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.

Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

January 21, 2020


International Trade

US$ 260 million reported in alcoholic beverage exports from Venezuela

Luis Enrique Cardenas, President of the Venezuelan Alcoholic Industry Chamber (CIVEA) reports that close to US$ 260 in alcoholic beverages were exported from Venezuela by the private sector during 2019, particularly to the European Union. (El Universal; https://www.eluniversal.com/economia/59929/exportan-260-millones-en-bebidas-alcoholicas)

 

Oil & Energy

U.S. extends CHEVRON Venezuela sanction waiver

The United States Treasury Department granted CHEVRON another three-month sanction waiver to continue operating in Venezuela, with the expiry date of this latest extension set for April 22. The Treasury Department has been granting Chevron three-month extensions of its sanction waiver for a while now, with the one it announced last October reportedly being a topic of heated discussion in the Trump administration in light of Washington’s attempts to stifle all oil revenues going into the coffers of the Maduro government. Some, however, notably Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, argued that the presence of a U.S. company in Venezuela would help to quicken the recovery of its oil industry when—and if—the government changes. Reuters noted that CHEVRON reported losses of US$ 104 million related to its business in Venezuela for the first nine months of the year. Yet if the Treasury Department stops granting it sanction waivers, Chevron would have to leave the country, which would cost it US$ 2.7 billion in assets. Besides CHEVRON, four oilfield services companies have been granted sanction waivers to continue doing business in Venezuela. However, SCHLUMBERGER, BAKER HUGHES, HALLIBURTON and WEATHERFORD have wound down their operations there to virtually nothing. (Oil Price: https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/US-Extends-Chevron-Venezuela-Sanction-Waiver.html; The Houston Chronicle: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/article/American-energy-companies-to-remain-in-Venezuela-14990649.php; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-chevron/u-s-grants-chevron-another-three-months-for-venezuela-operations-idUSKBN1ZH0DH)

 

Oil buyers steer clear of Venezuela over Petro payments

Buyers of Venezuelan crude oil have stopped dealing with this nation after officials started demanding payment of port fees in the country’s controversial Petro cryptocurrency. Sources told media outlet World Oil that exports of at least a million barrels of oil were put on hold after the government announced the fees must be paid in Petro tokens. Buyers were reportedly worried that paying in Petro may violate US sanctions. (Coin Rivet: https://coinrivet.com/es/oil-buyers-steer-clear-of-venezuela-over-petro-payments/)

 

Economy & Finance

Venezuela Petro dumped at a 50% discount at LocalBitcoins

Venezuelans are dumping the government-issued Petro, a crypto coin backed by a barrel of Oil, for half its value (US$ 30) at peer-to-peer exchanges like LocalBitcoins. The situation has worsened over the past few weeks as the government has scrambled to tame the USD/Bolivars rate but shutting down avenues for liquidation. At the time of writing, 50k Bolivars equals to $1 while 1 Petro (PRT) is pegged at US$ 60. The Maduro-led regime asserts that each coin is more than a medium of value but a crypto asset, like Bitcoin, in an economy stricken by economic turmoil and world’s leading hyperinflation. According to sources in Venezuela, the government airdropped 0.5 Petro to government workers and pensioners claiming that their effort reached 6 million people. As a crypto asset, the objective of the government was to probably avail a shield for its citizens. However, it soon emerged that people used the same airdropped Petro to buy ordinary stuff through Point-of-Sale and government-supported Petro Wallets. Both avenues were shut, paving the way for people to liquidate at peer-to-peer exchanges. At LocalBitcoins, the value of each Petro was consequently priced at US$ 30, 50% of what the government had set. (Coin Gape: https://coingape.com/venezuela-petro-dumped-at-a-50-discount-in-localbitcoins/)

 

Maduro opens international crypto casino

Nicolas Maduro has authorized the opening of an international casino at a luxury hotel in Caracas where bets must be placed in Petros, the country’s national oil-backed digital currency. Several cryptocurrencies and fiat currencies can be exchanged into Petros to wager in the casino. Maduro announced Friday that he has authorized the opening of a casino at the Humboldt Hotel in Caracas where bets must be placed in Petros. The hotel, located on the peak of El Avila hill, was reopened in 2018. Gamblers must acquire PTR to participate. Following Friday’s casino announcement, the media started reporting that Venezuela may be warming up to casinos again. The Humboldt Hotel’s casino is expected to begin operations in the coming months, but Maduro did not reveal whether he plans to open more casinos. (Bitcoin: https://news.bitcoin.com/maduro-opens-crypto-casino-venezuela/)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Pompeo vows US support as he meets Venezuela's Guaidó in Colombia

Venezuela's acting President Juan Guaidó has met with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Colombia's capital, as he tries to shore up international support amid a power struggle with Nicolas Maduro.

