South America

US Sanctions Venezuelan 'Dictator' Nicolás Maduro

The sanctions are a reaction to a controversial vote that critics say will give Maduro power to rewrite Venezuela's constitution.

US Sanctions Venezuelan 'Dictator' Nicolás Maduro
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Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has been directly sanctioned by the U.S. after he orchestrated a controversial vote to form a "constituent assembly."

National Security Council head H. R. McMaster told reporters: "Maduro is not just a bad leader. He is now a dictator."

The new sanctions will freeze any of Maduro's assets under U.S. jurisdiction, though the White House didn't comment on what those assets might be. The measures also block U.S. persons from dealing with Maduro.

US Urges Venezuela To Cancel Vote, Sanctions 13 Officials
US Urges Venezuela To Cancel Vote, Sanctions 13 Officials

US Urges Venezuela To Cancel Vote, Sanctions 13 Officials

The White House is holding back on sanctioning the entire country or its prosperous oil industry out of concern it would make matters worse.

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Maduro recently declared victory in a nationwide vote to form a new governing body that can rewrite Venezuela's constitution. The opposition boycotted the vote, arguing it would give Maduro undemocratic new powers.

The country was gripped by widespread, and sometimes violent, protests during the months leading up to the vote. Around 120 people have been killed in the past four months of unrest.