Venezuela gate-crashes meeting with regional powers
Venezuela's top diplomat turned up uninvited to a meeting of the South America's Mercosur on Dec. 14, despite Caracas' suspension from the trade bloc for failing to meet democratic and trade standards.
Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez pushed her way through a crowd of riot police and journalists to enter the Argentine Foreign Ministry in Buenos Aires where the extraordinary meeting was held.
"These [Mercosur] presidents insist Venezuela can't participate," she told reporters outside the building.
"Well we'll come in through the window because we're here to defend Venezuela's rights and also defend the rights of Mercosur."
She later tweeted a picture of herself inside the conference room.
But her colleagues - who had explicitly said Venezuela was not invited - excluded her from the meeting, Argentine Foreign Minister Susana Malcorra said.
The other Mercosur countries - Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay - had suspended Venezuela earlier this month for failing to ratify rules on trade, politics, democracy and human rights.
In a surreal turn, Venezuela insists it still holds Mercosur's rotating presidency - a claim Rodriguez repeated on Dec. 14.
But Malcorra said Argentina had in fact taken over the presidency at the meeting.
Speaking in Havana, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro took a defiant tone.
"Nothing and nobody is going to remove us from Mercosur because Mercosur belongs to the people," he insisted, accusing an alliance of "ultra-right" governments in Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay of trying to destroy the bloc.
Venezuela's neighbors are becoming increasingly wary of developments in the once-booming oil giant.
Maduro has presided...
- Log in to post comments