure is the priority. But he did not rule out Trump following through on his threat. "The United States has many options, and we reserve those options," Pence said. "But we truly believe that by increasing economic and diplomatic pressure on the Maduro regime -- not just across the Americas, but across the wider world -- that we can achieve a restoration of democracy in Venezuela by peaceable means." The United States along with Argentina and other regional allies have joined in international condemnation of Maduro. But the South American bloc MERCOSUR over the weekend rejected any use of force to resolve the Venezuela crisis. (NDTV: http://www.ndtv.com/world-news/argentina-warns-united-states-against-military-move-on-venezuela-1738044)

 

Chile won’t support U.S. intervention in Venezuela, Bachelet tells Pence

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet has told United States Vice President Mike Pence that Chile will not support coups d’etat or military interventions, but will agree to sanctions that should be adopted by the United Nations Security Council. Pence met with Ms. Bachelet Wednesday as part of his tour of Latin America, which seeks to strengthen support for joint action against Venezuela. “I want to be very clear. Chile will do its utmost to support the Venezuelans in finding a peaceful way,” Bachelet said during a joint press conference at La Moneda Palace. The U.S. vice president began his trip in the region in Colombia, where he met with President Juan Manuel Santos, then visited Argentina and President Mauricio Macri. The trip will end with a final stop in Panama to meet President Juan Carlos Varela. (Santiago Times: http://santiagotimes.cl/2017/08/16/chile-wont-support-u-s-intervention-in-venezuela-bechelet-tells-pence/)

 

Brazil’s Lula says Maduro’s mistakes do not justify intervention in Venezuela

Brazil’s former President Lula da Silva has said: “We cannot have it that, whatever error Nicolás Maduro may have committed or may be about to commit, let’s a US president say he will use force to overthrow him”. More in Spanish:  (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/lula-dice-que-errores-maduro-justifican-intervencion-venezuela_665872)

 

Panama grants asylum to Supreme Tribunal justice, diplomat

The Panamanian government reports it has granted asylum to José Sabino Zamora, who was recently appointed to Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal by the nation’s legislature. It also granted asylum to Gabriel Pérez, former Secretary at Venezuela’s embassy in Panama, saying they are “in danger” here. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/internacional/panama-concede-asilo-politico-a-diplomatico-y-magistrado-venezolanos; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/mundo/panama-otorga-asilo-politico-magistrado-consul-venezuela_199084)

 

OP-ED: What to do with Venezuela?

Until last Friday, much of the conversation in Latin America was aimed at how to remove Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro from office. The region is often only unified in its unwillingness to meddle, no matter how radical the politics. So, it was historic when 12 countries met last week in Lima, Peru, and together denounced Venezuela’s “rupture of democratic order.” Such a large and unified opposition was a major blow to Maduro’s narrative that the country’s economic woes are the result of political sabotage led by the U.S. Then President Trump mentioned the possibility of a “military option.” But even with Trump’s inclination for braggadocio, the thought of U.S. military intervention in Latin America struck a nerve because there is a feeling that international pressure might not be enough to convince Maduro to step down, or end his push to rewrite the country’s constitution, and that the U.S. might take the lead with a more drastic approach. Part of Trump’s effect has been to alter the conversation on Venezuela from one of what to do, to that of what will not be allowed.  Finding a balance in U.S. policy will be difficult because Venezuelans might be hypersensitive to any overly aggressive U.S. actions.  Much of the talk at the U.S. State Department so far has been focused on sanctions. And, at the most extreme level, a possible oil embargo, because Venezuela is still one of the top suppliers of oil to the U.S. What’s left of Venezuela’s economy depends heavily on the 2.1 million barrels of oil it exports each day. The U.S. accounts for one-third of that, and banning all Venezuelan crude imports would likely finish off what remains of the country’s broken economy and kill its moribund oil industry. This is sometimes called the “nuclear option” because it would not only devastate the Maduro government, it would equally ruin the powerful and the poor, supporters and the opposition. A move this drastic would likely strengthen Maduro, because it feeds into the historic narrative set up by his predecessor, Hugo Chavez. (The Atlantic: https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/08/venezuela-intervention/536970/)

 

