Nicholas Maduro | Maduro demands the right to vote for Venezuela in the UN General Assembly despite not paying his dues

11/05/2022 at 05:52

CET


The Venezuelan president has alleged that he does not pay them due to the sanctions imposed by the United States

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has demanded this Friday the Secretary General of the UNAntonio Guterres, that Venezuela regain the right to vote in the UN General Assembly despite not paying their country’s dues to the bodyclaiming that he cannot do so due to US sanctions.

On the occasion of the new support of the UN General Assembly for Cuba against the United States embargo achieved last Wednesday –with the vote in favor of a resolution against the blockade of 185 countries– Maduro has congratulated Cuba regretting not having been able to join in the vote.

“Great victory for Cuba, congratulations to the people of Cuba. It is a moral victory, a diplomatic, political victory that gives our countries full, absolute reason that the US empire must cease its criminal mechanisms of persecution; of torture against peoples,” the Venezuelan president emphasized in statements reported by the Venezuelan newspaper ‘Ultimas Noticias’.

In this sense, he has argued that Venezuela I cannot exercise your right to vote to support Cuba because “the financial blockade imposed by the United States” on the country “prevents having bank accounts to pay the fees and obligations in the UN.

“They have removed us from the voting system, we have the right to speak, but we do not have the right to vote, as a result of the sanctions,” Maduro asserted.

For this reason, the Venezuelan president has demanded from Guterres the right of his country to vote in the United Nations General Assembly, diminished by the “the blockade that prevents paying with the commitments with the multilateral entity”as reported by the aforementioned newspaper.

“It is an obligation, a duty of Guterres to resolve that Venezuela, having the resources, the money, can have the bank account to pay and have the right to vote there in the UN,” he stressed.

However, Maduro has stressed that, despite the fact that his country was unable to exercise the vote, yes he “fully” exercised the right to voicewhich is why Venezuela would have stood up “with its truth, with its Bolivarian voice” to say that it is with Cuba and “against the criminal 60-year blockade that has martyred, tortured and persecutes Cuba.”

On Wednesday, for the thirtieth time, Cuba drew the attention of the international community with this symbolic gesture, no direct political impact. On an annual basis, it serves to defend its political positions before the UN body in which all member states are represented.

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