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.

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Tuesday, July 9, 2019

July 09, 2019


Oil & Energy

Squeezed by sanctions, Venezuela sells oil to tiny Turkish firm

With U.S. sanctions blocking Venezuela from selling oil to the United States, state-owned energy firm PDVSA has turned to several little-known buyers that include a tiny Turkish company with no refineries but ties to Nicolas Maduro’s regime. U.S. sanctions have driven away many customers. PDVSA’s exports have slumped by more than a fifth since sanctions were imposed. Its biggest buyers today are Chinese and Indian companies. Directors at a March 14 meeting of Maduro’s PDVSA board temporarily waived some requirements for new customers or suppliers, including that of having at least two years’ experience in the oil industry. In the wake of the changes, a Turkish company called Grupo IVEEX INSAAT started buying Venezuelan oil in April. Istanbul Chamber of Commerce records show that IVEEX INSAAT was formed less than a year ago with capital of just US$ 1,775 and listed “residential construction” as its main activity. It was one of only five firms that loaded tankers to take Venezuela’s upgraded crude - among its most valuable oil - from April through June, the documents showed. IVEEX loaded four cargoes of Venezuelan crude and products in April - equivalent to just under 8% of Venezuela’s oil exports - and nothing in May or June, according to PDVSA documents. Turkish corporate records show IVEEX INSAAT is owned by Miguel Silva, a Venezuelan businessman who heads the Caracas-based Venezuelan Exporters’ Chamber and served as a housing ministry commissioner in Maduro’s administration. Silva registered IVEEX INSAAT with a Turkish partner named Erhan Kap, an Istanbul tour guide, on Sept. 27, 2018, just a week after Maduro visited Istanbul. IVEEX reportedly has agreed to deliver refined products to Venezuela in exchange for receiving crude. With its refinery network crippled by maintenance issues, the OPEC nation has struggled with severe fuel shortages in recent months. The two other companies that only began chartering tankers to take PDVSA’s oil after sanctions hit are Panama-registered MELAJ Offshore Corp and Sahara Energy, a unit of Nigeria-based Sahara Group. The two loaded PDVSA oil cargoes shortly after the sanctions were announced. (REUTERS: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-oil-turkey/squeezed-by-sanctions-venezuela-sells-oil-to-tiny-turkish-firm-idUSKCN1U324M)

 

OPEC wants quick resolution to tensions between US and Iran, Venezuela

OPEC has asked on Monday for a timely settlement to the tensions that have flared up between the United States and Iran and Venezuela. Iran and Venezuela, both founding members of OPEC, are both exempt once again from the production cut extensions that the cartel announced last week and will remain exempt for as long as they remain under sanction. Both Iran’s and Venezuela’s production woes have contributed significantly to the cartel’s over compliance to the group’s production cut quota, with Iran’s crude production falling from an average of 3.813 million barrels per day in 2017 to 2.370 million barrels per day in May 2019, and Venezuela’s crude production falling from 1.911 million bpd on average in 2017, to an abysmal 741,000 bpd in May 2019. But while the two countries combined seemingly did OPEC a favor by taking more than 2.6 million barrels of crude oil per day out of the market within that time frame, the tensions in the Persian Gulf and the dire situation in Venezuela are creating a market that OPEC is finding it difficult to both predict and manage. (Oil Price: https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/OPEC-Wants-Quick-Resolution-To-Tensions-Between-US-And-Iran-Venezuela.html)

 

Amuay and Cardon refineries halted by blackout

Venezuela’s Amuay and Cardon refineries are halted following a blackout in the early morning hours, two oil industry sources with knowledge of the issue said on Sunday. The twin refineries together form the 955,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Paraguana Refining Center, which has been operating well below capacity for years because of chronic operational problems that have been aggravated by Venezuela’s economic crisis. “Blackout in both refineries,” one employee who works in the complex wrote in a text message. “It’s going to be difficult to get the system back up.” (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/refinery-operations-pdvsa-amuay/update-1-venezuelas-amuay-and-cardon-refineries-halted-by-blackout-sources-idUSL2N24802S)

 

CHEVRON is playing a long game in Venezuela’s oil fields

Donald Trump may have slammed Venezuela with sanctions in an effort to change the regime of President Nicolás Maduro, but the country’s energy industry has an unlikely ally: CHEVRON Corp. Despite the U.S. administration’s push to disrupt the financial resources available to Venezuela’s leadership, the second-biggest U.S. oil company is working to bolster one of the Maduro government’s chief economic pillars—its ability to produce crude oil. CHEVRON is helping tap four fields in the country while testing new injection technologies to maximize production in one. CHEVRON is also helping pay for supplies, expenses, and even health care for workers at state-owned oil producer PDVSA to keep the crude flowing. CHEVRON’s actions are an attempt to play the long game in economically ravaged Venezuela. If Maduro retains power, CHEVRON will keep its tenuous—but still profitable—foothold in Venezuela. If he’s forced out and U.S. sanctions end, the company could be first in line to gain from the country’s vast geologic riches. The gamble puts CHEVRON in the same group as state-controlled producers from Russia and China that have been supportive of the Maduro regime—and potentially at odds with its home country. The company is working under a Department of the Treasury waiver of U.S. sanctions against Venezuela that expires on July 27. A decision by the U.S. government not to renew the waiver could cripple the production of more than 200,000 barrels a day at the four projects Chevron is keeping afloat, even though most of that production goes to PDVSA. And it could lead Maduro to hand CHEVRON’s stakes in these fields to other explorers.  Positioning itself to outlast Maduro won’t be easy. Last year two Chevron employees were arrested and held for seven weeks for reasons neither the government nor the company disclosed. Still, the oil producer continues to work with the government to keep its operation intact. That could mean braving Trump administration pressure and weathering the worsening humanitarian crisis, but the payoff might be worth the risks. “Whatever government that is coming in will be dealing with very diverse issues and doing it with very little cash in the bank, and that presents a unique opportunity,” says Schreiner Parker, vice president for Latin America at consulting firm RYSTAD Energy. “In the medium to long term with regime change, we believe Venezuela will become very investor-friendly, out of necessity more than anything.” (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-07-09/chevron-is-playing-a-long-game-in-venezuela-s-oil-fields)

 

Economy & Finance

JP Morgan to cut Venezuela weight to zero in key indexes over five months

JP Morgan will reduce the weight of Venezuela's sovereign and PDVSA bonds to zero in its widely tracked indexes, the bank said on Tuesday, phasing them out over five months starting on July 31. Venezuela's weight was 0.5%, 0.9% and 1.2% in the EMBI Global Diversified, EMBI Global and EMBI+ indices, respectively, it added. As a result of dialing down the weighting, JP Morgan said the headline EMBIGD yield and spread were estimated to compress by about 45 basis points. JP Morgan said it could open another index watch process in "the event of any favorable official guidance around easing of trading restrictions or consistent, observable improvements in liquidity and replicability of Venezuela bonds." (NASDAQ: https://www.nasdaq.com/article/jp-morgan-to-cut-venezuela-weight-to-zero-in-key-indexes-over-five-months-20190709-00584)

 

Maduro regime says U.S. sanctions hit debt refinancing, oil sales

Nicolas Maduro’s Vice foreign minister William Castillo also Venezuela charged on Friday that U.S.-led sanctions had stopped foreign debt refinancing, blocked vital food and medicine imports, and cost billions of dollars in lost oil assets. Maduro’s government says Venezuela is the victim of a U.S. plot to topple him, eradicate socialism and hand the world’s largest oil reserves to multinationals. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-un/venezuela-says-u-s-sanctions-hit-debt-refinancing-oil-sales-idUSKCN1U014B)

 

Bitcoin trading activity goes ballistic in Venezuela as rule of law erodes

The worse the political, social, and economic conditions in Venezuela get, the more that residents suffering under the Maduro regime pile into Bitcoin. According to Coin Dance, more than 47 billion Venezuela bolivars were traded against Bitcoin in the first week of July. This broke a previous record that had been set in mid-June. While the rising amounts of bolivars being spent on buying Bitcoin could be attributed to the fact that the Venezuelan currency is perpetually weakening, it also coincides with the price of the flagship cryptocurrency appreciating considerably in the last couple of weeks. As of April, the inflation rate in Venezuela was estimated to have hit 1,300,000%. Mid last month, the country announced a 50,000-bolivar bill designed to ease business transactions. Maduro will have released new banknotes for the second time in less than a year. Still, Venezuela ranks among the top 30 countries whose national currencies are the most traded for Bitcoin, according to Coinhills. While BTC/VES volumes have been on a steady increase since the beginning of 2018, Venezuela now has a national cryptocurrency, the Petro, which is competing for attention with Bitcoin. With Venezuelans already witnesses to how government-issued money can quickly lose its purchasing power in the face of hyperinflation, this move will only be beneficial to Bitcoin: The Maduro regime may be force-feeding the Petro on the people, but that will likely just serve as a gateway drug to Bitcoin. (CCN: https://www.ccn.com/crypto/bitcoin-trading-volume-venezuela/2019/07/08/)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Guaido announces fresh talks with Maduro regime

