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3/19/2020

Statement by Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin Following Meeting on Venezuela | U.S. Department of the Treasury

Statement by Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin Following Meeting on
Venezuela
April 19, 2018

I welcomed colleagues from the Western Hemisphere, Europe, and Japan to discuss the
humanitarian and economic catastrophe in Venezuela. The policies of the regime of President
Maduro have consequences that extend beyond Venezuela’s borders, threatening regional
stability and national security.
Participants in the meeting agreed that the Maduro regime’s destruction of the economy has
created a full-blown humanitarian crisis that is driving a major exodus of Venezuelan citizens.
They reviewed migration flows out of Venezuela to destination countries around the world,
including a sharp acceleration in departures as Venezuelans flee the lack of security and
economic opportunity. They took note of the call by the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees to assist countries in the region that are absorbing Venezuelan migrants, to which Vice
President Pence announced a significant United States contribution.
President Maduro continues to refuse o ers of international humanitarian assistance to address
the health and welfare of Venezuela’s increasingly impoverished population. His government
instead has directed dwindling food imports to a government-run distribution network.
Participants reviewed how the government’s control over food distribution is a mechanism for
social control, and they received a briefing – based on shared financial intelligence – on the
known identities of corrupt individuals who are stealing from this program.
Concrete actions are necessary to restrict the ability of corrupt Venezuelan o icials and their
support networks from abusing the international financial system. We agreed to strengthen
international cooperation and continue to share information through appropriate channels on
the assets of such individuals and networks.
Looking forward, participants recognized that a government in Venezuela that warranted the
support of the region, and was prepared to enact economic policies to reclaim Venezuela’s
prosperity for its people, would receive the support of the international financial community.
Creditors, whether private or public, that provide new financing to the Maduro regime are
lending to a government that lacks legitimacy to borrow in the name of Venezuela. Noting the
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3/19/2020

Statement by Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin Following Meeting on Venezuela | U.S. Department of the Treasury

decline in Venezuela’s petroleum output, and Venezuela’s defaults on external obligations,
participants concurred that recovery will take time, and require significant external support.
Participating countries agreed to remain in coordination, such that the tools of the international
community are prepared for swi deployment when circumstances warrant.
* The following countries were represented at the meeting: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia,

France, Germany, Guatemala, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Spain, the United
Kingdom, and the United States.
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