  • Venezuela is a "failed state", Pompeo said on Monday, after meeting Guaidó on the sidelines of a three-day counterterrorism ministerial meeting in Bogota. "I would fully expect there will be further action that the US would take to continue to support President Guaidó and the Venezuelan people," Pompeo told journalists. "We do not talk about particular sanctions, but everyone can fully expect that the US is not done," Pompeo warned, without specifying what action Washington will take.
  • I’ve heard this idea that we’ve underestimated Maduro. What’s been underestimated is the desire for freedom that rests in the hearts of the Venezuelan people,” he said. “We are collectively — the Europeans, the other countries in South America, the United States are determined to deliver that outcome for the people of Venezuela.”
  • "The world must continue to support the Venezuelan people's effort to restore their democracy and put an end to Maduro's tyranny which harms millions of Venezuelans and has an impact on Colombia and indeed on the entire region", he added. "I want you to know that your president is a great leader who wants to take your country in the right direction — the direction of freedom, democracy, to restore economic prosperity," Pompeo said in remarks directed at the Venezuelan people.
  • From Colombia, Guaidó is set to travel on to London, Brussels and Davos, Switzerland, to attend the World Economic Forum.  Guaidó would not confirm whether he will meet US President Donald Trump in Davos.
  • Separately, Colombia and the US accused Maduro of harboring armed groups such as Colombia's Marxist-led National Liberation Army rebels and of having connections to everyone from drug traffickers to Lebanon's HEZBOLLAH movement. “After today’s event I think the world has it very clear that there is a dictatorship that finances terrorism,” Guaidó said.
  • Pompeo blasted Maduro as an ally to terrorist groups that in contrast to other nations in Latin America is providing “a home” to Hezbollah. “This is unacceptable,” he said."[Maduro is] now running an operation that looks more like a cartel than anything else that one could describe. This isn't good for Venezuela, it's not good for the countries that are around Venezuela," Pompeo said.
  • Pompeo kicked off the counter-terrorism conference at the General Santander Police Academy in Bogota – where 22 cadets were killed in a bombing last year – by decrying Maduro as an ally to terrorist groups including the National Liberation Army, the Colombian rebel group authorities say plotted the attack. “These groups must lay down their arms and the Maduro regime must be held to account for its support of them,” Pompeo said.
  • The statements could open the possibility of the US including Venezuela in the list of states that support or finance terrorism.
  • Maduro allies including Diosdado Cabello, head of the powerful National Constitutional Assembly, brushed off Guaidó’s international tour, dismissing the Bogota event as “a conference of terrorists.” “It doesn’t occupy any of our time, because in truth, it’s insignificant,” Cabello said.
  • Guaidó told reporters the fight for democracy "finds alternatives, different pathways, and reinforced mechanisms." He said getting rid of Maduro is a "long-term strategy." "The dictators won't want to give up the power they've taken. ... We're much more like Syria than like Cuba ... in terms of migration, access to services, the inflation. There are no vaccines for our children. They are dying because of lack of food," Guaidó said.
(Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/01/pompeo-vows-support-meets-venezuela-Guaidó-colombia-200121061021165.html; The Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/articles/pompeo-meets-venezuelas-juan-Guaidó-vows-continued-u-s-support-11579565437; BBC News: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-51169801; VOA News: https://www.voanews.com/americas/pompeo-promises-more-action-boost-venezuelas-Guaidó; Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-01-20/Guaidó-meets-foreign-backers-of-bid-to-oust-venezuela-s-maduro; AP: https://apnews.com/14d31109b0c60cb574a44d3ad8cd0fde; (PBS: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/Guaidó-meets-pompeo-condemns-venezuela-for-links-to-terrorism)

 

Colombia rolls out the red carpet for Guaidó

 We are honored by your presence,” Colombian President Iván Duque told Guaidó during opening remarks in a stately reception. “You will always have a friend in Colombia.” Venezuela’s pro-Maduro Supreme Court has barred Guaidó from leaving the nation it’s unknown whether authorities will let him back again this time. “That risk always exists in Venezuela,” Guaidó said to a bevy of journalists as he headed into a meeting with Pompeo. Duque shot back at critics who have questioned Guaidó’s strength Monday, characterizing his efforts as “brave” in facing off against Maduro. “Maybe many speculate, ‘Why hasn’t Guaidó put an end to the dictatorship?’” Duque said. “This can’t be a discussion about individual capabilities. We know your bravery and that confronting a dictatorship with no limits is a task that goes beyond heroism.” (PBS: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/Guaidó-meets-pompeo-condemns-venezuela-for-links-to-terrorism

 

Guaidó to meet top EU diplomat in Brussels

Opposition leader Juan Guaidó, recognized as Venezuela's president by more than 50 countries including the United States and most European Union members, will come to Brussels on Wednesday to hold talks with the European Union's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, Borrell told a news conference. (The New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2020/01/20/world/americas/20reuters-venezuela-politics-eu.html; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-eu/venezuelas-Guaidó-to-meet-top-eu-diplomat-in-brussels-idUSKBN1ZJ1RX)

 

Guaidó to attend Davos forum

Venezuela’s opposition leader and acting president, Juan Guaidó will attend this week’s World Economic Forum in DAVOS, lawmaker Stalin Gonzalez told AFP on Monday. Guaidó is currently in Colombia, but Gonzalez, a Guaidó ally, said the National Assembly speaker will then head to Switzerland for the annual economic meeting that opens on Tuesday. Despite being banned from leaving the country by the regime of Nicolas Maduro, Guaidó surfaced in Bogota on Sunday, where Colombian President Ivan Duque welcomed him with full presidential honors. (The Japan Times: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/01/21/business/venezuela-opposition-leader-juan-Guaidó-attend-davos-forum/#.XibkAMhKi8U)

 

European Parliament reaffirms support for Juan Guaidó, condemns Maduro coup attempt

The European Parliament has condemned the recent attempted coup to prevent Juan Guaidó from being re-elected President of the Venezuelan National Assembly. In a resolution adopted on Wednesday, the European Parliament strongly condemns the attempt by Nicolas Maduro’s regime to install pro-government candidate Luis Parra as new Chairman of the Venezuelan National Assembly on 5 January of this year. In the resolution, the European Parliament reaffirms their support for Juan Guaidó as the legitimate President of the National Assembly and interim President of Venezuela. MEPs deplore the recent grave violations, which are incompatible with legitimate election processes. The National Assembly of Venezuela is the only legitimately elected democratic body in the country, and its powers need to be respected, says the text. The European Parliament also recalls that the EU stands ready to support a genuine process towards a peaceful and democratic solution to the Venezuelan political crisis. The resolution calls on EU Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell to step up the European Union’s response to restore democracy in the country, including through targeted sanctions against individuals responsible for human rights violations, but also by extending these sanctions to their family members. The text was adopted by 471 votes to 101, with 103 abstentions. (European Parliament: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20200110IPR70010/venezuelan-crisis-meps-reaffirm-their-support-for-juan-Guaidó)

 

Guatemala's new president cuts ties with Venezuela, as promised

Guatemala’s new President Alejandro Giammattei cut diplomatic ties with the regime of Nicolas Maduro on Thursday and ordered the closure of its embassy in Caracas. The conservative Giammattei, who took office on Tuesday, had already indicated he would cut ties upon assuming power. Maduro’s foreign minister Jorge Rodriguez, in a response on Twitter, accused Giammattei of bowing down to the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-guatemala-politics-venezuela/guatemalas-new-president-cuts-ties-with-venezuela-as-promised-idUSKBN1ZF2SB)

 

Maduro says he’s still in control of Venezuela, ready for direct talks with the United States

Nicolás Maduro cast himself as the wily survivor of a dramatic, year-long struggle by the opposition at home and its allies in Washington to unseat him and said it’s now time for direct negotiations with the United States to end the political stalemate.