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido on Sunday announced fresh talks with the government of President Nicolas Maduro. Guaido, who became acting president earlier this year, said the Norway-brokered talks aim "to establish a negotiation on the end of the dictatorship," referring to Maduro's regime. "The Venezuelan people, our allies and the world's democracies recognize the need for a truly free and transparent electoral process that will allow us to surpass the crisis and build a productive future," he said. Guaido is hoping the negotiations eventually lead to Maduro stepping down and "free elections with international observers." In May, delegations representing both parties met in Oslo under Norwegian mediation. However, the talks have yet to provide a path forward for the political impasse here. But Venezuela's opposition is wary of talks with Maduro's regime. Previous attempts to end the country's political crisis have failed, with critics saying they have only served to further solidify his rule. Norway which hosted the preliminary talks and is mediating the protracted process says the aim of the upcoming round of discussions in Barbados, is to move further forward towards a constitutional settlement. The opposition led by Juan Guaido wants a transitional government to replace the regime of Nicolas Maduro, and then free elections monitored by international observers. Guaido insists he`s the legitimate Interim President, recognized by more than fifty nations all around the world.  While Maduro states he`s the democratically elected President. (DW: https://www.dw.com/en/venezuelas-guaido-announces-fresh-talks-with-maduro-regime/a-49507748; Vatican News: https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2019-07/venezuela-cardinal-government-opposition-dialogue.html; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics/venezuela-opposition-says-it-will-meet-maduro-envoys-in-norway-mediated-talks-idUSKCN1U20TF; https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-norway/venezuela-talks-to-resume-this-week-norway-idUSKCN1U30GU)

 

Barbados welcomes being the site for talks as CARICOM leverages ties with Caracas

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley Monday welcomed plans by both sides to hold talks in Barbados. “Since January, the government of Barbados along with other CARICOM governments has made it clear that the time for dialogue is never over. As a zone of peace, we will want to see a very peaceful resolution to the problems in Venezuela,” Mottley told reporters. Caribbean Community (CARICOM) leaders who have in the past adopted a position of non-interference and non-intervention in the affairs of this country, last week re-affirmed that position during their annual summit held in St. Lucia. Mottley made it clear that apart from hosting the meeting, Barbados will be playing no major role in the discussions. “This is a matter that requires the utmost patience, so it is not something that you should be asking me or anybody about on a daily basis, let the people talk. When you have deep divisions, it takes time and I have every confidence in the government of Norway being able to do what CARICOM has wanted done since January,” she said. Caribbean nations that used to rely on cheap Venezuelan oil are now hoping to leverage their ties with Caracas to help broker a negotiated settlement to the political crisis there. "This issue is one for the Venezuelans to work out," Trinidad´s prime minister Keith Rowley said. Norway's prime minister Erna Solberg was a guest at the CARICOM summit, and the group is playing the role of an honest broker in the Venezuelan crisis, St. Kitts-Nevis prime minister Timothy Harris said. (Caribbean Broadasting Corporation: http://www.cbc.bb/wordpress/2019/07/09/pm-pleased-with-plans-for-negotiations-to-end-venezuela-crisis/; Argus Media: https://www.argusmedia.com/en/news/1935802-caribbean-sets-stage-for-thorny-venezuela-talks)

 

Maduro 'optimistic' as crisis talks resume

Nicolás Maduro said he was "optimistic" as talks between his regime and the opposition to resolve the country's political crisis resumed on Monday. Preliminary talks held in May in Oslo petered out without an agreement. Maduro said a six-point agenda was being discussed at the meeting which is being hosted by Barbados. He did not give further details. The Norwegian foreign ministry is again acting as a mediator, as it did at the previous meeting in Oslo, but has so far only commented to confirm the meeting was taking place. Maduro revealed that Monday's meeting lasted five hours. He also said he thought "a path to peace" could be found. Just a week ago Guaidó ruled out a return to negotiations, citing as a reason the death in custody of an army captain whose body showed signs of torture. Guaidó has not said why his stance has changed. Some in the opposition say the talks are a ruse by the government to buy itself more time in power. On Friday Maduro said he doesn’t think it necessary to hold presidential elections in the country right now. "What does the people of Venezuela need today? Elections? I don’t think so," he told journalists. "The people of Venezuela needs economic revival, peace and constitutional stability. And it is necessary to reelect the National Assembly for that," he said. "The opposition wants no elections," he said. "If we say elections will be held in 30 days, they will begin inventing reasons to dodge them." (BBC: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-48904193; TASS: https://tass.com/world/1043923)

 

Venezuela's rule of law has crumbled under Maduro, international legal group reports

The rule of law has crumbled in Venezuela under the regime of Nicolas Maduro which has usurped the powers of the legislative and judicial branches, an international legal watchdog said on Monday. The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) called on Venezuelan authorities to reinstate democratic institutions as part of a solution to the political, economic and humanitarian crisis engulfing the OPEC member. The government and a compliant Supreme Court effectively stripped the National Assembly of most powers after the opposition won a majority in 2015 elections. Lawmakers loyal to Maduro generally do not attend the sessions but go to meetings of the Constituent Assembly, a legislative body that meets in the same building. The Constituent Assembly, created in a 2017 election boycotted by the opposition, is controlled by the ruling Socialist Party and its powers supersede the National Assembly. Sam Zarifi, ICJ secretary-general, presented its latest report on Venezuela: “No Room for Debate”. “The focus of this report is on the usurpation of the authority of the legislative by the government in Venezuela. This comes after the judiciary was taken over,” he told a news briefing. The Constituent Assembly was “formed improperly and illegitimately” and has gone far beyond its stated role, Zarifi said, adding: “In fact it seemed to do everything but really discuss a new Constitution”.  Addressing the problem of the National Constituent Assembly is a crucial step in any political solution to the crisis that has gripped Venezuela,” ICJ’s Zarifi said, urging the government to engage with the opposition-led legislature. (NBC News: https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/venezuela-crisis/venezuela-s-rule-law-has-crumbled-under-maduro-international-legal-n1027406)

 

Poll shows 64,6% of Venezuelans would vote in any new presidential election

A recent poll by the Catholic University’s Center for Political Studies and Government, along with DELPHOS, shows that 64.6% of Venezuelans are willing to vote if new presidential elections are called; and the number goes up to 70.2% if Nocolás Maduro resigns and stays out of the process, the National Elections Council is changed and there are international observers. An opposition candidate would get 67% of all votes (12.9 million) and a regime candidate would receive 33% (6.3 million). Another 15.1% of those polled indicated they might vote. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/politica/44895/646-de-los-venezolanos-votarian-en-elecciones-presidenciales)

 

Venezuelans deserve better life, free from fear, UN Human Rights Chief says

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Friday that Venezuelans deserve a better life that is free from fear and whereby they have access to food, water and health services during the presentation of her report on Venezuela before the Human Rights Council. “The fate of more than 30 million Venezuelans rests on the leadership’s willingness and ability to put the human rights of the people ahead of any personal, ideological or political ambitions,” Michelle Bachelet said during presentation of her report in Geneva. The report accuses the Nicolas Maduro regime of grave human rights violations and documents, among other serious incidents, more than 6,800 extra-judicial killings by the Venezuelan armed forces between January 2018 and May 2019. These killings, “should be fully investigated, with accountability of perpetrators, and guarantees of non-recurrence,” added Bachelet. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights also denounced a pattern of torture reports during arbitrary detentions and mentioned the recent death of Rafael Acosta, a retired navy captain, who died in custody. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2480704&CategoryId=10717)

 

Maduro slams UN human rights report, says it's full of lies

Nicolás Maduro on Monday said he had demanded the rectification of what he described as lies included in the latest United Nations report on human rights in this country. He also said that the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and former president of Chile, Michelle Bachelet, had "made a wrong call" with the report's outcome. (EFE: https://www.efe.com/efe/english/world/venezuela-s-maduro-slams-un-human-rights-report-says-it-full-of-lies/50000262-4018799)

 

Venezuelan bishops condemn death of naval captain while in custody, other atrocities

