No EU ambassadors attend Maduro’s second term inauguration

Nicolas Maduro, the president of Venezuela, gestures during a press conference in Caracas, Venezuela, 09 January 2019. [Miguel Gutierres/EPA/EFE]

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Thursday (10 January) begins a new term that critics dismiss as illegitimate, with the economy in free fall and the country more isolated than ever.

The 56-year-old leader will be sworn in at 1400 GMT by the Supreme Court rather than the sidelined, opposition-controlled parliament. He was re-elected in May in voting boycotted by the majority of the opposition and dismissed as a fraud by the United States, European Union and Organization of American States.

As the swearing-in gets under way, the OAS in Washington is to hold a special session on Venezuela.

With the exception of Mexico, the Lima Group — made up of 14 mostly Latin American countries — has urged Maduro to renounce his second term and deliver power to parliament, a demand Caracas blasted as incitement to stage a coup d’état.

Neither the EU nor the Lima Group — again except for Mexico — will send a representative to the inauguration. Countries that will be represented include Bolivia, Cuba, El Salvador, Nicaragua, China, Russia and Turkey.

Last May EU foreign ministers agreed new sanctions against Venezuelan officials involved in Maduro’s re-election, which they said “lacked any credibility”.

EU to 'swiftly' hit Venezuela with sanctions over election

EU foreign ministers today (28 May) agreed to “swiftly” adopt new sanctions against Venezuelan officials involved in Nicolas Maduro’s re-election, which they said “lacked any credibility”.

Maja Kocijancic, spokesperson to EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini, said that the EU sticks to its position that the presidential elections had not been free nor fair, and that it regretted that despite calls no fresh elections took place.

“In this context, the EU and its member states will not participate in the presidential inauguration session today. The EU will however continue its diplomatic and political engagement in support of peaceful political and democratic solution to the crisis in Venezuela, keeping the channels open with relevant stakeholders”, she said.

A former bus driver and union leader, Maduro is the handpicked successor of the late leftist firebrand Hugo Chavez.

Maduro has gained control of virtually all of Venezuela’s political institutions and enjoys the support of the military.

He says he feels stronger and more legitimate than ever, but many blame him for Venezuela’s economic woes, which have left much of the population living in poverty with shortages of basic foods and medicines.

The International Monetary Fund predicts that Venezuela’s economy will shrink by five percent next year with inflation — which reached 1.35 million percent in 2018 — hitting a staggering 10 million percent.

Maduro hit out at his regional detractors on Wednesday, threatening to take “diplomatic measures” against them if they refuse to recognize his reelection.

Last week the Lima Group called on Maduro to step down and hand power to the parliament ahead of “democratic elections.”

An angry Maduro slammed the Lima Group’s “interventionist and rude policy” and vowed to “defend the national interest.”

He warned his government would “take the most immediate and crude diplomatic measures” should those governments fail to change their position “within 48 hours.”

While the opposition in Venezuela has tried every means to dislodge Maduro, it remains fractured.

In March 2016, the opposition launched a failed bid for a recall referendum aimed at removing Maduro from office before the end of his term.

Many prominent opposition figures are either in jail or exile and various factions continue to squabble over power while the National Assembly, the one institution they control, has been left impotent after Maduro created the rival Constituent Assembly and filled the Supreme Court with loyalists who annul every decision made by parliament.

Washington has sanctioned a number of individuals in Venezuela as it cranks up the pressure on the Maduro government it blames for the country’s economic meltdown.

Maduro claims the sanctions cost the country $20 billion in 2018. The opposition says the government’s control of foreign exchange, which has been in place since 2003, has generated $300 billion in illicit gains.

According to the United Nations, 2.3 million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2015 to escape economic hardship.

Anti-government riots in 2014 left 43 dead, and at least 125 people died in months of protests in 2017.

Read more with Euractiv

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