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US-Venezuela conflict
WorldAmericas

IMF, World Bank say they are resuming dealings with Venezuela

The move follows the January ouster of Nicolas Maduro and could unlock billions in frozen assets for the Rodriguez administration

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Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez delivers a speech during a civil-military parade in Caracas on Monday. Photo: AFP
Reuters

The International Monetary Fund and ⁠the World Bank said on ⁠Thursday they had resumed dealings with Venezuela, which had been paused since 2019.

The move paves the way for a full IMF assessment of Venezuela’s economy for the first time in some 20 years and could eventually unlock billions of dollars in ‌funding via frozen special drawing rights.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said in a statement that the Fund, guided by the views of a majority of its members, was now dealing with Venezuela’s government under the administration of the South American nation’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez.

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The World Bank Group also issued a statement announcing it was resuming dealings with Venezuela’s government ⁠under Rodriguez. Its last loan, the statement said, was in 2005.

The resumption of a formal relationship comes ‌after US President Donald Trump’s administration in January ousted President Nicolas Maduro in a raid on Caracas. Since then, Washington has been working with Rodriguez and ‌is looking to expand the US presence in Venezuela’s oil and mining sectors.

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“This ⁠is a very important ⁠step for the Venezuelan economy,” Rodriguez said in a televised address, thanking Trump and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, ‌as well as others, for their help in normalising the relationship with the IMF.

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