The Venezuelan bishops' justice and peace commission have condemned the death in custody of Rafael Acosta Arévalo, a naval captain who was arrested over an alleged assassination plot against president Nicolas Maduro. Acosta's lawyer alleges the officer had been tortured while in custody. Two members of Venezuela's military counterintelligence agency have been charged in relation to Acosta's death. The bishops also protested that police had allegedly disfigured and left blind Rufo Chacón Parada, a youth, as he was demonstrating about the lack supplies in the country. “The Venezuelan state is responsible. We will not consent to the manipulation, dissimulation and downplaying of these grave incidents,” the bishops' justice and peace commission stated July 4. The bishops said that “the forced disappearance, torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, excesses committed by the police … against Venezuelans are practices that have taken hold in the military and police corps, and are occurring on an ongoing basis, like a secret that cries out in our consciences.” “Silence is not an option in face of so much outrage,” the bishops said. The bishops noted that the men charged in relation to Acosta's death, Lt Ascanio Tarascio and Sgt Esteban Zarate, are 22 and 23, and asked: “This is the generation the armed forces are passing the baton to? Who taught these young men how to do so much harm to their brothers? What are the responsibilities of their superiors in the chain of command in these institutions?” They emphasized that “these young perpetrators are also victims of a system that has allowed this moral and spiritual degradation in our country.” In addition, a Venezuelan Cardinal is accusing the Maduro regime of intimidation and has reiterated his appeal to Nicolas Maduro to engage in dialogue. In an interview with the Pontifical Foundation ‘Aid to the Church in Need’, Archbishop Baltasar Porras of Merida, apostolic administrator of Caracas and President of Caritas Venezuela, shone the light on the limitations and intimidation perpetrated by the government against Church officials and organizations. He decried the fact that those who are bringing aid to the impoverished population and even parishes are continuously under pressure to stop their work.  (Catholic News Agency: https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/venezuelan-bishops-condemn-death-of-naval-captain-while-in-custody-74364; Vatican News: https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2019-07/venezuela-cardinal-government-opposition-dialogue.html)

 

Venezuelan journalist Braulio Jatar conditionally released, barred from leaving country

Venezuelan online and radio journalist Braulio Jatar was formally released from house arrest today after receiving official notification from a criminal court in his home state of Nueva Esparta. As mandated by the court, Jatar - who was charged but not tried for money laundering -- is barred from leaving Nueva Esparta and is required to present himself before that court every 15 days, according to his statement. Jatar's release was first announced by U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on July 5, according to press reports. According to the reports, Bachelet had requested the release of Jatar and other high-profile prisoners during her June visit to Venezuela. The news came after the U.N. Human Rights Council held a debate on Bachelet’s report of a visit to Venezuela in June. The report accused Venezuelan security forces of sending death squads to murder young men but a vice minister rejected that in a speech to the Geneva forum on Friday. “The welcome releases of 62 detainees then (in June), with a further 22 – including journalist Braulio Jatar and judge (Maria) Lourdes Afiuni – set free yesterday and the authorities’ acceptance of two human rights officers in the country, signify the beginning of positive engagement on the country’s many human rights issues,” Bachelet said. (Committee to Protect Journalists: https://cpj.org/2019/07/venezuelan-journalist-braulio-jatar-conditionally-.php; Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-un-prisoners/venezuela-releasing-judge-journalist-20-students-u-n-idUSKCN1U016V)

 

US expresses concerns for wrongfully detained U.S. persons (CITGO 6) in Venezuela

The United States demands that the former Maduro regime release the wrongfully detained “CITGO 6” in Venezuela. These men are suffering serious health conditions and must be released immediately. Maduro loyalists continue to prevent the families and attorneys of American prisoners from assisting with basic access to food and medicine, without regard for mental health and general well-being of those detained. These affronts to basic dignity will not be ignored.  The Department of State continues to press Maduro’s representatives for their assurance of the safety and welfare of Americans wrongfully detained in Venezuela. (US Department of State: https://www.state.gov/concerns-for-wrongfully-detained-u-s-persons-citgo-6-in-venezuela/)

 

UN agencies welcome regional road map to help integrate ‘continuing exodus of Venezuelans’

A new road map adopted by Latin American and Caribbean countries, to help better integrate refugees and migrants from crisis-hit Venezuela into new host societies, drew a warm welcome from two UN agencies on Monday. UN refugee agency UNHCR, and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) lauded the joint declaration that agrees to reinforce cooperation, communication and coordination between the countries of transit and destination; strengthen measures against people-smuggling and trafficking; and protect the most vulnerable by combatting discrimination, xenophobia and sexual and gender-based violence. The road map was adopted late last week during the International Technical Meeting of the Quito Process, in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires, with the participation of 14 Latin American and Caribbean governments, UN agencies, regional organizations, development banks and civil society The meeting highlighted the actions and efforts of the regional countries, not only in terms of reception, documentation and humanitarian assistance, but also in promoting access to health, education, employment, and housing on behalf of Venezuelan refugees and migrants. The Road Map of the Buenos Aires Chapter sets out specific actions on human trafficking, healthcare and for recognizing academic qualifications of Venezuelan professionals, as well as establishing information and reception centers. A so-called Information Card for Regional Mobility is a priority commitment, to complement and strengthen the documentation and registration processes at national levels where it exists or is being developed. According to data from national immigration authorities and other sources, the number of refugees and migrants from Venezuela around the world has now exceeded four million. (UN News: https://news.un.org/en/story/2019/07/1042041)

 

On Venezuelan Independence Day Maduro called for “dialogue” as Guaido slammed 'dictatorship'

Venezuela’s bitterly divided political factions held competing commemorations of the country’s independence day on Friday, with President Nicolas Maduro calling for dialogue and opposition leader Juan Guaido decrying alleged human rights violations by Maduro’s “dictatorship.” Speaking to a gathering of top military officials, Maduro reiterated his support for a negotiation process mediated by Norway between his socialist government and Guaido, the leader of the opposition-held National Assembly who argues Maduro’s 2018 re-election was a fraud. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics/on-venezuelan-independence-day-maduro-calls-for-dialogue-as-guaido-slams-dictatorship-idUSKCN1U022E)

 

Maduro ratified General Padrino as Defense Minister

Nicolas Maduro on Sunday announced he will maintain Defense Minister General Vladimir Padrino in his post, following months of rumors that top military brass would be replaced after a failed uprising in April. The Trump administration identified Padrino among the top officials involved in negotiations with opposition leader Juan Guaido to create a transition government on April 30, in response to the country’s economic meltdown. Since then, General Padrino has publicly professed loyalty to Maduro along with the majority of the armed forces, which are seen as the main reason why Maduro held on to power despite a hyperinflationary collapse. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-military/venezuelas-maduro-ratifies-padrino-as-defense-minister-idUSKCN1U305G)

 

OP-ED: Will more talks that do not include the military resolve Venezuela’s crisis?

Representatives from Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s government and the opposition are expected to meet this week in Barbados for another round of talks mediated by Norway. Previous discussions to end the country’s ongoing political crisis have ended in deadlock. The talks so far have involved two parties: Maduro’s government, which still controls state institutions largely due to military backing; and the opposition led by Juan Guaidó, who is recognized as Venezuela’s acting president by more than 50 countries. Guaidó, like many in the opposition, is skeptical of dialogue. Maduro’s critics see it as a stalling tactic. What to expect: Guaidó has demanded a solution this time, but the talks could again be limited by the two-party approach, said Moises Rendon, the associate director of the Americas program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “The new round of negotiations has a flaw that hasn’t been addressed in the last rounds: who is representing Maduro’s government and who is representing Guaidó’s government,” Rendon said. “I don’t think it’s going anywhere, because you don’t have the full representation of all the forces within the Maduro regime”—including the military.” Last week, the United Nations released a report alleging thousands of extrajudicial killings carried out by Venezuelan special forces over the past 18 months. “That will help on the leverage of the Guaidó side,” Rendon said. But it could have limited impact on this week’s negotiations. “The [U.N.] report did not go that far in terms of connecting the human rights violations they described to the Maduro government,” he added. “It’s not shedding light on who’s responsible.” (Foreign Affairs: https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/07/09/another-round-of-talks-for-venezuela-maduro-guaido-iran-europe-trump-uk-darroch/)

 

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, June 20, 2019

June 20, 2019


International Trade

Venezuela received a new shipment of humanitarian technical assistance

On Monday, June 17th, the second shipment of Humanitarian Technical Assistance arrived, with 24 tons of medicines and medical supplies, as part of the cooperation between the Maduro regime and the Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. Maduro’s Health Minister, Carlos Alvarado, said that with this shipment increases to 48 tons received through the Federation, totaling 569 tons of medicines and medical surgical equipment. (AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/node/474357)

 

