Venezuela
threatens oil, trade in continuing election spat with US
In
response to remarks from US Assistant Secretary of State Roberta
Jacobson, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Elias Jaua warned that any
sanctions imposed by the US for its April 14 presidential ballot
would be met with punitive oil and trade measures.
RT,
21
April, 2013
Over
the weekend Jacobson commented on CNN en Espanol, stating that the
Venezuelan state moved too quickly in proclaiming Nicolás Maduro its
new president in light of tight electoral results, and that half of
the country’s public rejected the results.
When
Jacobson was asked whether the US would go so far as to impose
sanctions if Venezuela refused to recount poll results, she could not
confirm or deny the possibility.
In
response to Jacobson’s remarks, Foreign Minister Jaua said that his
country held the US responsible for the violence that followed the
election and has so far left eight people dead. He added that
Venezuela would respond in kind to any US sanctions.
"You
can be certain that in the face of sanctions of any kind we will
respond with economic, political, diplomatic actions to defend the
sacred right of the will of the Venezuelan people," Jaua noted
in an interview with broadcaster Telesur.
Maduro
was sworn in as president last Friday at a ceremony widely attended
by South American leaders, including Brazilian President Dilma
Rousseff and the presidents of Argentina and Cuba. No US diplomat
attended the ceremony.
Since
the election results were tallied the US State Department has
supported the idea of a recount, which has been a demand of
opposition candidate Henrique Capriles and his Justice First party.
The notion of a full or partial recount has been the subject of much
back-and-forth debate, though last Thursday the country’s electoral
board (Consejo Nacional Electoral) indicated that it would support an
audit.
Since
then, however, the electoral body seems to have retracted its support
for an audit. The board’s president, Tibisay Lucena, criticized as
an ally of the incumbent party, told domestic media that no one
should have “false expectations” regarding the results of a
potential audit, and reiterated that as far as the board was
concerned the vote’s results were final and irreversible.
Officially,
the US has yet to accept the results of Venezuela’s presidential
election, where Maduro was reported to hold 51 per cent of the vote
to Capriles’ 49 per cent.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.