Embattled Maduro appeals for help to end US sanctions against Venezuela

Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela's president, speaks while holding a protective mask during the UN General Assembly on Wednesday, September 23 2020. The UN General Assembly met in a virtual environment for the first time in its 75-year history due to the pandemic.
Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela's president, speaks while holding a protective mask during the UN General Assembly on Wednesday, September 23 2020. The UN General Assembly met in a virtual environment for the first time in its 75-year history due to the pandemic.
Image: TIFFANY HAGLER-GEARD

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro told the UN General Assembly on Wednesday that all “countries that defend peace” should rally against US sanctions clamped on the South American country and its allies Cuba, Nicaragua and Syria.

The Trump administration has ramped up sanctions against Venezuela in the past two years as part of an effort to oust Maduro, whom it accuses of corruption, human rights violations, and of rigging his 2018 re-election.

Maduro has overseen a six-year economic collapse in the once-prosperous Opec nation, which the opposition and most economists attribute to Venezuela's interventionist economic policies. Venezuela's ruling socialist party blames the US sanctions for the country's woes.

“We must demand the cessation of all unilateral coercive measures, of all the sanctions, and that they allow our people to exercise their own rights,” Maduro said.

Cuba and Nicaragua are two of Maduro's only remaining allies in Latin America, after left-leaning leaders lost power in countries such as Brazil and Ecuador.

US President Donald Trump has rolled back a detente with Havana, Washington's old Cold War foe, which was pursued by his predecessor Barack Obama. His administration has also sanctioned Nicaraguan individuals and companies in response to what it calls corruption and repression under President Daniel Ortega.

In a later video address, Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido — who is recognised as the legitimate president by dozens of countries including the US — urged the international community to take decisive action to oust Maduro, without being specific.

“Today I call upon all representatives of the member states ... to consider a strategy that contemplates different scenarios after the diplomatic route has been exhausted,” Guaido told representatives of over 30 countries that recognise him. — Reuters



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