Yahoo – AFP,
11 April 2015
Panama City (AFP) - Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro told an Americas summit on Saturday that he does not trust US President Barack Obama but is willing to talk to ease tensions.
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| Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro waves to journalists in front of the Atlapa Convention center in Panama City on April 10, 2015 (AFP Photo/Raul Arboleda) |
Panama City (AFP) - Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro told an Americas summit on Saturday that he does not trust US President Barack Obama but is willing to talk to ease tensions.
Maduro came
to the 35-nation summit in Panama to demand that Obama lift a sanctions order
against Venezuelan officials that describes Venezuela as a threat to US
National Security.
Fellow
leftist leaders from Argentina, Bolivia and Ecuador rallied behind Maduro, as
the US-Venezuela spat contrasted with the diplomatic thaw that Obama and Cuban
President Raul Castro were pursuing at the summit.
"I
respect you, but I don't trust you, President Obama," Maduro told the
Summit of the Americas, though Obama had already left the room to hold
bilateral talks with Colombia's president.
He
countered that it was Obama who "threatened" his country.
"I am
willing to talk with President Obama about this issue with respect and
sincerity whenever he wants," he said.
Maduro said
he has publicly and privately sought to speak with Obama ever since the
Venezuelan leader was elected two years ago, but his US counterpart "never
answered the messages that I sent him."
The
Venezuelan leftist leader said he has garnered millions of signatures in a
petition demanding the removal of the sanctions order, which Obama issued
against seven officials accused of committing abuses in an opposition
crackdown.
The White
House has since rowed back a bit, saying the use of the word "threat"
was standard wording for such executive orders and that Washington does not
really perceive Caracas as dangerous to US security.
The
sanctions follow earlier accusations from Maduro, who has charged Washington
with backing an opposition plot to overthrow him in a coup that he says would
have involved bombing the presidential palace.
The US
government has dismissed the charges as baseless.
The
sanctions have irritated other Latin American countries.
"The
response has been forceful, rejecting the executive order and demanding its
removal," Ecuador's leftist President Rafael Correa said. "Our people
will never again accept tutelage, meddling and intervention."
Bolivian
President Evo Morales said: "The Venezuelan people along with Latin
America and the Caribbean, we are not a threat to anybody."
While
Argentine President Cristina Kirchner also criticized the sanctions, she shook
hands with Obama at the summit.
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