Some high-profile critics of the Maduro administration took the new ban as opportunity to slam the administration. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said in a statement that he didn’t need to come to Caracas to work against the regime.
“No matter where I am, I will continue exposing the murders, human rights abuses and economic disaster that Nicolas Maduro and his regime are responsible for in Venezuela,” he said.
Similarly, Sen. Bob Menendez, a Democrat from New Jersey, vowed that the ban would have no effect on his willingness to speak out against the Maduro government.
The U.S. recently imposed a travel ban on a list of top Venezuelan officials accused of human rights violations.
Foreign Relations Minister Delcy Rodriguez said Sunday she would work to put the new regulations in place quickly, and added that the new visa restriction was a question of fairness.
“It’s nothing unusual. Venezuelans have to pay in dollars just to apply for a visa to go to the U.S., even if they’re not granted one,” she said.
Maduro suggested Saturday that he could squeeze the number of U.S. functionaries permitted in Venezuela from a hundred people down to just a handful, a move which could complicate the processing of tourist visas for Venezuelans. The U.S. embassy in Caracas temporarily suspended new tourist visas for Venezuelans last year, citing staffing issues.
Tensions have been running high in Venezuela after a policeman killed a 14 year-old during an anti-government protest, and officials arrested the opposition mayor of Caracas. The bolivar has fallen to a record low on the widely used black currency market and Maduro’s approval ratings are languishing in the low 20 percent range.
Government critics rallied outside the Vatican’s diplomatic mission in Caracas last week to ask Pope Francis to intervene.
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