EU may impose more sanctions on Venezuela

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EU SANCTIONS AGAINST RUSSIAThe European Union is considering imposing more sanctions on the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro but has not discussed an oil embargo, Malta’s foreign minister said on Monday.

“The intention … is that sanctions can be possible on certain individuals rather than on issues that might have an effect on an already weakened economy,” Carmelo Abela told Reuters following a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels.

“Having further (sectoral) sanctions is not excluded but primarily we are focused on certain individuals.”

Since November 2017, the European Union has imposed an embargo on exports of weapons and equipment for internal repression, as well as a travel ban and an asset freeze on 18 officials accused of violating rights and undermining democracy.

Experts say EU sanctions, while symbolic, have had little or no impact on Maduro’s policies so far and that oil and financial sanctions may be the only way to force the government to change.

Oil and related products make up three quarters of Venezuela’s exports to the EU, but the bloc is unwilling to take steps that might further worsen an economy already in deep crisis with widespread suffering.

The U.S. administration of President Donald Trump has imposed sweeping sanctions on Venezuela’s state-owned oil firm PDVSA.

REUTERS

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2 responses to “EU may impose more sanctions on Venezuela”

  1. Foreign reporters have been arrested in Venezuela on charges of visa violations.
    The government claims media are manufacturing crisis, but critics argue that officials are targeting journalists as a means of censorship.

    Blocked border crossing.
    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/fa810d4d9360961f7cf49882801323c0e536fd7f74ea46853d64dc39104dbc0f.jpg Blocked bridge: A tanker and a container block the border crossing between Venezuela and Colombia at Cúcuta
    The media interest in Cúcuta is correspondingly high. National and international TV teams are building their cameras, but no trucks are rolling over the bridge with aid packages. On the contrary: Colombia’s migration agency published on Tuesday pictures that show how a container and a tanker block the lanes.
    The border crossing was completed for over $ 40 million in 2016. However, the permanent diplomatic crisis between the two countries prevented commissioning.

  2. EU deputys are not allowed to enter Venezuela. ????
    Venezuela has denied entry to a group of EU deputys. They apparently wanted to meet with the self-proclaimed transitional president, Juan Guaidó.
    EU-Abgeordnete dürfen nicht einreisen.

    https://www.zdf.de/nachrichten/heute-sendungen/eu-abgeordnete-duerfen-nicht-einreisen-100.html

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