Oil & Energy

CHEVRON could finally be forced to leave Venezuela

CHEVRON's nearly century-long relationship with Venezuela might not survive the Maduro regime's fight with the United States. Not only is Venezuela's infrastructure crumbling, but the national oil company has been sanctioned by the Trump administration. CHEVRON, the last major US oil company still operating in Venezuela, could be forced to leave unless US officials extend sanctions waivers scheduled to expire on July 27. A CHEVRON exit would follow on the heels of other major American companies that have retreated from the chaos in Venezuela in recent years. A loss of CHEVRON's expertise and resources would only make matters worse for Venezuela's oil industry, which is already on the brink of collapse under Nicolas Maduro. And it could trigger losses for CHEVRON in a major market it's spent decades sinking time, money and sweat into. CHEVRON currently has five onshore and offshore production projects in Venezuela with PDVSA, the national oil company. CHEVRON even established its Latin American headquarters in Caracas. In January, US President Donald Trump imposed tough sanctions on PDVSA in a bid to push out Maduro. Those sanctions prohibited American companies from doing business with PDVSA. However, the US Treasury Department granted six-month waivers to CHEVRON and five oil services companies: HALLIBURTON, SCHLUMBERGER, BAKER HUGHES and WEATHERFORD International. Those waivers, set to expire on July 27, allow the companies to conduct transactions and activities with PDVSA. If the waivers lapse and US sanctions remain in place, analysts said that CHEVRON would need to suspend its joint ventures with PDVSA. CHEVRON said that "future events" could cause the environment in Venezuela to become "more challenged," leading to "increased business disruption and volatility" in financial results. Today, CHEVRON owns a 39% stake in a joint venture with PDVSA that produced 16,000 barrels per day of oil in the Boscan Field, which is in the state of Zulia. CHEVRON also owns stakes in three other onshore production joint ventures, two of which operate in Venezuela's Orinoco Belt. If the sanctions waivers aren't renewed and CHEVRON Leaves, the hope is that the company would be able to resume its operations once relations between the United States and Venezuela improve. However, analysts warn that would be no easy task. Venezuela's energy infrastructure is falling apart -- and a pause in activity would only worsen it. (CNN: https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/19/business/chevron-venezuela-oil-sanctions/index.html)

 

Russia squeezing embattled Maduro for tax-free gas expansion

Russia’s state-controlled oil giant, ROSNEFT PJSC, is extracting concessions from crisis-ridden Venezuela to enter the offshore natural gas market on the cheap, a potential headache for the U.S. and Europe. An accord signed by both Russia and Venezuela earlier this month will give ROSNEFT tax breaks to produce and export gas from the Patao and Mejillones fields off Venezuela’s east coast. The document, which also includes a “fair market price” in the event of an expropriation, makes changes to a bilateral agreement reached in 2009, according to a filing by the Russian government. The deal underscores how Russia is both propping up and gaining from the Nicolas Maduro regime at a time when the U.S. is sanctioning Maduro and China has cut its support. Venezuelan gas could eventually offer Russia new entry points into both Asia and Europe. As a result of the changes signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin, ROSNEFT and its suppliers will be exempt from value added and import taxes to develop the two gas fields, which are near to where EXXON MOBIL Corp. is rushing to extract oil in neighboring Guyana. The agreement was filed online by the Russian legal information website, which publishes orders by the president and applied international treaties. ROSNEFT is also considering entering another natural gas block, known as Deltana 5, that’s much closer to a border that’s been hotly contested.  ROSNEFT would have two options to export the gas. It could build a liquefied natural gas plant in Venezuela, or it could pipe the gas to Trinidad where there are LNG trains with spare capacity. (Bloomberg: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/russia-squeezing-embattled-venezuela-tax-040001813.html)

 

U.S. seeks info from ad-hoc CITGO board named by Venezuela's Guaidó

An ad-hoc board of directors for U.S. oil refiner CITGO, named by Venezuelan interim president Juan Guaidó, said on Wednesday it has received a request for information from U.S. officials, who are probing its parent company PDVSA for alleged corruption. "Recently, the U.S. Department of Justice ... has also requested information from CITGO," the board said on its Twitter account. "CITGO has communicated to the Department of Justice its complete disposition to cooperate to clear up presumed irregular actions or corruption." The CITGO board added that it was conducting an internal investigation into "the company's actions in the recent past." (The New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2019/06/19/world/americas/19reuters-venezuela-politics-citgo.html)

 

No end in sight, families of CITGO executives jailed in Venezuela push for answers

It's been 570 days, say family members, who worry about the men's health and insist they're innocent as they worry their situation has been forgotten. Carlos Añez, 34, says he was upset when his stepfather, a Citgo executive, was called for a last-minute meeting in Venezuela the weekend before Thanksgiving 2017. Once in the conference room at the PDVSA headquarters in Caracas, armed and masked security agents arrested the men — five American citizens and one U.S. resident. Later that day, Maduro’s chief prosecutor, Tarek William Saab, announced at a news conference that the executives had been detained on charges stemming from a deal to refinance CITGO’s debt. Saab accused them of signing off on a deal to refinance the company's debt with terms unfavorable to Venezuela and offering CITGO as collateral. The alleged agreement was with the investment fund Apollo Global Management and Dubai-based Frontier, a firm that was working to source deals for Apollo. But a deal was never signed. About seven weeks after Apollo declined a deal, the executives were arrested. Maduro called them “corrupt thieving traitors” and said they should go to the worst prison. The detained include former Citgo President Jose Pereira and five former company vice presidents: Jorge Toledo, Tomeu Vadell, Gustavo Cardenas, Jose Luis Zambrano, and Alirio Zambrano. After more than a year-and-a-half in detention, the six Americans finally had a preliminary hearing. The judge ordered they stand for trial, after they declared their innocence. No date was set. Some of the families say they are concerned that CITGO and the State Department may not be doing enough to secure the release of the executives. A State Department spokesperson said it is gravely concerned about the welfare and safety of these and other U.S. prisoners in Venezuela and are closely monitoring the cases. (NBC: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/no-relief-sight-families-citgo-executives-jailed-venezuela-seek-answers-n1018071)

 

Canadian crude Gulf Coast exports rise as Venezuelan gap is filled

Heavy crudes have poured into the United States this spring, offsetting the loss of Venezuelan oil and producing a mini surplus, with Canadian heavy crude this month being exported from the U.S. Gulf Coast. U.S. refiners have lined up larger supplies from Canada, Iraq and Colombia since Washington in January began choking off the flow of dollars to Venezuela’s socialist government by barring transactions with PDVSA, Venezuela’s state oil company and once among the top three providers of heavy crude to U.S. refiners. The United States went from importing 561,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Venezuelan oil in January to zero barrels in May. This month, more than 130,000 bpd of heavy Canadian crude is scheduled to depart from Texas, four times the average exported in 2018, trade sources said. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-crude-exports/canadian-crude-gulf-coast-exports-rise-as-venezuelan-gap-is-filled-trade-sources-idUSKCN1TJ2AC)

 

Economy & Finance

Is Maduro trafficking Nazi gold stolen from Holocaust victims?

The Simon Wiesenthal Center is looking into whether Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro has been trafficking Nazi gold that includes ingots made from fillings taken from Jews murdered in the Holocaust. The Center said in a statement on Wednesday that it’s studying information exposed by the Wall Street Journal indicating that Maduro has managed to hold onto his regime through selling some 73.3 tons of gold valued at US$ 3 billion, to Middle East and Turkish companies between 2017 and February 2019. In March, it was reported that a further 7.4 tons of gold ingots, valued at US$ 300 million, were sent in two flights of a Russian aircraft from Caracas to Entebbe, for "refining" and sent on to a Middle Eastern country. “Despite the African Gold Refinery claims that the final destination was Dubai, via Turkey, if the final destination was a ‘Muslim country,’ possibly to Iran as end-user to fund terror, Maduro may be the agent of a historic irony: Gold stolen from Jews in the Shoah to finance another genocidal intent, this time against the Jewish State,” the Center stated. "We urge a full investigation into the activities of African Gold Refinery and its management’s reportedly nefarious role in the theft of the Venezuelan people’s property, the dubious origin of its gold transport and involvement in a possible Holocaust travesty,” it added. (The Jerusalem Post: https://www.jpost.com/Diaspora/Is-Veneeulas-Maduro-trafficking-Nazi-gold-stolen-from-Holocaust-victims-593042)

 

Midtown’s Tower Fifth gets pushback from Venezuelan leader

Real estate tycoon Harry Macklowe’s proposed Midtown Manhattan skyscraper, dubbed Tower Fifth, is now likely to get skinnier — thanks to US sanctions against the Venezuelan regime. After the Post reported Wednesday that Macklowe’s Tower Fifth skyscraper will be built partially in a space where the Venezuelan consulate now stands on East 51st Street, the Venezuelan Ambassador to the US tweeted out the story with some harsh words to Nicolas Maduro. “None of [Venezuela’s] assets are for sale in the US,” Ambassador Carlos Vecchio tweeted with a link to The Post story. “Maduro regime attempted to sell VZ consulate in NY, one of the usurper’s criminal acts that we stopped to protect assets of the nation,” said Vecchio, who was appointed by Juan Guaidó, who the US recognizes as the interim president of the country. (New York Post: https://nypost.com/2019/06/19/midtowns-tower-fifth-gets-pushback-from-venezuelan-leader/)

