Venezuela
expels top US diplomat, two others
Caracas
— President Nicolas Maduro ordered the expulsion of the top US
diplomat in Venezuela and two other embassy officials Monday,
accusing them of plotting acts of sabotage with the opposition.
30
September, 2013
Maduro
gave charge d'affaires Kelly Keiderling, who has held the post since
2011, and the two other diplomats 48 hours to leave the country.
"Yankees
go home, get out of Venezuela!" the leftist leader said in a
public address, adding that he had instructed Foreign Minister Elias
Jaua to throw out the three Americans.
The
United States and Venezuela have been without mutual ambassadors
since 2010, making Keiderling the most senior US diplomat in Caracas.
A
US embassy official told AFP that the two other diplomats, Elizabeth
Hunderland and David Mutt, work in the mission's political section.
The
official said the embassy had yet to receive an official notification
of expulsion from the government.
Maduro
said the diplomats had met with the "Venezuelan far-right"
-- as he calls the opposition -- to finance his opponents and
"encourage actions to sabotage the power system and the
economy."
Venezuela
has endured blackouts for years, and the government has accused the
opposition of plotting outages and economic sabotage before.
Earlier
this month, Maduro blamed the opposition for causing a major power
breakdown that affected 70 percent of the country.
Venezuela
has also faced more shortages of food and other basic goods in recent
months, which Maduro says is part of an opposition conspiracy to
foment protests.
"The
actions of the government of Barack Obama do not matter," Maduro
said Monday, accusing the US president of fomenting sabotage.
"We
will not allow an imperial government to bring money and see how they
can stop basic companies and stop the electricity to turn off all of
Venezuela."
He
said his government had "enough evidence" of the "hostile,
illegal and interventionist attitude" of US embassy officials.
Maduro
had expelled two US military attaches on March 5, hours before
announcing the death of president Hugo Chavez, accusing them of
promoting "destabilization projects."
Last
June, the two countries agreed to begin discussions aimed at
returning ambassadors to Caracas and Washington following a meeting
between US Secretary of State John Kerry met with Jaua.
But
Venezuela broke off the rapprochement in July after the now US
ambassador to the UN, Samantha Power, lumped Caracas with other
"repressive regimes."
The
president has adopted the anti-US rhetoric of Chavez since his mentor
named him as his successor before his death. Maduro won the April 14
election, which opposition candidate Henrique Capriles says was
fraudulent.
Last
week, Maduro scrapped his plans to take part in the United Nations
General Assembly in New York, claiming he had received threats.
After
returning from a visit to China, Maduro said last Wednesday that he
had received intelligence about two "highly serious
provocations," which prompted him to cancel the UN trip.
One
of the alleged threats "had been planned against my physical
integrity" and another could have involved violence in New York,
he charged.
The
government said it would present to the UN committee that deals with
the world body's operations the claims of "obstacles" put
up by the United States to prevent Maduro's visit.
Maduro
had also accused the United States of denying him access to its
airspace during his flight to China, which the State Department
denied.
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