US offers $15m reward for information leading to arrest of Venezuela’s President, Nicolás Maduro

0

US offers $15m reward for information leading to arrest of Venezuela?s President, Nicol?s Maduro

The United States Government has offered a $15m reward for any
information leading to the arrest of Venezuela’s President, Nicolás
Maduro.

The announcement came after the United States Department of
Justice indicted Venezuela’s socialist leader Nicolas Maduro and several
key aides on charges of narco-terrorism on Thursday March 26.

US offers $15m reward for information leading to arrest of Venezuela?s President, Nicol?s Maduro

Maduro and more than a dozen Venezuelan officials including the
country’s chief justice were charged with narco-terrorism. The socialist
leader and other Venezuelan officials were accused of conspiring with
Colombian rebels “to flood the United States with cocaine”.

The US Department of Justice said;

“We estimate that somewhere between 200 and 250 metric tonnes of
cocaine are shipped out of Venezuela by these routes. Those 250 metric
tonnes equates to 30 million lethal doses.

“The Venezuelan people deserve a transparent, responsible,
representative government that serves the needs of the people – and that
does not…. engage in illicit narcotics trafficking.

“These individuals violated the public trust by facilitating
shipments of narcotics from Venezuela, including control over planes
that leave from a Venezuelan air base.”

US offers $15m reward for information leading to arrest of Venezuela?s President, Nicol?s Maduro

After unsealing the indictment, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
announced that the State Department would offer cash rewards of up to
$55m for information leading to the arrests or convictions of Maduro and
four of his associates. The rewards, up to $15m for Maduro and up to
$10 million each for the others, are being offered under the
department’s Narcotics Rewards Program, which has paid more than $130m
in awards for information regarding some 75 drug traffickers since it
was created in 1986.

Though Maduro is yet to comment on the charges, it is speculated
that the action could boost Trump’s re-election chances in the key swing
state of Florida, which he won by a narrow margin in 2016 and where
Venezuelans, Cubans and Nicaraguans fleeing authoritarian regimes have
political muscle.

US offers $15m reward for information leading to arrest of Venezuela?s President, Nicol?s Maduro

Mr Maduro narrowly won a presidential election in April 2013 after
the death of his mentor, President Hugo Chávez. He was elected to a
second term in May 2018 in an election seen as flawed by international
observers.

Venezuela has experienced economic collapse, inflation was 800,000% last year and three million people have left the country.

Though opposition leader opposition leader, Juan Guaidó who has won
the support of many in the country as well as US and EU leaders has
continously accused President Maduro of being unfit for office, the
socialist leader has however remained in power and is backed by Russia,
China and Cuba.

Leave a Reply