OP-ED: Venezuela: At the edge of a deeper chasm

According to the consultancy firm ECONOMETRICA, 2.1 million Venezuelans are now eating from the garbage. Its citizens are at war with the military. The real enemy responsible for this lethal landscape is not foreign. This destruction has come from within. For almost two decades, Venezuela's socialist government has managed to undermine every institution that kept the country afloat. When Hugo Chavez ascended to the presidency in 1998, he had an agenda: Bring socialism to Venezuela, then export it to the rest of Latin America. His successor, Nicolas Maduro, has continued the country’s hurtle down a slope paved by the total destruction of the means of production. Indeed, he has managed to sharpen the slope. On May 29, the Supreme Court of Justice declared the National Assembly in contempt and usurped its functions. That unleashed a series of protests, which in turn generated a wave of repression that has so far killed more than 130 people and imprisoned nearly 1,400. Maduro declared victory at the end of July with an illegal election. The company that provided the voting system alleges that the results were tampered with. Sixteen people died violently on polling day. The violence, the repression, the assault on fundamental human rights, and the rupture of the constitutional order have prompted opposition leaders to defend the Constitution. The resistance is mainly composed of teens and young adults born under socialism, fighting to defend the country from what they believe will be the deeper abyss of communism. T-shirt soldiers, they call them. These street fighters make shields with just about anything. Their weapons are fireworks and Molotov cocktails. They constantly cover their faces and change their names for fear of being identified and detained, like a lot of their friends. According to the non-governmental organization Foro Penal—Spanish for Criminal Forum—278 have been detained in Bolívar State alone. Only 12 of those detainees have been formally accused by prosecutors. The others have been accused by judges who have usurped the prosecutor function; 21 of them have been released under injunction, while 40 are under injunction but still in custody. The others are under house arrest. This summer's vote is widely considered a sham. Electoral authorities said more than eight million people, or 41.5 percent of the electorate, voted. Yet a Reuters reporter claims to have seen an internal memo from the Electoral Council saying fewer than four million votes had been cast just two hours before polls closed. Opposition leaders and even the attorney general agree that participation was closer to 12%. This latest phase in the drift toward dictatorship began with the dismissal of Attorney General Luisa Ortega Díaz. The assembly plans to take further legal actions against her and opposition leaders, claiming they are "terrorists." International sanctions will only make things worse. The food and medicine shortages will deepen. More people will die. In the streets, people continue to protest. Some military groups have joined the resistance, which struggles to maintain the few free spaces left. It has come to this. (Reason: http://reason.com/archives/2017/08/16/venezuela-at-the-edge-of-a-deeper-chasm)

 

EDITORIAL: Exporting chaos to Venezuela

Having scared a lot of people last week with his bombast over North Korea, causing jitters about nuclear war, President Trump he threatened on Friday to use force to quell chaos in Venezuela. That threat poured fuel on the worsening conflict between President Nicolás Maduro and his opponents. It also unsettled people across Latin America, which has suffered a long history of American intervention. In this environment, Mr. Trump’s threat of military action is a lifeline for Maduro. Like other Venezuelan leaders, he has used the United States to rally his people, often with specious warnings of American plots to invade. Regional leaders also responded to his threat. Juan Manuel Santos, the president of Colombia, said on Sunday, “The possibility of a military intervention shouldn’t even be considered.” Vice President Mike Pence, on a trip to the region, attempted to calm the outrage, saying in Buenos Aires on Tuesday that he was confident about reaching a “peaceable” solution for Venezuela through economic and diplomatic pressure on Maduro. But he also said, “We’re simply not going to tolerate seeing Venezuela collapse into dictatorship.” The precipitous decline of Venezuela is not just a tragedy for its people, but a threat to regional stability. Mr. Trump should continue to toughen sanctions, but any lasting solution will be achieved only in concert with regional leaders. (The New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/17/opinion/venezuela-trump-maduro-military-threat.html)

 

