Official: Venezuela Tried to Pressure Aruba
Aruba's top prosecutor said Tuesday that Venezuela ratcheted up various
types of pressure against the Dutch Caribbean island and the Netherlands
in recent days to try to win the release of a powerful former general
wanted on U.S. drug-trafficking charges.
But Chief Prosecutor Peter Blanken said the "actions against Aruba" were
not the reason authorities decided to free Venezuela's ex-military
intelligence chief, Hugo Carvajal.
Blanken told The Associated Press he believes Carvajal was freed because
the Dutch foreign minister, after reviewing the facts of the case,
decided he had immunity from arrests.
"There were several actions against Aruba from the Venezuelan
government. But as far as I'm concerned, Mr. Carvajal was released
because he was found to have diplomatic immunity," Blanken said in a
phone interview Tuesday.
Carvajal, who was designated to be Venezuela's consul to Aruba, was
detained at the Caribbean island's airport last week on a request from
U.S. prosecutors. U.S. authorities alleged Carvajal is one of several
high-ranking Venezuelan military and law enforcement officials who
provided haven to drug traffickers from neighboring Colombia and helped
them move U.S.-bound cocaine through Venezuela.
Venezuela protested the detention, citing diplomatic immunity, though
Carvajal had not yet been accredited as consul. Dutch Caribbean
officials say Venezuela responded by temporarily suspending flights to
Aruba and threatening to cut off fuel shipments to the neighboring
island of Curacao.
Carvajal was freed from a detention center late Sunday, shortly after
Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans decided he had diplomatic
immunity. However, he also declared Carvajal a "persona non grata" — a
term used by governments to remove foreign diplomats.
Dutch Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Annemijn van den Broek said the
decision was based solely on a review of the legal case. "In no way did
any pressure exercised by anyone influence our analysis," she said
Tuesday.
Blanken said U.S. media reports that Venezuela raised military pressure to try to secure Carvajal's release were "misleading."
Local authorities, he said, were alarmed early Sunday when several
Venezuelan naval ships were tracked close to the territorial waters of
Aruba. However, the Royal Dutch Marines found that the ships were on a
normal route.
"I did not perceive the movement of the ships as a threat since they
were coming back from (an exercise) on their way to their basis in
Puerto Cabello," said Aruban Justice Minister Arthur Dowers.
On Monday, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki had said
Washington was "disturbed by credible reports that have come to us
indicating the Venezuelan government threatened the governments of
Aruba, the Netherlands, and others" to obtain Carvajal's release.
Venezuela had publicly released a diplomatic note claiming it "could
cease diplomatic, economic, energy and commercial relations with the
Kingdom of the Netherlands," the State Department said Tuesday.
Carvajal returned to a hero's welcome in Venezuela. Before a cheering
crowd, President Nicolas Maduro said the former general was "rescued"
and called his return a "great satisfaction."
His roughly five-day detention in Aruba greatly exacerbated friction
between Venezuela and the tiny Dutch Caribbean island of roughly 102,000
people that is located about 15 miles off the South American country's
coast.
On Tuesday, Blanken said he was disappointed that Carvajal was not kept
in custody in Aruba and extradited to the United States, which he called
a "reliable partner."
"For Aruba and for people living in Aruba, it's a relief that he is gone
now. But as a public prosecutor, I am disappointed that he did not go
to the United States," Blanken said.
Psaki has said Washington was "deeply disappointed" by the Venezuelan's release and would continue to pursue him.
———
Associated Press writer David McFadden reported from Kingston, Jamaica.
AP writer Mike Corder contributed to this story from The Hague,
Netherlands.
David McFadden on Twitter: http://twitter.com/dmcfadd
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