  • He suggested a bonanza could be waiting for U.S. oil companies in this country should President Trump lift sanctions and press the reset button on U.S.-Venezuelan relations.
  • Yet if anything, his words revealed the vast gulf that still exists between his authoritarian government and the opposition and U.S. officials who call him a dictator. His positions on key issues suggested no quick fix to the brutal humanitarian crisis that has led millions to flee poverty and hunger in this troubled socialist state.  Speaking in the ornate Miraflores presidential palace, Maduro did not display such willingness.
  • He called any new presidential vote still years away. He also denied the assertions of U.S. and European diplomats and opposition negotiators that his government offered the opposition a deal including new presidential elections during talks brokered by Norway last year before they collapsed in the fall. He doubled down on his pledge to hold legislative elections this year — a vote his opponents insist he would use as a tool to further consolidate power. Maduro said he remained willing to sit down with Guaidó — but he seemed to dismiss the opposition’s key demand: that he exit in favor of a transitional government that would renovate the Supreme Court and national election councils to call new elections.
  • Maduro seemed to dismiss his growing international isolation. “Do you want me to tell you the truth?” he asked, leaning in. “I don’t care even a little bit about what Europe does, or about what the U.S. does. We do not care at all. We only care about what we do … No matter how many thousand sanctions, they won’t stop us, or Venezuela.”
  • Maduro repeatedly asserted his view that Trump had been misled by his policymakers, and he seemed baffled that Trump had courted North Korea’s Kim Jong Un but not him. “I believe Mike Pompeo has failed in Venezuela and is responsible for Donald Trump’s failure in his policy toward our country,” Maduro said. “I think Pompeo lives in a fantasy. He’s not a man with his feet on earth. I think Trump has had terrible advisers on Venezuela. John Bolton, Mike Pompeo, Elliott Abrams have caused him to have a wrong vision.”

U.S. officials have been considering more provocative steps to oust Maduro, including a naval blockade of Venezuelan oil destined for Cuba. Maduro said such a step would be “illegal,” but stopped short of calling it an act of war. Still, Maduro said significant changes could be in the offing if Washington opened a direct channel with him. (The Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/maduro-says-hes-still-in-control-of-venezuela-ready-for-direct-talks-with-the-united-states/2020/01/18/7f609a6e-38a7-11ea-a1ff-c48c1d59a4a1_story.html)

 

Maduro’s foreign minister in Iran, starts 3-day visit

The Maduro regime’s foreign minister Jorge Arreaza began a three-day visit to Iran and was received by his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif, Venezuela's foreign ministry reported on its @CancilleriaVE Twitter account on 20 January. The Venezuelan ministry posted photos of Arreaza and Zarif shaking hands and embracing, with the words: "To start the work agenda that will be developed in Tehran, the foreign minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Javad Zarif @JZarif receives the [Venezuelan] foreign minister Jorge Arreaza @jaarreaza to have a bilateral meeting". (BN Americas: https://www.bnamericas.com/en/news/venezuela-foreign-minister-in-iran-starts-3-day-visit)

 

Maduro calls for Cuban ambassador to gain access to Venezuelan ministries

Nicolas Maduro said on state television that the Cuban ambassador to Caracas should have access to all the country's ministries in order to coordinate efforts. “For the Cuban ambassador, the doors of all ministries should be open for coordination,” TASS quoted Maduro as saying. He also added that Cuba could “count on Venezuela in everything.” (Teller Report: http://www.tellerreport.com/news/2020-01-21---maduro-calls-for-cuban-ambassador-to-gain-access-to-venezuelan-ministries-.ByKaINAQWI.html)

 

Colombia’s leading opposition senator to sue Guaidó

One of Colombia’s leading opposition figures said he would file criminal charges against Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó for claiming he was “financed through Venezuelan corruption money.” During a surprise visit to Colombia, Guaidó additionally called Senator Gustavo Petro an “accomplice” of Nicolas Maduro. Petro responded that “I am neither an accomplice of dictators nor an accomplice of “Los Rastrojos,” a Colombian drug trafficking organization that allegedly helped Guaidó cross the border last year. (Colombia Reports: https://colombiareports.com/venezuelas-opposition-chief-calls-colombias-leading-opposition-senator-accomplice-of-maduro/)

 

Venezuela attorney added to ICE Most Wanted list

Venezuelan attorney and businessman, Raul Antonio De La Santisima Trinidad Gorrin Belisario, has been added to the US ICE Most Wanted list for conspiracy to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and several counts of money laundering. The action follows an indictment filed August 16, 2017, in the Southern District of Florida, Gorrin’s subsequent escape from justice, and the updated FinCEN advisory of May 3, 2019, regarding widespread public corruption in Venezuela. The indictment alleges that Gorrin, 50, a Venezuelan citizen with a residence in Miami, Florida, paid millions of dollars in bribes to two high-level Venezuelan officials to secure the rights to conduct foreign currency exchange transactions at favorable rates for the Venezuelan government. Gorrin was last seen in Caracas, Venezuela, and currently remains at-large. ICE warns the public to not attempt apprehending the subject. If you have information about the whereabouts of this fugitive, immediately contact your local U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office or call the national hotline at 1-866-DHS-2-ICE as soon as possible. (News Americas Now: https://www.newsamericasnow.com/latin-america-news-venezuela-news-usice-wanted/)

 

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.

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

October 08, 2019


International Trade

Passport maker De La Rue flies in turnaround specialist

De La Rue has appointed turnaround specialist Clive Vacher as chief executive as the banknote and passport maker contends with a series of setbacks. Vacher takes over immediately from Martin Sutherland, whose departure was announced after a May profit warning, but faces significant challenges alongside new chairman Kevin Loosemore. De La Rue’s share price has more than halved since the profit warning, with the company also taking a one-off hit for non-payment from Venezuela and an investigation led by Britain’s Serious Fraud Office. Vacher was previously CEO at semiconductor business Dynex Power and has held senior positions with industrials Pratt & Whitney, Rolls-Royce and General Dynamics. De La Rue is emphasizing Vacher’s credentials in business transformation and operational turnarounds, which may prick up the ears of all shareholders, said Russ Mould of investment broker AJ Bell, referring to activist investor Crystal Amber Fund. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-de-la-rue-ceo/passport-maker-de-la-rue-flies-in-turnaround-specialist-idUSKBN1WM0EG)

 

Oil & Energy

EXXON MOBIL bars use of oil tankers linked to Venezuela: sources

EXXON MOBIL Corp this week banned the use of vessels linked to oil flows from Venezuela in the last year, putting new pressure on the U.S. sanctioned country and on global crude freight rates. The decision by world’s largest publicly traded oil producer to ban the Venezuela-linked tankers should affect about 250 vessels. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-exxon-mobil-shipping-venezuela/exxon-mobil-bars-use-of-oil-tankers-linked-to-venezuela-sources-idUSKBN1WJ20E)