Prison 'massacre' kills 37 in Amazonas state, governor says

At least 37 people in a southern Venezuela prison died Tuesday night after a massive fight broke out between inmates and security officials. The violence started around midnight on Tuesday at the prison in Puerto Ayacucho, according to Gov. Liborio Guarulla of Amazonas state. Guarulla said security forces entered the grounds to restore order in the prison, where the inmates had seized control several weeks ago. The governor referred to the fighting as a "massacre". The bloodshed was believed to be the worst in Venezuela since a prison riot in 2013 that left 61 people dead. The office of Venezuela's chief prosecutor said on social media that 14 prison guards were injured in the fight, and that it was investigating the incident Venezuela has around 30 prisons, many of which suffer from overcrowding and are dominated by criminal gangs that traffic in weapons and narcotics. The prison system, built to hold about 16,000 inmates, is currently estimated to house some 50,000 prisoners, according to the Venezuelan Prisons Observatory, which monitors prison conditions. (Fox News: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/08/16/venezuela-governor-says-36-killed-during-fighting-at-prison.html; The Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/venezuela-governor-at-least-36-dead-following-raid-by-security-forces-at-jail/2017/08/16/0b8da24e-82d3-11e7-9e7a-20fa8d7a0db6_story.html)

 

Violin-playing protester freed from jail in Venezuela

A Venezuelan violinist who is a well-known face of protests against his country's socialist government has been freed after more than two weeks in prison. The office of Venezuela's chief prosecutor said Tuesday night that a court granted its request for Wuilly Arteaga to be let out on parole. He was detained last month during a protest and his lawyers have said he was beaten with his violin while during custody. The 23-year-old musician skyrocketed to fame after he and his violin were dragged to the ground by national guardsmen during a confrontation with protesters. Arteaga was often seen playing somber renditions of Venezuela's national anthem while standing amid clouds of tear gas. He even was invited to Washington to perform for members of Congress. (ABC News: http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/violin-playing-protester-freed-jail-venezuela-49241570; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-violinist-idUSKCN1AW05A)

 

Venezuelan soldiers caught in Guyana begging for food

A handful of Venezuelan soldiers - armed and in uniform - have been caught in neighboring Guyana begging for food, local police reported, another sign of Venezuela's deepening hunger crisis. Guyanese Police Inspector Christopher Humphrey said he'd gone to the border along the Amacuro river, which divides the two nations, last week to investigate reports that the Venezuelan military was stealing food from locals. But the three soldiers he encountered - two carrying military assault rifles - said they had come to beg for meals and hadn't harmed anyone. Humphrey said the men had crossed into Guyana on a wooden raft and seemed genuinely hungry. The Guyana Guardian newspaper, which first reported the story, said the men had been given some additional food and then sent back across the border. Venezuela's armed forces - which are key to propping up the administration of President Nicolas Maduro - have always been perceived to have easier access to basic goods. Lately, though, there have been growing but uncorroborated reports of soldiers going hungry, particularly at far-flung border outposts. Venezuela's military is under intense scrutiny for signs that its support for Maduro might be eroding. That soldiers would cross into Guyana is telling. The two nations have been locked in a centuries-old border dispute over a swath of Guyanese territory known as the Esequibo and are not on good terms. (The Sydney Morning Herald: http://www.smh.com.au/world/venezuelan-soldiers-caught-in-guyana-begging-for-food-20170816-gxxdf8.html)

 

Zoo animals 'stolen to be eaten' amid Venezuela shortages

Police in crisis-hit Venezuela believe animals stolen from a zoo were taken to be eaten amid chronic food shortages here. Two collared peccaries, a mammal similar to a pig, went missing over the weekend from the Zulia Metropolitan Zoological Park, near Venezuela's northeastern border with Colombia. "What we presume is that they (were taken) with the intention of eating them," said a local police official. A recent study revealed 93% of Venezuelans cannot afford to buy enough food and 73% have lost weight in the last year. But the zoo's chief Leonardo Nunez denied the thefts were related to food shortages. Former zoo director Mauricio Castillo said thieves had made off with two tapirs - another mammal like a pig that is classed as vulnerable to extinction. The shortages have left zookeepers unable to properly feed their animals, with some 50 estimated to have died within six months last year at one of the country's main zoos in the capital Caracas. The government denied the animals had starved. (Sky News: http://news.sky.com/story/zoo-animals-stolen-to-be-eaten-amid-venezuela-shortages-10991977)

 

The following brief is a synthesis of the news as reported by a variety of media sources. As such, the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Duarte Vivas & Asociados and The Selinger Group.