US lets Venezuelans stay temporarily, will review sanctions
WASHINGTON DC: The Biden administration said it is offering temporary legal residency to several hundred thousand Venezuelans who fled their country's economic collapse and will review US sanctions intended to isolate the South American nation.
Both measures mark a shift from US policy toward Venezuela under President Donald Trump.
President Joe Biden's administration announced it would grant temporary protected status to Venezuelans already in the United States, allowing an estimated 320,000 people to apply to legally live and work in the country for 18 months.
Trump resisted repeated calls from Republican and Democratic lawmakers, primarily from South Florida, to grant temporary protected status to Venezuelans though he issued an order deferring deportation for a smaller number on his final day in office.
The Trump administration also significantly tightened U.S. economic sanctions on Venezuela, most notably on its crucial oil sector, to try and force President Nicolas Maduro to give up power after an election in 2018 that the United States and more than 50 other countries consider fraudulent.
A senior Biden administration official portrayed that as a failed strategy.
The United States is in no rush to lift sanctions," the official said, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity to discuss the policy. But we need to recognize here that unilateral sanctions over the last four years have not succeeded in achieving an electoral outcome in the country.
US sanctions, which began under President Barack Obama, have increased economic pressure on the once prosperous country. Its economy was already suffering from mismanagement and the deterioration of its all-important oil industry.
In the last few years, the Venezuelan economy has been in free fall, with widespread shortages of food and medicine and frequent power outages. An estimated 5 million people have fled, mostly to neighboring countries such as Colombia, but many have settled in South Florida.