 

PDVSA flooding Cuba with stranded oil

At least three Venezuelan fuel tankers are heading towards Cuba, part of a flotilla meant to free up domestic storage space while defying a US campaign to cut off Venezuela's oil supply to its political ally. Up to 3mn bl of refined products and heavy crude that Venezuelan state-owned PDVSA is dispatching to Cuba in the first half of October should help partially alleviate a critical storage deficit that has forced down Venezuelan production toward 500,000 b/d. The storage shortage is a domino effect of US sanctions that are scaring away most buyers, with a few exceptions such as Russia's state controlled ROSNEFT and Spain's REPSOL that takes supply in exchange for its domestic production.  Although Venezuela has long supplied Cuba with oil under preferential terms, the wave of new shipments — equivalent to 200,000 b/d in the first half October — quadruple the volume that PDVSA had been delivering in recent months. Cuba has about 160,000 b/d of oil demand, with roughly 50,000 b/d covered by domestic production. The shipments should help the Cuban government to ease oil shortages that are crippling the island's transportation and electricity generation. But some are also likely to be resold, a PDVSA official said. (Argus: https://www.argusmedia.com/en/news/1989349-pdv-flooding-cuba-with-stranded-oil)

 

Brimming storage and no buyers: Venezuela’s oil production tanks

Venezuela’s oil production took another hit in recent days, as the country struggles with brimming storage tanks and no buyers. PDVSA slashed output in the Orinoco Belt to just 200,000 bpd, according to Bloomberg, after averaging roughly double that for much of this year. The lack of space in storage forced production cuts, including at joint venture projects, where output has been more stable. Sources told Bloomberg that the SINOVENSA blending facility would be idled for at least a week. Output had held up in recent months. While monthly totals bounce around from month to month, Venezuela’s production was stable at 750,000 bpd from April on. However, after months of relatively stable output, production began to slide again in August, falling to 712,000 bpd, according to OPEC’s secondary sources. Venezuela may now be on the verge of another decline. According to Bloomberg, the country only exported 495,000 bpd in September, and in the last week production fell to 510,000 bpd following the temporary shutdown of upstream heavy oil operations. Worse, the industry is in disrepair. Widespread pillaging, a worker exodus, lack of equipment, and a lack of capital plague oil operations. Luis Pacheco, who sits on the PDVSA board appointed by Guaidó, estimates that the industry needs US$ 120 billion in order to turn things around. There is almost no chance of even a faction of that without a change in the political context. (Oil Price: https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Brimming-Storage-And-No-Buyers-Venezuelas-Oil-Production-Tanks.html)

 

Venezuela detains local head of oil joint venture with China: sources

Venezuelan authorities have arrested the president and two other officials in a corruption investigation at state oil company PDVSA’s SINOVENSA joint venture with China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), oil sector and intelligence sources said on Saturday. The three detainees, in the latest round-up in the struggling and graft-plagued oil sector, are Venezuelan. The detention of SINOVENSA President Alberto Bockh in eastern Anzoátegui state on Thursday was confirmed to Reuters by five PDVSA sources, an intelligence source and another person in the local oil sector familiar with the case. It was unclear what the precise accusations were against him and the other two detained SINOVENSA employees. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-oil/venezuela-detains-local-head-of-oil-joint-venture-with-china-sources-idUSKCN1WK0F5)

 

Oil-rich Venezuela and Russia come to aid of ally Cuba, but its energy woes persist

A flotilla of shipments from Venezuela gave Cuba some respite this week from crippling fuel shortages in the wake of tougher U.S. sanctions, while Russia’s prime minister pledged during a visit to the island on Friday to help develop its energy sector. But support from two of its closest allies looks unlikely to resolve Cuba’s energy problems and the government has extended many of the energy-saving measures it had introduced over the past month. Havana warned on Sept. 11 it had not secured enough shipments of refined fuels, such as gasoline and diesel, for the rest of the month due to sanctions imposed by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump in retaliation for its support for Nicolas Maduro. In response to the shortages, Cuba swiftly deepened austerity measures it had introduced since an economic meltdown in Venezuela, its principal supplier, choked off its energy imports. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-cuba-economy-analysis/oil-rich-venezuela-and-russia-come-to-aid-of-ally-cuba-but-its-energy-woes-persist-idUSKBN1WJ2GS)

 

Inside Look at Venezuela’s Oil Belt

Five decades ago, Venezuela pumped 3.7 million barrels of oil a day. Now, it’s only producing a little over 700,000 barrels a day. Bloomberg’s Jessica Summers and Lucia Kassai discuss the collapse of the nation’s oil industry, the theft that goes on at Orinoco field, the lack of security and what it will take for a recovery. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/audio/2019-10-04/this-week-in-commodities-inside-look-at-venezuela-s-oil-belt)

 

Economy & Finance

ADOBE Is cutting off users in Venezuela due to US sanctions

ADOBE is shutting down service for users in Venezuela in order to comply with a US executive order issued in August that prohibits trade with the country. The company sent out an email to customers in Venezuela today to let them know their accounts would be deactivated and posted a support document further explaining the decision. In the document, Adobe explains: “The U.S. Government issued Executive Order 13884, the practical effect of which is to prohibit almost all transactions and services between U.S. companies, entities, and individuals in Venezuela. To remain compliant with this order, ADOBE is deactivating all accounts in Venezuela.” Users will have until October 28th to download any content stored in their accounts and will lose access the next day. To make matters worse, customers won’t be able to receive refunds for any purchases or outstanding subscriptions, as ADOBE says that the executive order calls for “the cessation of all activity with the entities including no sales, service, support, refunds, credits, etc.” The news is not only disastrous to designers and freelancers who rely on the company’s software like PHOTOSHOP and ILLUSTRATOR, but to NGOs and media outlets that will no longer be able to use software like INDESIGN, ACROBAT, and READER. The ban will also affect all free services like BEHANCE, ADOBE’s portfolio site, which requires a Creative Cloud account. It’s an unfortunate situation that highlights a downside of ADOBE’s subscription-based model — users lose access to the company’s products immediately as soon as the option to pay for them is removed, no matter how long they’ve been a customer. ADOBE says it’ll continue to monitor the US sanctions for more developments, but until then, accounts will remain deactivated. (Financial Times: https://www.ft.com/content/0c6ddd44-e95d-11e9-a240-3b065ef5fc55: The Verge: https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/7/20904030/adobe-venezuela-photoshop-behance-us-sanctions)

