The regime and the opposition are negotiating in Mexico to find a solution to the country’s precarious situation
Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro has made the lifting of sanctions as part of the dialogue between the government and the Venezuelan opposition in Mexico City a condition for holding elections in the Latin American country. In this sense, he specified that the sanctions weighing on the oil industry “contrary to the laws of free trade” and “free production”, while at the same time stressing that the recent measures taken by the United States, which allowing the oil company Chevron to resume its extraction activities in Venezuela in a “limited” manner, “are not enough”.
“We are going to achieve sooner rather than later that Venezuela is freed from all criminal sanctions: 763 criminal sanctions that are like a sword around the neck and neck of all Venezuelans and all Venezuelans,” he said. Maduro has also set out, as reported by the Venezuelan television network, that the government will “again promote dialogue” as Caracas wants “elections free from sanctions” and “free from unilateral coercive measures”.
“I wanted to celebrate with you the success of the agreement. I think they brought me the agreement that was signed in Mexico last Saturday, November 26,” he said, adding that it was an “intensively elaborated” pact, with components of a “social nature.” “The essence is to recover more than $3 billion that has been detained, frozen and kidnapped from bank accounts in the United States and Europe belonging to the Venezuelan state,” he assured at a press conference.
Source: La Verdad

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