 

Politics and International Affairs

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet arrives in controversial Venezuela visit

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet arrived in Venezuela on Wednesday for a three-day visit where she is expected to hold separate talks with both Nicolas Maduro and interim president Juan Guaidó. She is also expected to speak to civil society leaders and "victims of human rights violence and abuses", the UN rights office said. Her visit, at the invitation of the government, comes in advance of a UN Human Rights Council three-week session.  Bachelet will deliver a statement at the end of her visit on June 21, and she is also expected to submit a report to the UN Human Rights Council in the next month. In recent months, the rights chief has been critical of Maduro's crackdown on opponents. In a report to the UN Human Rights Council in March, Bachelet said Venezuelan security forces, backed by pro-government armed groups, had quashed peaceful protests with excessive use of force, killings and torture. She has also criticized US sanctions against Maduro's government, cautioning that they are exacerbating the crisis and possibly hurting "people's basic rights and wellbeing". Some analysts believe her visit will reflect positively for Maduro. "With this visit the UN Commissioner, indirectly, recognizes the legitimacy of the government of Nicolas Maduro," said Luis Vicente from DATANALISIS, a think-tank in Venezuela. The fact that her three-day trip is even taking place is also seen as something of a minor triumph for rights activists. Bachelet’s predecessor, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, was repeatedly denied access to the country for criticizing what he said was the government’s refusal to recognize a humanitarian crisis. In contrast, Maduro appears to be rolling out the red carpet for Bachelet, who survived jail and exile during Chile’s military dictatorship. On the eve of her arrival, the government freed 21 opposition activists considered political prisoners, including a substitute lawmaker and 18 people detained during recent anti-government protests. Previously, Maduro began allowing the Red Cross to deliver humanitarian aid. But several politicians close to Guaidó who have been arrested in recent weeks remain behind bars, including his chief of staff Roberto Marrero and National Assembly Vice President Edgar Zambrano.  In addition to meeting with Maduro, Bachelet will meet with socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello, as well as the Supreme Court head and attorney general. She also plans to see victims of human rights violations and their relatives, the U.N. agency said. Notably absent from a draft agenda are visits to detention centers such as the Helicoide prison, where many of the nearly 700 activists considered to be political prisoners by the opposition are being held. José Miguel Vivanco, Americas director for Human Rights Watch, urged Bachelet to insist on receiving access to a prison and the JM de los Rios Children’s Hospital in Caracas, which doctors describe as a waiting room for sick and dying children. He warned Bachelet’s visit will be a disappointment if she just meets with officials, opposition leaders and civil society representatives. “She can do that via Skype from Geneva,” he said. “She’s there to represent the victims. The litmus test is whether she can gain access to a prison of her choice, inspect conditions and meet in private with political prisoners. That’s the only thing that will give purpose to this trip.”  Supporters of Guaidó, however, have called for protests out of fear Bachelet will get a highly curated, unrealistic view of the crisis.  However, Geoff Ramsey, a Venezuela researcher at the human rights group Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), said the visit would still be worthwhile, telling AP: "Any progress we see of releasing political prisoners or efforts to organize new elections I don't think are going to be providing oxygen to Maduro. This could be a galvanizing moment for the opposition at a time when they badly need it." (Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/06/rights-chief-bachelet-heads-venezuela-day-visit-190619061657764.html; Newsweek: https://www.newsweek.com/maduro-trump-venezuela-Guaidó-1444914; France 24: https://www.france24.com/en/20190620-venezuela-united-nations-bachelet-human-rights-chief-first-visit-crisis)

 

NSC denies Washington Post report that Trump is losing patience and interest on Venezuela

According to The Washington Post, President Donald Trump is losing interest in Venezuela after a bid to oust Nicolas Maduro by US backed opposition figures in April failed. An official told the Post that Trump had always thought of Venezuela as "low-hanging fruit" on which he "could get a win and tout it as a major foreign policy victory." "Five or six months later.... it's not coming together," the official said. Two senior White House officials told The Post that the president "chewed out the staff"  - national security adviser John Bolton and Latin America policy director Mauricio Claver-Carone - after the failure on April 30 to shift Maduro from power because they "got played" both by US-backed opposition leader Juan Guaidó, and Maduro regime figures - who claimed to have supported ousting Maduro. The time, the White House had been assured that key figures in the security forces and government were ready to switch their allegiance, The Washington Post reported. The issue has largely fallen off Trump's Twitter feed, with the president last mentioning Venezuela on June 4, when he claimed Russian forces had withdrawn from the country. However, the report was rejected by National Security Council spokesman Garrett Marquis who described the official's claims as, "patently false." "The United States never said that its effort in Venezuela would be limited to one round. The administration's maximum-pressure policy relies upon consistency and discipline to achieve the ultimate goal," another senior official told the paper. (Business Insider: https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-bored-of-venezuela-as-maduro-clings-to-power-report-2019-6; https://www.washingtonpost.com/; Newsweek: https://www.newsweek.com/maduro-trump-venezuela-Guaidó-1444914)

 

Pence thanks Latin America for generosity in supporting Venezuela’s freedom

Vice President Mike Pence renewed on Tuesday the “firm” commitment of the Donald Trump administration to Venezuela’s “legitimate” president, Juan Guaidó, and the Venezuelan people and thanked other Latin American countries for their “generosity” in helping defend the cause of freedom in Venezuela. The US government stands “with our neighbors ... We will continue to stand strong until freedom, democracy and the rule of law are restored” in Venezuela, Pence said on a visit to the US Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort at the Port of Miami, a vessel which on Wednesday will set sail on an 11-country tour of the Caribbean, Central and South America, the ship’s second visit to the region in the past six months. Pence said he was happy to visit Miami “for the departure of the USNS Comfort, bringing the compassion of the American people to those suffering here in our hemisphere and around the world.” (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2480035&CategoryId=10717)

 

Colombian armed groups recruiting desperate Venezuelans, army says

Venezuela’s crisis is spilling across the border into Colombia as Marxist rebels and right-wing paramilitaries recruit migrants to strengthen their ranks, according to five Colombian military commanders.  Violence still simmers in Colombia despite a 2016 peace deal with leftist FARC rebels, meant to end five decades of conflict. Dissident FARC fighters, the rebel National Liberation Army (ELN), right-wing paramilitaries and drug-trafficking gangs are battling each other and the military. Keen for recruits, these armed groups are targeting Venezuelans as they traverse the porous 2,219-km (1,380-mile) frontier at illegal border crossings, according to the military officials, human rights officials and migrants themselves. Five military commanders told Reuters that as many as 30% of insurgents in Colombia’s eastern border region are Venezuelans, willing to take up arms in return for food and pay. Nationwide, an estimated 10% of fighters are Venezuelan, the commanders said. Their estimates were based on information from informants, deserters, captured rebels and residents.  Reuters was not able independently to confirm the information provided by the commanders or speak directly to any Venezuelans who had been recruited by an armed group. Several Venezuelan migrants told Reuters they had been approached by armed groups for recruitment on entering Colombia. A FARC dissident, who asked not to be identified, told Reuters the group was also present on Venezuelan soil and was recruiting Venezuelans. Colombia’s right-wing paramilitary groups, which battled the ELN and FARC for decades, are also recruiting migrants, the military officials said. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-colombia-exclusive/exclusive-colombian-armed-groups-recruiting-desperate-venezuelans-army-says-idUSKCN1TL14E)

 

After loss at sea, Venezuelan archbishop calls for trafficking probe

A top Vatican official in Venezuela has called on authorities to investigate a rise in human trafficking after an apparent smuggling operation gone wrong left more than a dozen people missing. Archbishop Roberto Luckert in an open letter published on Facebook on Tuesday said the sinking of a boat carrying Venezuelan migrants to Trinidad and Tobago in April showed the dire consequences of trafficking. The letter urged authorities “to investigate, follow, prosecute and convict those responsible for the crimes of human trafficking.” It was signed by Luckert and another clergyman. Thirty-seven passengers were on board the boat which left Venezuela and sank on April 23. Rescuers found nine survivors and one body, and the other migrants remain unaccounted for. It was unclear whether the passengers left Venezuela voluntarily or were forced as part of a trafficking operation, as the Archbishop’s letter suggested. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-trafficking-archbishop/after-loss-at-sea-venezuelan-archbishop-calls-for-trafficking-probe-idUSKCN1TK392)

 

OP-ED: Can negotiation actually break the stalemate in Venezuela? by Felix Seijas

The announcement of negotiations in Oslo between Nicolás Maduro’s government and the Venezuelan opposition took most of the country by surprise. Though the basis for the talks was built quietly over several months, their beginning marked a new phase in the country’s political conflict. Exploratory talks began just two weeks after the April 30 uprising, indicating that the opposition had already been testing the possibility of negotiations while pursuing its preferred path of a dramatic rupture within the government. With those talks underway, Guaidó now faces two fundamental problems. The first is that he must deal with currents within the opposition that do not want a negotiated exit for Maduro. Pressure from international actors, especially the Lima Group and the European Union, which have been consistent in calls for a peaceful resolution to the conflict, may help in this regard. A second, related problem is how to sell the benefits of dialogue to a skeptical public that remembers the fruitless attempts at negotiation with Maduro in Caracas in 2016 and the Dominican Republic in 2018. But despite the risks, the circumstances today are very different. Maduro is likely to still feel that he’s holding most of the cards, but time is not on his side as it once was. Thus, the possibility of success in Oslo, while perhaps slim, should not be discounted. The challenge lies in convincing those with the weapons that clinging to their trenches will cost them more in the long run than reaching an agreement and exiting the stage. To do this, it is essential to continue to increase pressure on Maduro, and Guaidó should concentrate his efforts on three goals: keeping the opposition coalition as unified as possible, keeping the public mobilized, and coordinating with international allies to continue to create effective mechanisms to pressure the regime. If any of these fails, the goals at Oslo may well be unattainable.  The Trump administration does not have a seat at the table in Oslo, but it is difficult to imagine that anything is happening without its full knowledge and consent. Diosdado Cabello is another player to keep an eye on. If Cabello were to get backing from Cuba, it could lead to consequential changes in the balance of power within chavismo. If talks are successful, the most likely outcome will be a call for new elections with safeguards to ensure a fair result. The two sides, for now, are far from such an agreement, and the odds of success at this point do not seem high. But for Venezuela, it is well worth the attempt.  - Seijas is a Venezuelan political analyst and statistician, Ph.D. He is the director of the Delphos poll. (Americas Quarterly: https://www.americasquarterly.org/content/can-negotiation-actually-break-stalemate-venezuela)

 

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.

Friday, May 10, 2019

May 10, 2019


International Trade

Something is happening with Venezuela’s agriculture

Venezuela’s agricultural exports rose to US$ 322.3 million in 2017 from US$ 47. 4 million in 2013. They increased again in 2018 to US$ 337.1 million. In 2013 that modest level of agricultural exports accounted for 2.32% of exports different from oil and gold. In 2017 that percentage had increased to 12.34%. Over the past year – given the low export levels of commodities different from oil and gold, and an increase in agricultural exports – the latter accounted for 15.26% of total exports. The increase of agricultural exports has taken place despite a national productive collapse with many adverse conditions, the vast majority of which relate to the lack of favorable economic policies, such as a myriad of tighter controls and permits, the lack of inputs, lack of physical infrastructure and disrespect for the agrarian property. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2478291&CategoryId=10717)

 

Oil & Energy

PDVSA ad-hoc board to finance bond payment with uncollected oil revenue

Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA will use uncollected oil revenue to make a bond payment due this month, the board of directors named by interim president leader Juan Guaidó said on Thursday. The opposition-controlled National Assembly on Tuesday approved the US$ 71 million payment on PDVSA’s 2020 bond, as it seeks to avoid losing control of PDVSA’s U.S. refining subsidiary CITGO. The Maduro regime had remained current on that bond even as it defaulted on billions of dollars in other bonds, because the PDVSA 2020 is backed by shares in Citgo, the country’s crown jewel overseas. In a statement, the board said the funds to pay the bond would come from “PDVSA’s overseas accounts receivable,” referring to invoices to customers that had not yet been paid. The board did not specify the value of PDVSA’s accounts receivable abroad but said it would make the payment within the 30-day grace period that began on April 27. If the payment is not made, bondholders could move to seize half the shares in Citgo, which PDVSA posted in collateral for the bond. Guaidó has sought to protect Venezuelan assets abroad from possible seizure by creditors since invoking the country’s constitution to assume an interim presidency in January. He has been recognized as the country’s rightful leader by dozens of countries, including the United States. Maduro retains control of PDVSA within Venezuela, as well as state functions. Any effort by a Maduro-linked entity to make the payment would have been complicated by sanctions the United States placed on PDVSA in January in a bid to squeeze Maduro’s government financially. (Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-bonds/venezuelas-pdvsa-ad-hoc-board-to-finance-bond-payment-with-uncollected-oil-revenue-idUSKCN1SF2KE: Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-08/venezuela-money-at-new-york-fed-may-be-key-to-pdvsa-bond-payment)

 

Firms flock to power auction for troubled Brazil state near Venezuela

Developers have presented more than 150 proposals for power plants ahead of an auction this month to supply electricity to the Brazilian state of Roraima, which has struggled with a rash of blackouts due to reliance on the shaky Venezuelan power grid. Roraima, which is not connected to Brazil’s national grid, has begun depending on expensive emergency fuel-burning plants in the absence of reliable power from its northern neighbor, which has sunk into a profound economic and political crisis. Brazil’s federal government set an auction for May 31 to close long-term contracts with new suppliers using any available source, from oil to wind or solar. Canadian Solar Inc and Brazilian companies Casados Ventos, Eneva SA and Equatorial Energia SA are among the potential bidders, according to industry sources.(Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-power-venezuela/firms-flock-to-power-auction-for-troubled-brazil-state-near-venezuela-idUSKCN1SF2MA)

 

Economy & Finance

Meet Venezuela's jilted creditors

Since December a handful of lawsuits have been brought against Venezuela and its state-owned oil company, PDVSA, over unpaid debts. One of the most recent comes from Siemens-owned DRESSER RAND. The oil-and-gas-equipment manufacturer is seeking US$ 132 million from PDVSA to cover missed interest payments and other fees. That suit followed another by Connecticut-based hedge fund CONTRARIAN Capital Management for US$ 182 million in unpaid promissory notes from PDVSA. Its subsidiary, Red Tree Investments, snapped the securities up from GE Capital at the start of the year. Given the ongoing power struggle at the highest echelons of the Venezuelan state, one firm has been told to wait for now, while the other is likely to face a similar fate. Earlier this week, US District Judge Alison Nathan granted the opposition government led by Juan Guaidó its request for a stay in the ongoing case with Red Tree. The stay is set to last 120 days, meaning no legal proceedings will take place during that time. Other firms have also filed lawsuits, including London-based hedge fund PHARO Management and another hedge fund registered in Panama City, BROKWEL Management. Given the opposition government's recent success in the courts, however, the more litigious of the creditors might want to rethink their strategy. (FT Alphaville: https://ftalphaville.ft.com/2019/05/10/1557486677000/Meet-Venezuela-s-jilted-creditors/)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Arrest of key legislator draws condemnation as Maduro tightens pressure on opposition