 

Maduro’s top envoy to Japan blasts freeze of bank accounts

The Maduro regime's ambassador to Japan rebuked a Japanese bank for effectively freezing his and other diplomats' accounts out of concerns that their use ran afoul of U.S. economic sanctions recently imposed on the country. The accounts, frozen since September, concern five with SMBC Trust Bank belonging to the ambassador, his wife and other diplomats. Ishikawa said that the accounts could not be used for Internet banking as well as withdrawing and transferring money via ATMs. In response to his inquiry, a bank official told Ishikawa that the accounts were frozen as a result of economic sanctions by the Trump administration against Nicolas Maduro’s regime. A senior official with the bank's Hiroo branch later visited the embassy and explained that their dollar accounts were frozen because of concerns that certain transactions ran against President Donald Trump's executive order signed Aug. 5. Ishikawa is a second-generation Japanese Venezuelan born to Japanese parents. His wife is Japanese, and they have four children with Japanese nationality. A bank official notified Ishikawa on Oct. 3 that his yen account would be reactivated, but not his U.S. dollar account. (The Asahi Shimbum: http://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201910070027.html)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Russia boosts military ties with Maduro

Russia’s deputy prime minister Yuri Borisov met with Venezuela’s embattled incumbent Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on Saturday as the two countries boosted their military ties in Moscow’s apparent sign of continued support for the embattled dictator who is resisting an intense Western pressure to quit. The meeting between Borisov and Maduro was held in the framework of the high-level intergovernmental commission (CIAN) between Caracas and Moscow, Russia’s official news agency reported. Maduro thanked Russia for the military cooperation between the two countries, saying his nation had a solid defense grid to resist any outside aggression. He said that the two sides also renewed their agreements on the military-technical area during the meeting between the leaders. He also indicated that the two countries have made progress in advancing agreements on the exploration of oil and gas. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2484158&CategoryId=10717; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-venezuela/russian-deputy-prime-minister-in-venezuela-to-support-maduro-idUSKCN1WK0CF; https://www.reuters.com/article/russia-venezuela/russian-deputy-pm-to-meet-venezuelas-maduro-interfax-idUSL5N26Q0D8)

 

Venezuelans Find Medical Refuge in Colombia

The Arauca pier is already busy before sunrise. Hundreds of people arrive in boats from Venezuela to get medical attention, and to be sure they do, they must be among the earliest to stand in the long lines that quickly begin to form. One of the first buildings they come across in the city, which is the capital of Arauca province and is only separated from Venezuela by the swiftly flowing Arauca River, is that of the Colombian Red Cross. From 4:00 am, when the humidity and heat of the area are not yet so fierce, dozens of people, many with babies in their arms, line up outside the medical center waiting for the doors to open at 7:00 am with hopes of being among the 120 to be assigned their turn. Some have cardiac problems, others suffer respiratory illnesses and there are also pregnant women who, despite their pain, know that this is the only way to get good medical care. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2484150&CategoryId=10717)

 


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, July 11, 2019

July 11, 2019


Oil & Energy

CHEVRON's Venezuela oil assets threatened as Trump weighs extending joint venture waiver

The Trump administration faces an important decision later this month, one that could either maintain the status quo, or one that could escalate the “maximum pressure” campaign on Caracas. In January, the U.S. government tightened sanctions on Venezuela, but issued a series of waivers to oil companies operating in joint ventures with PDVSA in Venezuela. The waivers expire later this month, and the U.S. government is considering letting them expire to force some of the companies out in order to further tighten the fiscal noose around the Venezuelan government. That could affect operations for CHEVRON, HALLIBURTON, SCHLUMBERGER, BAKER HUGHES and WEATHERFORD International, according to S&P Global Platts. If the Trump administration followed through, the companies would have 60 to 90 days to wind down their operations, S&P reported. CHEVRON plays a crucial role in keeping Venezuela’s oil sector running, such as it is. The American oil major is active in four joint ventures with PDVSA, and its share of production accounts for 42,000 b/d, although total output from the four sites exceeds 200,000 b/d. The exit of Chevron and other international companies would be especially painful for Maduro’s regime because the joint ventures have proven to be much more resilient than PDVSA’s sole operations. Foreign companies bring capital and technical expertise, and when the industry really began to deteriorate in 2017 and 2018, output from the joint ventures held up better than production from projects run only by PDVSA. The upshot is that if the U.S. lets the waivers expire in late July, Venezuela’s oil production could resume its downward slide, ending a several-month hiatus that saw output stabilize. “The service companies leaving will have some additional effect since they are involved in the operation of at least a third of the rigs in activity. However, the U.S. government is also wary of allowing oil companies from China and Russia to step into the void. The prospect of greater influence for Moscow and Beijing in Venezuela might be enough for the Trump administration to extend the waivers to CHEVRON. The tradeoff is hardly theoretical. Venezuela's government threatens to nationalize CHEVRON's oil assets if the Trump administration does not extend a sanctions waiver that expires July 27. In perhaps an attempt to clarify what is at stake, an unnamed official in the Venezuelan presidential palace told Argus Media that if the Trump administration lets the waivers expire, Maduro’s government would seize Chevron’s assets and “offer Russian, Chinese and other non-US oil companies an ‘opportunity to acquire’ them,” Argus reported. In fact, the official said that “discreet discussions” have already started with ROSNEFT and CNPC. It’s unclear how the Trump administration will approach what appear to be competing geostrategic goals, but Venezuela’s oil sector hangs in the balance. White House advisor Larry Kudlow said yesterday the administration was considering a possible waiver extension. “It is under discussion,” Kudlow said. “I don’t know about the license. That will be determined in the future. It’s under discussion right now,” he said. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-usa-chevron/white-house-discussing-renewing-license-for-chevron-to-operate-in-venezuela-idUSKCN1U42NG; Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-07-09/venezuela-license-for-chevron-under-discussion-kudlow-says; The Fuse: http://energyfuse.org/venezuela-faces-more-outages-as-trump-admin-mulls-escalation/; Seeking Alpha: https://seekingalpha.com/news/3476997-chevrons-venezuela-oil-assets-threatened-seizure)

 

Vessels change names or go dark to ship Venezuelan crude to Cuba

Stopping the flow of Venezuelan oil to its ally Cuba might prove harder than the U.S. expected. Tankers are being renamed and vessels are switching off their transponders to sail under the radar of the U.S. government. The vessel Ocean Elegance, an oil tanker that has been delivering Venezuelan crude to Cuba for the past three years, was renamed Oceano after being sanctioned in May. The ship S-Trotter, another one that’s on the sanctions list, is now known as Tropic Sea, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-07-08/vessels-change-names-go-dark-to-ship-venezuelan-crude-to-cuba)  

