Venezuelan president meets top US diplomat in Colombia
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has met with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Colombia amid tensions in Caracas-Washington relations.
“President @NicolasMaduro held respectful, top level meeting with @JohnKerry,” Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez Gomez said on her twitter account.
The brief talks were held on the sidelines of the ceremony for the formal signing of a historic peace deal between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebel group in the Caribbean city of Cartagena on Monday.
Commenting on the meeting, US State Department Spokesman John Kirby said Kerry “spoke of our concern about the economic and political challenges that have affected millions of Venezuelans, and he urged President Maduro to work constructively with opposition leaders to address these challenges.”
The spokesman further said the two sides also agreed to continue bilateral talks.
Last April, Maduro also held a brief meeting with US President Barack Obama at a regional summit, where the pair discussed bilateral relations.
Caracas’ relations with Washington have been tense for years over the US support for attempts to topple the government in Venezuela, which is struggling under an economy severely hit by low oil prices and inflation.
They do not have ambassadors in place following expulsions several years ago.
In March, Obama renewed Washington’s sanctions against Caracas, saying the situation in Venezuela was an “unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”
Venezuela has condemned such American measures as a sign of Washington’s perpetual hostility towards the Latin American nation.
SS