European and Latin American countries have condemned the arrest of a top lawmaker who backed calls for a military uprising against Nicolás Maduro. Edgar Zambrano, vice president of the opposition-controlled National Assembly in Venezuela, was leaving his Democratic Action party’s headquarters on Wednesday when he was detained by members of Maduro’s intelligence agency who surrounded his car. Zambrano was arrested by the regime's intelligence services on Wednesday. The SEBIN intelligence police towed Zambrano's car with the 64-year-old lawmaker inside it after he refused to step out outside the headquarters of his Democratic Action Party.  After a half-hour standoff, the SEBIN simply towed his car away while he remained in it. People who witnessed the incident shouted “assassins!” at the armed intelligence agents, who are loyal to the Maduro government. Zambrano tweeted, “Democrats will keep fighting!” as he was being whisked away to prison. The detention of Zambrano – who was among those who joined Guaidó’s fruitless attempt to spark a pre-dawn uprising against Maduro on 30 April – sparked a wave of domestic and international condemnation. “Maduro’s arrest of … Zambrano breaches parliamentary immunity and is a clear violation of the constitution,” tweeted the British foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt. “Feels like the act of a desperate man on borrowed time.” The US state department slammed Zambrano’s “illegal and inexcusable” detention and warned: “If he is not released immediately, there will be consequences.” US President Donald Trump himself spoke out against the arrest on Twitter and signaled his support to Guaidó. He wrote: “I am returning to Washington, D.C. with Senator Rick Scott and Senator Marco Rubio, discussing the terrible abuses by Maduro. America stands with the GREAT PEOPLE of Venezuela for however long it takes!” The Lima Group, which includes a dozen Latin American countries and Canada, said his arrest was unconstitutional because his parliamentary immunity was illegally lifted. The European Union condemned the arrest of Zambrano, saying it formed part of Maduro's strategy to subjugate the opposition-held legislature. "Zambrano's arrest is a politically motivated action aimed at silencing the National Assembly," said an EU spokesperson. "The EU will continue to react, through its different policy instruments, to further erosion of democratic institutions, the rule of law and human rights." Legislators Américo de Grazia and Mariela Magallanes are both in the Italian embassy, while their colleague Richard Blanco has gone to the Argentine embassy. They are among 10 lawmakers stripped of immunity after a pro-Maduro tribunal said they should be investigated for conspiracy, rebellion and treason. Seven other National Assembly lawmakers remain at risk of being arrested. Maduro has not tried to arrest National Assembly President Juan Guaidó, who invoked the constitution to assume the position of interim president, arguing that Maduro's re-election last year is considered illegitimate. The arrest of Zambrano appears to be part of a carefully calibrated crackdown on the opposition. Diosdado Cabello, a leading political ally of Maduro, suggested that the government is taking a methodical approach in its struggle with the opposition. “We're not in a rush,” Cabello said. On Thursday, General Miguel Rodríguez Torres, a former spy chief who became a government critic, was also transferred by military police to a maximum-security cell at a Caracas military base, his political movement said. Rodríguez Torres was arrested a year ago. In a televised address on Wednesday night, Maduro claimed “victory” over the 30 April plotters and promised to dedicate himself to rescuing Venezuela’s collapsed economy. But other top Chavistas are more cautious and warn there may be further attempts to topple their embattled leader in the days ahead – a view shared by many political observers in Caracas. “There could be a repeat – today, in two hours, in a week, in a fortnight,” Freddy Bernal, a senior Socialist party figure, told state television on Tuesday. Maduro’s regime has so far avoided arresting Guaidó, which would likely provoke a stronger international backlash. But the recent measures suggest the ruling Socialist Party is seeking to isolate him by pursuing key political allies. (PBS: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/arrest-of-venezuelan-opposition-figure-draws-condemnation; BBC News: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-48224790; VOA: https://www.voanews.com/a/venezuela-maduro-tightens-pressure-on-opposition/4910662.html; Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics/venezuelan-lawmakers-seek-refuge-in-embassies-after-crackdown-on-Guaidó-allies-idUSKCN1SF1YK; Local 10: https://www.local10.com/news/venezuela/venezuela-s-maduro-defies-trump-s-warnings-on-Guaidó; VOX: https://www.vox.com/2019/5/9/18540091/venezuela-Guaidó-maduro-zambrano-arrest; Express: https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1124978/venezuela-news-nicolas-maduro-juan-Guaidó-arrest-donald-trump)

 

Venezuela's opposition vow to defy Maduro after key figure detained

Opposition politicians battling to bring down Venezuela’s strongman leader, Nicolás Maduro, have vowed to continue their struggle after the detention of one of their movement’s key figures signaled the start of a major crackdown. Interim president Juan Guaidó on Thursday called for nationwide rallies to protest the arrest of Edgar Zambrano, an opposition figure and vice president of the democratically elected National Assembly. "This Saturday, we return to streets across the country to defend every Venezuelan represented in the National Assembly," Guaidó said, referring to the opposition-held legislature. "It is up to us to remain united and mobilized until we achieve freedom." “We take it as a given that the regime is going to keep escalating its repression,” Guaidó said at a news conference, referring to Zambrano’s arrest. Guaidó accused Maduro’s regime of “kidnapping” Zambrano, who was taken to El Helicoide, a notorious political prison in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas. He portrayed the arrest and targeting of members of the assembly as acts of desperation by a government whose leaders don’t know who to trust. He also called for Venezuelans to take to the streets on Saturday for fresh protests against Maduro on Saturday. “They won’t get us out of the streets,” said Guaidó, whose public appearance in Caracas reflected his belief that Maduro does not have the confidence to arrest him. Juan Andrés Mejía, one of the targeted deputies, told the Guardian the group would not be cowed by Maduro’s “absolutely illegal and unconstitutional” counterattack. “This is not going to work … You are not going to solve Venezuela’s problems by persecuting and imprisoning people. There are just too many of us who want change,” said Mejía, a close Guaidó ally and member of his party, Voluntad Popular (Popular Will).(DW: https://www.dw.com/en/venezuelas-juan-Guaidó-calls-for-return-to-streets/a-48681844; The Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/09/venezuela-maduro-Guaidó-crackdown-edgar-zambrano=

 

'We need to know why': Lawmakers wary as Trump aides weigh military options for Venezuela

Talk of possible U.S. military action in Venezuela is prompting bipartisan concern in Congress, where Democrats and Republicans alike cautioned against a rush toward intervention amid escalating rhetoric from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton. U.S. intervention would be highly controversial and could spark a political backlash, in the United States and across the hemisphere. "What would our military’s mission be in Venezuela?” said Sen. Todd Young, an Indiana Republican, who sits on the Foreign Relations Committee. “Would the administration push for our military to conduct regime change?” The Marine Corps veteran has called for immediate congressional hearings on the issue and said he wants several “threshold questions” answered by President Donald Trump's top advisers. On Thursday, Trump denied a Washington Post report he is frustrated with Bolton's hardline position on Venezuela and that Bolton was pushing him into a war he didn't want. “John’s very good. He has strong views on things which is okay," Trump told reporters on Thursday. "I’m the one who tempers him ... I have John Bolton and I have people who are a little more dovish than him.” Any move by the Trump administration to send American forces to Venezuela would require congressional authorization, Young and other lawmakers said. That, in turn, would require Pompeo and others to make a compelling case to Congress and the American public that such a move is warranted. And there seems to be little political appetite among lawmakers for approval of such a move. Even some hawkish Republicans who have championed a U.S. military role in Venezuela seemed to shy away from a direct U.S. confrontation with Maduro’s military forces when pressed on the matter. “It’s too early,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, said Tuesday. Military options should be “on the table,” he said on Tuesday, but “we should really be putting a lot of pressure on Cuba right now.”  Other Republicans said U.S. military involvement in Venezuela, despite a strong desire to see Maduro step down, would only play into Maduro's hands.  The first step…is calling on the administration to explain their thinking for threatening military action in the press,” said Young, who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “If hostilities are imminent, then we need to know why.” Young said the committee's GOP chairman, Sen. James Risch of Idaho, shares his concerns and has promised to work on his request for hearings, although those might be closed-door sessions. (USA Today: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/05/09/lawmakers-not-comfortable-us-troops-venezuela-back-Guaidó-maduro/1137011001/)

 

Pence warns Venezuela’s Maduro harboring Iran-backed terrorists

 The Iranian regime has been working with Venezuela’s corrupt dictatorship to establish a safe haven for its terrorist proxies,” U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said in a May 7 address to the Council of the Americas. “Hezbollah is working to extend its dangerous network throughout Venezuela, and from there, throughout our hemisphere,” Pence said.  Venezuela is a failed state,” Pence said. “And as history teaches, failed states know no boundaries. Drug traffickers, criminal gangs, terrorist groups seeking to destabilize the region and profit from the misery of the Venezuelan people every day.” Pence pointed to an Iranian connection in Venezuela by citing last month’s “very public launch of direct air service between Caracas and Teheran by Mahan Air, a blacklisted airline controlled by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps, which President Trump recently designated as a terrorist organization.” The vice president also denounced Maduro confidant and cabinet member Tareck El Aissami, who has been sanctioned by the United States as a drug kingpin and the European Union as a human rights violator. Pence described him as “a drug runner and a money launderer who partners with terrorist networks to bring Iran-backed terrorists into the country. “The struggle in Venezuela is the struggle between dictatorship and democracy,” Pence said Tuesday. “Nicolas Maduro is a dictator with no legitimate claim to power, and Nicolas Maduro must go.” (World Tribune: https://www.worldtribune.com/pence-warns-venezuelas-maduro-harboring-iran-backed-terrorists/)

 

Sen. Marco Rubio: China ‘controlling defense cyber operations’ in Venezuela

The Chinese government has actively helped Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro control, censor, and shut down the Internet in his quest to keep the legitimate president of the country, Juan Guaidó, from governing, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) told Breitbart News in an interview Monday. Rubio suggested that Beijing may be distancing itself from Maduro because the tide has shifted so definitively against him in Latin America that the rest of the region may sour on investments with China if it interferes to help him. That does not mean China is not helping Maduro, merely that it cannot afford the bad press, Rubio stated. “The Chinese are very involved. First, they are owed a bunch of money, so they want to get paid,” he explained. “Number two is they are single-handedly helping conduct the Internet control operation. They have basically taken a commercial version of their great Internet firewall and given it to Maduro, and it is a service they are providing him, so they are the ones that are shutting down the Internet and access to social media.” Maduro’s regime regularly cuts nationwide access to the Internet to prevent Guaidó and other opposition leaders from being able to communicate with the masses or organize rallies against him. Guaidó, according to Rubio, has “no access to the media. Any time he tries to speak or communicate on social media, they shut down the Internet. … Literally, every time he holds a rally, they shut down the Internet.” As the Chinese are “single-handedly controlling the defensive cyber operations shutting down the Internet,” they are responsible for silencing Guaidó. Yet being more open about their role could jeopardize investments in other parts of the continent. “The Chinese play a tricky game because on the one hand, they are trying to grow in influence and presence throughout Latin America, so they are seeing all of these countries supporting Guaidó, and they don’t want to … antagonize these countries by being cheerleaders for the Maduro regime,” Rubio noted. (Breitbart: https://www.breitbart.com/latin-america/2019/05/09/marco-rubio-china-controlling-defense-cyber-operations-venezuela/)

 

Is Trump failing in Venezuela?

