Venezuela, Iran strengthen relations
Published On: Aug 05 2014 11:57:11 AM EDT
Updated On: Aug 05 2014 12:00:26 PM EDT
Venezuelan Foreign Minister
Elias Jaua traveled to the Iranian capital of Tehran on Monday to meet
with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, aiming to strengthen diplomatic
relations between the two nations.
The top
Venezuelan diplomat was in Tehran to attend a one-day meeting of the
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Ministerial Committee on Palestine, held in
the Iranian capital.
President Rouhani
thanked Caracas for adopting what he considers "very good stances" on
Middle Eastern issues, particularly the Palestinian issue.
During the meeting, Iran reaffirmed its support for the Bolivarian government.
"We
must all join hands and unite against enemy plots and prevent the
enemies from putting pressure on the developing nations," said Rouhani.
To
date, Venezuela and Iran have signed 265 agreements deriving from 58
projects in the industrial, environmental, agricultural, commercial,
educational, sports, housing, cultural, energy and scientific and
technology areas.
Both the Iranian government
and the Venezuelan government agree in their support for the
Palestinian cause and not recognizing the legitimacy of the state of
Israel.
Florida delegation demands stronger sanctions against Venezuela
In
its strongest action against Venezuela, the State Department announced a
travel ban for officials of the socialist government it said committed
human rights abuses during a crackdown on opposition protests.
However,
the Florida congressional delegation, which has been out front on the
issue, called for stronger sanctions against Nicolas Maduro's
government.
The travel ban comes just days
after Venezuela secured the release of a former Venezuelan general who
had been detained in Aruba at the request of U.S. authorities. The U.S.
has accused Hugo Carvajal, the former head of Venezuela's military
intelligence, of using his high-level position to protect drug
traffickers.
Carvajal was expected to face
extradition to the U.S. Instead, Aruba released him and he flew back to a
hero's welcome in Caracas. The State Department accused Venezuela of
using threats against the Dutch Caribbean territory to circumvent
international justice, a charge denied by Venezuelan officials.
The
measure does not target every-day Venezuelans, only 24 high-ranking
Venezuelan officials including Cabinet ministers, senior judges and
high-ranking military, police and National Guard members.
The
State Department's announcement cited the months-long street protest
movement that left dozens of people dead earlier this year and said the
Venezuelan government had responded in many instances with "arbitrary
detentions and excessive use of force."
Jaua called the new sanctions a "desperate" act.
"We
understand all these attacks as a desperate cry from someone who knows
that the world is changing and they have no way of relating to it," said
the foreign minister during a news conference with national media.
"It's just another retaliation from the U.S. government against
Venezuela's role in shaping a new world."
U.S.
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., a chief advocate for increased U.S.
involvement in Venezuela who proposed similar sanctions in May, called
the travel ban a "first step" and urged the administration to do more.
Others on Capitol Hill said Congress should toughen the State
Department's measures by adding family members to the list of banned
Venezuelans and freezing assets.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered