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                                                                                    Updated  September 11, 2019

Venezuela: International Efforts to Resolve the Political Crisis


Background
The international community remains divided over how to
respond to the political crisis in Venezuela. The United
States and 54 other countries have formally recognized the
interim government of Juan Guaid6, who Venezuela's
democratically elected National Assembly named president
in January 2019. These countries have placed pressure on
authoritarian leader NicolAs Maduro, in power since 2013,
to leave office and allow a political transition to occur.
Other countries, such as China, Cuba, Nicaragua, and
Russia, have provided diplomatic, financial, and military
support to Maduro and sought to block anti-Maduro actions
within international organizations. A third group of
countries, including Mexico, Norway, Uruguay, and some
Caribbean nations, has remained neutral in the crisis.
These international dynamics appear to have contributed to
a political stalemate in Venezuela, even as conditions
within the country have deteriorated. On April 30, 2019, a
Guaid6-led uprising failed to garner enough military
support to compel Maduro to leave office. While some
observers maintain that Maduro is weak politically, others
fear a prolonged, potentially violent, standoff. Observers
hope that talks led by Norway, which began in May 2019,
lead to free and fair elections. Those talks have been on
hold, however, since the United States imposed new
sanctions on the Maduro government in August 2019.
Others hope that sanctions lead to fissures in the Maduro
government, which could prompt a political transition.
United Nations
The United Nations (U.N.) Security Council has discussed
the political and humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, but
divisions among U.N. members have stalled action. Russia
and, to a lesser extent, China support Maduro. The United
States and most countries in Europe and the Western
Hemisphere support Guiad6. Despite that polarization, U.N.
agencies are increasing humanitarian relief in Venezuela
after securing approval in April 2019 from Maduro and
Guaid6. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees and the
International Organization for Migration are coordinating to
serve some of the roughly 4.3 million Venezuelans who had
left the country as of August 2019 and the communities
hosting them. In July 2019, the U.N. High Commissioner
for Human Rights published a report documenting state
violence against civilians, which has included torture and
extrajudicial killings. On September 9, the High
Commissioner  criticized the Maduro government for failing
to implement the report's recommendations.
Organization of American States
The Organization of American States (OAS), a regional
multilateral organization that includes all 35 independent
countries of the Western Hemisphere (Cuba currently does
not participate), has focused attention on Venezuela's
political crisis. Since 2016, OAS Secretary-General Luis


Almagro has issued reports on the situation in Venezuela,
convened special sessions of the Permanent Council to
discuss regional responses to the crisis, and spoken out
against Maduro. Member states remain divided on how to
respond to the crisis, with countries in the Caribbean
Community  (CARICOM) particularly reluctant to intervene
in Venezuela's internal affairs. Many of those countries had
close ties with Venezuela under Maduro's predecessor, the
late president Hugo ChAvez, and until recently received
significant amounts of subsidized oil from Venezuela. In
2017, Maduro denounced the OAS  for meddling in his
country's domestic affairs and began a two-year process to
withdraw from the organization.
The OAS  requires 18 votes to pass a resolution of the
Permanent Council. In June 2018, 19 of 34 member states
passed a resolution stating that the May 2018 presidential
election in Venezuela lacked legitimacy and authorizing
countries to take measures, including sanctions, necessary
to hasten a return to democracy. In January 2019, the same
19 states approved a resolution that refused to recognize the
legitimacy of Maduro's second term, called for new
presidential elections, and urged all member states to adopt
measures to facilitate the prompt restoration of democratic
order in Venezuela. After Maduro withdrew his OAS
ambassador, the Permanent Council welcomed the
Venezuelan National Assembly's permanent representative
to the OAS on April 9, 2019. Some observers have praised
Secretary-General Almagro's activism on Venezuela, which
has included calling for international intervention in the
country. Others have asserted that he has sided too closely
with the opposition and is unlikely to help broker a
diplomatic solution to the current crisis.
Lima   Group
In mid-2017, efforts to reach a consensus at the OAS on
how to respond to the crisis in Venezuela appeared to stall.
On August 8, 2017, 12 Western Hemisphere countries
signed the Lima Accord, which rejected what it described
as the rupture of democracy and systemic human rights
violations in Venezuela. The signatory countries included
Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,
Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, and
Peru. In 2018, Guyana and St. Lucia joined the Lima
Group, which did not recognize Maduro's May 2018
reelection.
On January 4, 2019, 13 members of the Lima Group
(excluding Mexico) signed a declaration urging President
Maduro  not to assume power on January 10, 2019. The
countries resolved to reassess their level of diplomatic
engagement with Venezuela, implement travel bans or
sanctions on Maduro officials (as Canada and Panama
have), suspend military cooperation with Venezuela, and
urge others in the international community to take similar
actions. Under leftist President Andr6s Manuel L6pez


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