We finally may have found a peak Donald Trump headline: “A frustrated Trump questions his administration’s Venezuela strategy.” The Washington Post story that goes with it is a classic. It seems that Trump hired John Bolton to be his national security adviser, cleared the path for him to be the main policy maker on foreign affairs, and … is now shocked that Bolton is something of a warmonger and that his schemes don’t produce perfect and painless results overnight. Trump and his aides also aren’t eager to disguise that the president is something of an outsider to his own administration’s policy-making process. Remember: It’s not uncommon for presidents to fight with executive-branch departments and agencies for control over policy. Those bodies have multiple masters. But splits between the president and his own staffers in the White House are far rarer, since such people work directly for, and answer only to, the president himself. Trump has said in recent days that Bolton wants to get him “into a war” — a comment he has made in jest in the past but that now belies his more serious concerns, one senior administration official said. Despite Trump’s grumbling that Bolton had gotten him out on a limb on Venezuela, Bolton’s job is safe, two senior administration officials said, and Trump has told his national security adviser to keep focusing on Venezuela. Trump also spoke approvingly of Russian actions in Venezuela following a lengthy phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, saying that Putin “is not looking at all to get involved in Venezuela other than he’d like to see something positive happen for Venezuela. And I feel the same way. We want to get some humanitarian aid.” U.S. officials think time is on their side and that Maduro will fall of his own weight. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who has been influential in shaping the administration’s Venezuela response, said Trump and Bolton are on the same page. Rubio, who said he spoke to Trump about Venezuela on Tuesday evening, backs the policy of waiting out Maduro. Rubio said some of the harshest U.S. sanctions are only now having full effect, including sowing dissension among Maduro aides. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-05-09/why-donald-trump-is-failing-in-venezuela; The Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/a-frustrated-trump-questions-his-administrations-venezuela-strategy/2019/05/08/ad51561a-71a7-11e9-9f06-5fc2ee80027a_story.html)

 

US Secretary of State Pompeo to meet Russian President Putin, FM Lavrov on May 14

Mike Pompeo is to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov when he travels to Russia next week, the US State Department said in a statement. The visit comes as the relations between Moscow and Washington are at a new low over accusations of Russian meddling and disagreements over approaches to Venezuela and Iran’s nuclear program. The State Department says they will discuss “the full range of bilateral and multilateral challenges” during a meeting in the southern city of Sochi on May 14. (RT: https://www.rt.com/news/458985-pompeo-travel-russia-date/)

 

Russian FM Lavrov speaks on prospects for US-Russia deal on Venezuela

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has announced that there won’t be any “deals” on Venezuela between Moscow and Washington. "Trump is the one who usually prepares deals", Lavrov remarked. The foreign minister delivered this statement ahead of the upcoming meeting between him and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, which is scheduled to take place on 14 May in Sochi. Earlier this week, Lavrov also dismissed speculations about the possibility of a military intervention in Venezuela, stating that Russia opposes “hostilities anywhere in violation of international law”, and that “the use of force may only be authorized by the UN Security Council, or force may be used in response to aggression against a sovereign state”. (Sputnik News: https://sputniknews.com/world/201905091074854135-russia-us-venezuela-deal/)

 

Russia not planning to send more military specialists to Venezuela

Moscow does not plan to send more Russian military specialists to Venezuela, RIA news agency quoted Russian Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Borisov as saying on Thursday. The Kremlin said in March that Russian military specialists are in Venezuela to service pre-existing contracts for the supply of Russian arms. (Journal Pioneer: https://www.journalpioneer.com/news/world/russia-not-planning-to-send-more-military-specialists-to-venezuela-ria-309646/)

 

Ex-Venezuelan spy chief says Venezuelans should 'build a new state'

The ex-head of Venezuela’s SEBIN intelligence service, who was replaced last week after an attempted military uprising against Nicolas Maduro, urged Venezuelans on Thursday to build a new state and combat corruption.

In his first public appearance since Maduro replaced him on April 30, Manuel Christopher said Venezuelans “deserve a better country,” according to a video of Christopher posted on Twitter by Venezuelan TV outlet NTN24. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-intelligence/ex-venezuelan-spy-chief-says-venezuelans-should-build-a-new-state-idUSKCN1SF2PO)

 

Venezuelan Embassy’s power cut off in tense Washington standoff

A chaotic political standoff with international diplomatic implications began unfolding quietly weeks ago on a leafy side street in the upscale Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, as a group of American activists moved into the five-story Venezuelan Embassy and made themselves at home. With some 100 Venezuelan diplomats still working inside during the day, the activists from Code Pink and other antiwar groups brought their things to spend the night, sleeping on couches to keep the building occupied around the clock. They said they were guests, invited by the regime of Nicolás Maduro, and their mission was to oppose any American military intervention in the troubled nation. The antiwar activists have been alone in the embassy building since late April, when the American visas for the shoestring embassy staff expired, forcing the diplomats to go home. Appointees of Juan Guaidó, the opposition leader recognized by the United States and some 50 other countries as Venezuela’s interim president, had pledged to take over the embassy, a move those now occupying the facility fear could lead to a reciprocal siege of the American Embassy in Venezuela, and an armed conflict. Late last month, local Venezuelans who support Mr. Guaidó learned of the occupation and descended on the building, demanding that the activists, whom they view as unlawful trespassers, get out. In the ensuing days, tense clashes between the occupiers and the Venezuelans, who are camped in tents surrounding the building, have escalated, prompting nine arrests by the Secret Service. Late on Wednesday, the power company shut off electricity to the embassy, thrusting its occupants into darkness. The protesters outside cheered. The extraordinary stalemate has challenged local authorities and the Trump administration, turning the inoperative embassy into a stand-in for the much larger crisis vexing Venezuela, as Mr. Maduro’s supporters maintain control despite of efforts by the opposition and the United States. The State Department has said it considers their presence to be “unauthorized.” Washington police and the Secret Service have set up a barrier separating the pro-Guaidó camp from Maduro sympathizers and other activists across the street. Late on Wednesday, the power company shut off electricity to the embassy, leaving the activists inside in darkness. Only about 15 people remain in the building,  (The New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/09/us/venezuela-embassy-protests.html)

 

OP-ED: Can the U.S. help Venezuela militarily without use of force? by Sarah Lee

Lawmakers are debating whether the U.S. should proceed with military action in Venezuela to help end the socialist Maduro regime even as debate about whether the U.S. has a responsibility to protect Venezuela — and if there are ways the military can be utilized without use of force. Luis Almagro, Secretary General of the OAS, detailed the reasons he believes the U.S. and other nations would be justified in entering Venezuela and using force if necessary, under UN guidelines covering the “responsibility to protect” policy, or R2P.  While the Trump administration continues conversations with nations such as Russia and Iran, as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo did this week, some are noting that military intervention doesn’t necessarily have to mean use of force. How would it work? U.S. special forces, next door in Colombia to assist that country’s armed forces, would train the Venezuelan opposition in best practices of nonviolent resistance. This includes teaching tactics of dispersal, evading tear gas, erecting barricades, and maintaining command and control in the face of government repression. But can nonviolent resistance work? A new report by the Joint Special Operations University on Support to Resistance (STR) operations suggests it can. With the Maduro regime arresting interim president Juan Guaidó’s ally, National Assembly Vice President Edgar Zambrano, Wednesday, the U.S. may need to decide quickly on just how to help its neighbor to the south. (Town Hall: https://townhall.com/tipsheet/sarahlee/2019/05/09/can-the-us-help-venezuela-militarily-without-use-of-force-n2546111)

 

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.