 

Economy & Finance

Venezuela creditors push back on Guaidó's debt restructuring plan

Creditors holding Venezuelan debt on Tuesday pushed back on debt restructuring plans backed by opposition leader Juan Guaidó, urging a “fair and effective” framework for talks and improved communications with investors holding defaulted bonds. The main committee of Venezuela creditors said it opposed requests for a U.S. executive order that would prevent asset seizures by investors and disagreed with a proposal to give different treatment to debts owed to Russia and China. But the statement added that restructuring would not begin until the end of a “humanitarian crisis,” in reference to the hyperinflationary collapse overseen by President Nicolas Maduro that has fueled malnutrition and disease. “A new government should work with creditor parties, such as the Committee, to agree on the design of the restructuring process and to negotiate the financial and other terms of the restructuring,” the statement said. (Reuters, Venezuela creditors push back on Guaidó's debt restructuring plan)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Maduro regime and opposition talks conclude in Barbados, no deal announced; Putin remains hopeful

Talks between Venezuela's government and the opposition about how to address the country's political crisis concluded on Wednesday (Jul 11) with no announcement of a deal. "This round of talks for dialogue and peace in Barbados has concluded," Information Minister Jorge Rodriguez, who led the government's delegation, wrote on Twitter late on Wednesday, describing it as "a successful exchange promoted by the government of Norway." Rodriguez tweeted that the discussions in Barbados had ended and served as a space for the "settlement of disputes through constitutional and peaceful channels." A Venezuelan opposition source who asked not to be identified said the two sides could meet again on Monday in Barbados. The press team for opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who has been recognized by more than 50 countries as Venezuela's legitimate leader, said the opposition would make a statement about the talks in the coming hours. Rumors have been circulating in recent days that the opposition was seeking a presidential election within nine months and that Maduro would not be in power during the vote. Socialist Party Vice President Diosdado Cabello, who is influential in Maduro's regime, on Wednesday night dismissed the idea that any presidential election was in the works. "Here there are no presidential elections; here the president is named Nicolas Maduro," Cabello said during a televised broadcast. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday he hoped Norway-brokered talks between Venezuela's government and the opposition would normalize the situation in country and bring an end to political turmoil. In referring to the talks, interim president Juan Guaidó had previously asked one and all “not to commit the mistake of seeing a single mechanism as the solution,” and for that reason insisted on maintaining both internal and foreign pressure on the party in power. (Channel News Asia: https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/venezuela-talks-with-opposition-conclude-in-barbados--no-deal-announced-11712606; EFE: https://www.efe.com/efe/english/world/venezuelan-government-says-talks-with-opposition-concluded-successfully/50000262-4020424; The Jerusalem Post: https://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Putin-I-hope-Venezuela-talks-will-normalize-situation-595359; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2480869&CategoryId=10717)

 

U.S. military plans to battle Russia, China and Iran's 'most disturbing' influence in Venezuela

The head of the Pentagon's Southern Command warned that Russia, China and Iran were expanding their influence in Latin America, particularly in Venezuela, where they support a government the United States seeks to depose. In his testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Southern Command chief Air Force Admiral Craig Faller identified Moscow, Beijing and Tehran as the primary international obstacles to Washington's interests as the trio backed Nicolás Maduro in the face of a challenge posed by interim leader Juan Guaidó. The National Assembly head declared him acting president in January and was almost immediately recognized by the U.S., which cut ties with Maduro and has attempted to isolate him globally. "Russia, in their own words, is protecting their 'loyal friend,' to quote, by propping up the corrupt, illegitimate Maduro regime with loans and technical and military support," Faller said. "China, as Venezuela's largest single-state creditor, saddled the Venezuelan people with more than $60 billion in debt and is exporting surveillance technology used to monitor and repress the Venezuelan people. Iran has restarted direct flights from Tehran to Caracas and reinvigorated diplomatic ties." "Along with Cuba, these actors engage in activities that are profoundly unhealthy to democracy and regional stability and counter to U.S. interests," he added, calling for the "right, focused and consistent military presence" to counter these countries' "most disturbing" growing influence in the region. "These geopolitical tensions are inimical to stability across the world and we look forward to world leaders to continue to do their best to ensure that conflicts on trade and military are avoided”, he added. (NEWSWEEK: https://www.newsweek.com/venezuela-us-battle-russia-china-iran-influence-most-disturbing-1448545)

 

Russian equipment to be part of military drills in Venezuela

Russia on Thursday said its military equipment will be part of military drills in Venezuela scheduled for July 24. "Weapons and military equipment that are currently present in Venezuela and that the National Bolivarian Armed Forces use is mostly Russia-made. So, it just cannot be otherwise. I don't know if they have purchased any kinds of equipment in other countries, but the army is equipped with our weapons to a significant extent, so it will be used as well," Sputnik quoted Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying. Ryabkov also noted that there are almost no Russian military experts in Venezuela right now. "A rotation has taken place. As I see it, the presence of our personnel there is close to zero. However, this does not mean that it will not appear there when the need may arise to maintain the equipment", he said. "We are concerned about a continuous melody from Washington, where there is a tendency to talk about all options being on the table and nothing can be excluded. That deliberately creates a sense of uncertainty, of what is possible and what is not in terms of U.S. participation," Ryabkov told Spanish newspaper El Pais on Wednesday. (Business Standard: https://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ani/russian-equipment-to-be-part-of-military-drills-in-venezuela-119071100712_1.html; NEWSWEEK: https://www.newsweek.com/venezuela-us-battle-russia-china-iran-influence-most-disturbing-1448545)

 

Against family wishes, Venezuela government buries navy captain who died in captivity

The Maduro regime on Wednesday buried the remains of a navy captain who died in military custody last month, despite the opposition of family members who say he was tortured to death and want an independent autopsy.  Rafael Acosta was detained in June 21 for alleged participation in a coup plot but died following a week in custody of military intelligence agency DGCIM. Lawyers said he showed signs of severe beatings.  What can be interpreted is that government authorities are (saying) ‘I killed him, I bury him,’” said Alonso Medina, a lawyer representing Acosta’s family. Acosta’s wife, Waleswka Perez, had demanded that the government hand over his body and called for an U.N. investigation into his death, which was condemned by the United States as well as the Lima Group of Latin American nations. An official autopsy showed that Acosta died of “polytrauma with a blunt object,” Medina said. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-captain/against-family-wishes-venezuela-government-buries-navy-captain-who-died-in-captivity-idUSKCN1U52M0)

 

U.S. sanctions Venezuela's counter-intelligence agency after death of navy captain

The United States on Thursday imposed sanctions against Venezuela's military counter-intelligence agency following the death in custody of a Venezuelan navy captain amid allegations of torture. The U.S. Treasury said on its website that it had sanctioned the General Directorate of Military Counterintelligence. U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the "politically motivated arrest and tragic death" of Rafael Acosta was "unwarranted and unacceptable." The Maduro regime confirmed the death on June 29 of Acosta, who was arrested eight days earlier for alleged participation in a coup plot. Human rights organizations and political leaders have accused Maduro's government of torturing Acosta to death and refusing to clarify the circumstances. (CBC: https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/us-sanctions-venezuela-counterintelligence-navy-death-1.5208073)

 

Ex-Venezuela spy chief says Maduro ordered illegal arrests

As Nicolás Maduro began to lean on the brawny 55-year-old General Manuel Cristopher Figuera to do his dirty work — ordering him to jail opponents and victims of torture — the Cuban and Belarusian-trained intelligence officer gradually lost faith. In a show of nerve, he betrayed the leader he met with almost daily and secretly plotted to launch a military uprising that he said came close to ousting Maduro. Now one of the most prominent defectors in two decades of socialist rule in Venezuela has come to Washington seeking revenge against his former boss. It’s unclear whether Cristopher Figuera still has influence inside the government and can collect evidence against his former comrades. But he’s talking a big game. Cristopher Figuera for the first time provided details of what he said was Maduro’s personal commissioning of abuses, including arbitrary detentions and the planting of evidence against opponents. As the deputy head of military counterintelligence and then director of the feared SEBIN intelligence police, Cristopher Figuera stood alongside Maduro as Venezuela was coming apart. During the freefall, he said, he witnessed and played a role in abuses, including not speaking out when confronted with evidence of torture by others and the arbitrary detention of a prominent journalist. But he said Maduro’s most-brazen order — and one of Cristopher Figuera’s biggest regrets — was his role trying to break opposition leader Juan Guaidó’s resolve by going after his inner circle. Initially, he said, Maduro wanted to arrest Guaidó’s mother. When Cristopher Figuera pointed out that she was undergoing cancer treatment, the focus shifted to Roberto Marrero, Guaidó’s chief of staff, who has been held since March on accusations of running a “terrorist cell” bent on carrying out assassinations. Cristopher Figuera said he then told Maduro that he did not have legal cause. “How can I jail him?” Cristopher Figuera recalled asking Maduro in a tense meeting with top officials at Fort Tiuna in Caracas less than 72 hours before a violent raid on Marrero’s house. “He told me, ‘That’s not my problem. Plant some weapons on him. Do what you have to do.'” Cristopher Figuera expects one day to be called as a witness by the International Criminal Court, which is carrying out a preliminary investigation into the Maduro government at the request of several Latin American nations, France and Canada. Still, he acknowledges that he obediently carried out orders to spy on 40 or so of Maduro’s top opponents, using wiretaps as well as electronic and on-the-streets surveillance, and reporting to his boss every two hours any noteworthy movements. He claims to have tried to persuade Maduro to change course, sending him a two-page letter in early April that urged him to appoint a new electoral council and call early elections. He thought the move would have been a strategic retrenchment to regain the upper hand amid mounting international pressure.  He said he’s in constant contact with high-level officials — generals, deputy ministers and heads of government institutions — all of whom despise Maduro and want to see him leave but are afraid to act. (AP: https://www.columbian.com/news/2019/jul/04/ex-venezuela-spy-chief-says-maduro-ordered-illegal-arrests/)

 

With tenacity and torture, Venezuela’s awful regime is hanging on

Almost six months since Juan Guaidó began his attempt to remove Venezuela’s leftist dictatorship, the strain is showing. The 35-year-old’s jet-black hair is peppered with grey. His eyes seem weary. He has dropped his snappy slogan, “vamos bien” (“we are doing well”). Now his demoralized supporters utter it sarcastically. But the need to end the rule of Nicolás Maduro is as strong as ever. His mismanagement, plus sanctions imposed in January on Venezuela’s oil industry by the United States, will cause the economy to shrink by more than 25% this year. In dollar terms, the drop in output since Maduro became president in 2013 will be around 70%. Francisco Rodríguez, an economist in New York who has advised the moderate opposition, warns of famine. On July 5th the un High Commissioner for Human Rights published evidence that security forces loyal to the government, such as the FAES, had murdered at least 6,800 people from January 2018 to May 2019. It documented cases of torture, including the use of electric shocks and waterboarding. Days before it was published, Rafael Acosta, a reserve naval captain accused of plotting to overthrow Maduro, appeared in court in Caracas, bruised and unable to say anything but “help me” to his lawyer. He died hours later. Mr. Guaidó, the head of the opposition-controlled legislature, had hoped to lead a velvet revolution. That plan has suffered one reversal after another. Although Maduro claims to “sleep like a child” he has cause for insomnia. The April uprising revealed splits in the regime.  The state-owned oil giant PDVSA, the main foreign-exchange earner, is trying to shift exports from the United States to Asia. Corruption, mismanagement by executives chosen for their loyalty to the regime and now sanctions has caused output to plunge. Although Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves, much of the country is suffering from shortages of petrol. “The regime’s entire focus now is survival,” says a Caracas-based diplomat. “The rulebook has been thrown away.” Maduro has quietly abandoned elements of the socialism brought in by his predecessor. The dollar has become accepted almost everywhere. Inflation has plummeted, to a still stratospheric 445,482%. But these moves towards saner economic policies have so far done little to ease hardship for most people. The main hope for a political transition. It is hard to imagine a resolution to Venezuela’s agony that does not include Maduro’s departure and a plan to hold elections with international monitoring. If that is to happen, the president will have to sleep less and worry more. (The Economist: https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2019/07/13/with-tenacity-and-torture-venezuelas-awful-regime-is-hanging-on)

 

