Venezuela on sanctions Nicolas Maduro
Nicolas Maduro

Nicolas Maduro

CARACAS. — Venezuela’s defence minister says new tighter sanctions imposed on the country by the US are aimed at fomenting violent turmoil in the Latin American nation in a bid to topple its government. “This US interference is aimed at promoting violence . . . against our institutions” in an effort to overthrow major Washington critic (Venezuelan) President Nicolas Maduro,” said Vladimir Padrino on Saturday during an interview with Telesur Television.

The development followed US President Barack Obama signing into law Thursday a bill that allows imposing sanctions against senior Venezuelan authorities accused by the US-backed opposition elements of violating the rights of anti-government protesters in rallies across the country earlier this year.

“The background of all this is much more nuanced. It is dangerous because these are the steps they are taking, so that they can try to have the world see the Venezuelan state as a failed one,” Padrino emphasised.

Meanwhile, Maduro has persistently charged that the US is instigating the protest campaign against his government in a bid to overthrow him and even engineer his assassination. The Venezuelan president also condemned the latest sanctions law against his nation in a series of Twitter posts this week, describing it as a “misstep” that resembled Washington policy of isolating Cuba, which was ultimately overturned Wednesday as Obama and Cuba’s President Raul Castro declared a bilateral rapprochement. — Press TV

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