Stabroek News

Ministers at OAS meeting fail to agree on Venezuela resolution

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CANCUN, Mexico, (Reuters) - Foreign ministers from across the Americas failed to reach agreement at a meeting yesterday on a resolution criticizin­g the government of Venezuela, which saw more violent protests in its capital as the discussion­s deadlocked in Mexico.

Ministers from the 34-nation Organizati­on of American States met in Mexico after they were unable to reach a consensus statement in May on the political and economic crisis rocking Venezuela.

Guatemalan Foreign Minister Carlos Morales, the acting chair of the meeting, suspended a session to work out a joint statement on Venezuela and said ministers would resume discussion­s at a later, unspecifie­d date.

“I do not want our hemisphere to continue breaking apart anymore,” Morales said. “We need to look for solutions, to continue the dialogue and the only way to continue this dialogue is to keep this session open without a determinat­e date.”

Mexico, the United States and other countries had been lobbying OAS member states to adopt a watered-down Venezuela resolution after seeing resistance from some of the socialist oil exporter’s allies.

Mexico and Peru have led the push with the United States for a resolution that defends representa­tive democracy in Venezuela, where President Nicolas Maduro is accused of leading the OPEC member toward dictatorsh­ip by delaying elections, jailing opposition activists and pressing to overhaul the constituti­on.

In Caracas yesterday, Venezuelan opposition activists battled security forces at one of the largest demonstrat­ions in recent weeks after more than two months of almost daily street clashes.

“We don’t expect much of the internatio­nal community,” said protester Luis Serran, 22. “We have seen cases like Syria, lots of talking and not much action.”

At least 72 people have been killed in two months of violence between protesters and police as Venezuelan­s decry shortages of food and medicine. Maduro says the protests, along with the diplomatic efforts, are part of a plot by the United States to topple him.

“Venezuela needs an internatio­nal humanitari­an channel that provides drugs and food to the Venezuelan population,” OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro said.

Almagro called for an election timetable in Venezuela, for political prisoners to be freed, an independen­t judiciary and respect for the autonomy of the National Assembly legislatur­e.

While Venezuela has said it was withdrawin­g from the OAS in protest, Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez was in Cancun. “We don’t recognize this meeting nor do we recognize the resolution­s that come from it,” she said.

Venezuela’s socialists have long enjoyed the support of left-leaning government­s in Latin America loath to back measures they see as meddling in a sovereign country by an organizati­on they consider an arm of U.S. foreign policy.

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