Washington to decide on Repsol's Venezuela activity:
U.S. envoy
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[April 11, 2019]
By Isla Binnie
MADRID (Reuters) - The United States will
make a decision about Spanish oil company Repsol's activity in Venezuela
in coming days, U.S. Venezuela envoy Elliott Abrams said on Thursday.
Since the United States imposed fresh sanctions on Venezuela and its
state-run oil firm PDVSA, the country's main oil and oil products
suppliers have been Repsol, Russian state oil major Rosneft, India's
Reliance Industries and trading houses Vitol and Trafigura, according to
sources and vessel-tracking data..
Repsol has said it fully complies with all legislation and sanctions
regarding Venezuela and closely monitors the situation on a
cargo-by-cargo basis.
Asked whether he had talked about Repsol's Venezuelan business during a
visit to Portugal and Spain, Abrams said Spanish officials had raised
the issue.
"This is a case that Repsol itself has raised in Washington and its
under very active discussion right now in Washington as well as here,"
Abrams said.
"I think there will be decisions made in Washington in the coming days
about this," he added, although he declined to discuss the nature of any
decision.
The White House is conducting a campaign to dislodge Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro from power and has backed opposition leader
Juan Guaido.
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U.S. Venezuela envoy Elliott Abrams arrives for a news conference at
U.S. Embassy in Madrid, Spain, April 11, 2019. REUTERS/Sergio Perez
Abrams said further sanctions by Europe against Maduro's government had
been discussed during his visit but that any decision needed to be made
by the European Union.
"We will impose the sanctions we think are called for," Abrams said,
adding that the EU had already taken some action of its own.
"That is an EU decision and we hope it is a subject of discussion in the
EU," he said.
Since November 2017, the EU has embargoed exports to Venezuela of
weapons and equipment for internal repression, as well as putting in
place a travel ban and an asset freeze on 18 officials accused of
violating rights and undermining democracy.
Brussels has said Europe is considering further sanctions if Venezuela
did not take steps toward a fair democratic process.
(Reporting by Isla Binnie; Writing by Paul Day; Editing by Kirsten
Donovan)
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