Alex Saab, alleged financier for Venezuela's president, is extradited to the US and due in court Monday
One of President Nicolás Maduro's closest aides has been
extradited from Cape Verde to the United States, where he's been charged with
money laundering.
The US Treasury says Alex Saab worked as a front man for Mr
Maduro's regime.
The Venezuelan government suspended talks soon afterwards
with the US-backed opposition.
The talks were to resolve a political crisis that has led to
violence and the collapse of the economy.
The discussions had been due to resume this weekend in
Mexico.
The US Treasury accuses Mr Saab - a Colombian-born
businessman and Venezuelan envoy - of using his accounts in American banks to
launder the proceeds of corruption.
He was detained in June last year as his plane made a
stopover to refuel in Cape Verde.
Mr Saab said he was travelling on an official mission to
obtain medical supplies to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic. He denies all the
charges and says they are politically motivated.
The Venezuelan government has accused the US of kidnapping
diplomatic personnel and announced the suspension in negotiations with the
opposition that were set to resume this weekend.
Mr Saab was due to be a member of the government's
negotiating team in talks with the opposition in Mexico.
The suspension of talks was announced by ruling Socialist
party legislator Jorge Rodriguez, who heads the government's negotiating team.
Mr Rodriguez called the decision "an expression of our
deepest protest against the brutal aggression" against Mr Saab.
Mr Saab is accused of making large amounts of money from
overvalued contracts, as well as from Venezuela's government-set exchange rate
and centralised system of import and distribution of basic foods.
Venezuela has faced chronic shortages of food and medicine
as a result of years of political and economic crisis.
Venezuela's opposition has described Mr Saab as a front man
doing shady deals for the populist socialist regime of Mr Maduro.
Colombian President Ivan Duque tweeted that Mr Saab's
extradition was "a triumph in the fight against drug trafficking, money
laundering and corruption by the dictatorship of Nicolas Maduro".
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