John Bolton uses Twitter to try to flip Venezuela's defense minister

It looks like the White House national security adviser is trying to get Venezuela's defense secretary and military chief to flip. Four out of six John Bolton tweets since Monday evening have targeted Venezuelan defense minister Vladimir Padrino. Bolton's focus has been warning Padrino that he serves an illegitimate leader and that he will be held accountable for deaths that the Venezuelan military inflict under Nicolás Maduro's orders. In the first of what would be a three-day series of tweets addressed to the Maduro regime’s Defense Minister General Vladimir Padrino, Bolton argued that Maduro "deprived your soldiers, relied on illegal armed groups & 'colectivos' to violate the rights of Venezuela's people & has systematically executed political opponents." "Why do you support a tyrant whose inability to govern is visible for all to see?" Bolton asked. Shortly after Guaidó tried and failed to overthrow Maduro in late April, Bolton alleged that Padrino was among the socialist leader's top officials who agreed to switch sides, but ultimately failed to do so. Padrino has denied the claim and Monday was neither the first nor last time Bolton went off against Maduro and his administration on Twitter. "Do you want to be held to account for the arrest, torture and extrajudicial killings of your fellow Venezuelans, including members of the FANB? The atrocities are being documented for the world to see," Bolton tweeted Tuesday, using an acronym for Venezuela's National Bolivarian Armed Forces. "Are you proud to serve Maduro, a despot who has ordered the killing of thousands of your fellow Venezuelans in the last 18 months?" On Wednesday, Padrino responded, tweeting that Bolton "insists on an unhealthy attitude against me, like an obsessive-compulsive disorder, through recurrent, persistent and intrusive statements, characteristic of the insidious political blindness to which they resort to failing to divide the FANB." Padrino linked Bolton's "obsessive doubt" to the "clumsy and failed strategy he sold to Trump" and said that his continued position as defense minister "represents a mental torture for Bolton." Bolton hit back about 15 minutes later, arguing that the "Venezuelan Constitution does not call for the death of over 9,000 of your fellow Venezuelans because they voice disagreement with Maduro." He continued: "Remember your responsibilities to defend the constitution and the Venezuelan people."  It's not at all clear that Bolton's latest effort here will have any more success than the last time around. For one, Maduro has just reappointed Padrino as defense minister. While that might be a case of friends close and enemies closer, it's equally likely to reflect Maduro's increased confidence. (NEWSWEEK: https://www.newsweek.com/us-twitter-iran-venezuela-bolton-1448591; The Washington Examiner: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/john-bolton-uses-twitter-to-try-to-flip-venezuelas-defense-minister)

 

Maduro regime’s war on children at a 'breaking point' over lack of medical care

The cries of millions of children still languishing inside Venezuela all too often go unanswered as the deteriorating conditions and the iron-grip of the Maduro regime has set the stage for once eradicated diseases to run rampant, trauma medicine to vanish, infant mortality to drastically spike, and for simple health skirmishes to morph into life-threatening plagues. “The current health situation is at a very delicate breaking point,” Ephraim Mattos, executive director of Stronghold Rescue & Relief, told Fox News. “We will never know the exact numbers of people who have died due to the corruption of the Maduro government, but what is happening in Venezuela – especially to the children – is nothing short of genocide.”  One of the biggest health crises facing children fleeing Venezuela is simple dysentery caused by the contaminated food and water they are forced to eat and drink just to survive in Venezuela.  The dysentery causes the children to become even more malnourished and dehydrated which only compounds the issue further,” Mattos, who endeavors to reach some of the most famished and dangerous pockets of Venezuela with vital assistance, said. “Children who should be able to not only survive but also thrive, are needlessly dying every single day.” Paloma Escudero, the Global Director of Communication for UNICEF, concurred to Fox News that the UN children’s agency is concerned that Venezuela has reduced children’s access to essential services and increased their vulnerability. “Under-5 mortality increased by more than half between 2014 and 2017. Venezuela went from being a model for malaria eradication in the Americas, with its northern region declared malaria-free by the WHO in 1961, to becoming the largest contributor to the malaria burden in the region,” she said. “Between 2016 and 2017, reported malaria cases increased by over 70 percent. The number of people who died from malaria increased from 54 in 2010 to 456 in 2017.” In addition, UNICEF has recorded 190 suspected cases of diphtheria since the beginning of 2019, leading to 13 deaths. Escudero continued, noted that families are being forced to wake at the crack of dawn to trek their children across the border to the ravished Colombian city of Cucuta, to get them immunized or treated for common childhood illnesses. (Fox News: https://www.foxnews.com/health/venezuelas-war-children-medical-care-lacking)

 

Trinidad criticized for lack of action as Venezuelan migrants flee to the island nation

While large numbers of desperate Venezuelans have flocked to their Spanish-speaking neighbors in South America, more than 98,500 have fled to the Caribbean, according to a 2018 report from the United Nations. There are an estimated 40,000 Venezuelans residing in Trinidad and Tobago, just 10 miles off the coast of Venezuela. With unrest at their shores, Trinidad and Tobago’s government continues to avoid formal asylum legislation. The island nation remains the only country to take in large numbers of Venezuelan migrants without having an official asylum policy in place. It has also not taken political sides on the unraveling situation in Venezuela, instead choosing to remain officially neutral. As a result, the islands’ government is receiving condemnation from world leaders, the country’s own opposition, and asylum-seekers who say the country needs to do more. This leaves desperate families to choose between remaining in their divided homeland or moving to islands where they are unsure if they are safe and welcome. The side effects have led to reports of unlawful detention by the police and the deportation of 82 refugees, actions which the U.N. condemned as illegal. The uncertainty has Venezuelans there living in fear and seeking financial assistance on the black market, where reports of human trafficking are rampant. (NBC News: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/trinidad-criticized-lack-action-venezuelan-migrants-flee-island-nation-n1028246)

 

Spain arrests suspect sought by Venezuela for deadly arson

A Spanish National Court spokesman says that a man sought by Venezuela for allegedly burning a 22-year-old man during anti-government protests two years ago has been jailed in Madrid. Enzo Franchini Oliveros’ arrest was first announced on Wednesday by Venezuela’s top prosecutor, Tarek William Saab. Saab tweeted that Oliveros was sought for public disorder, intentional homicide and terrorism charges related to the burning of Orlando Figuera during a demonstration in May 2017. A Spanish National Police spokeswoman said Oliveros was arrested on Monday in a town near Madrid. A National Court spokesman says the man told Judge Santiago Pedraz during questioning Thursday that he didn’t want to be extradited. A hearing needs to be scheduled for magistrates to decide. (CBS: https://www.cbs42.com/news/international/spain-arrests-suspect-sought-by-venezuela-for-deadly-arson/)

 

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.