US imposes more sanctions on Venezuelans

Reuters a Venezuelan flag during riots at a march to state Ombudsman"s office in Caracas, Venezuela May 29, 2017.Reuters
Falling oil prices, political unrest, and corruption have decimated Venezuela's economy.

The US has imposed sanctions on four serving or retired Venezuelan generals for rights abuses or corruption.

The list includes Rodolfo Marco Torres, whom the US Treasury sanctioned for food smuggling when he was in charge of the country's distribution network.

All the men have had their assets frozen and US businesses are forbidden from working with them.

Forty-four Venezuelan officials have been sanctioned to date including President Nicolás Maduro.

Venezuela has angrily dismissed the move with its Foreign Minister, Jorge Arreaza, saying the country would never submit to what he called the imperialist and war-mongering forces of the US government.

He said the army "will never bow to any foreign power, much less to the imperialist and warlike forces of Donald Trump's supremacist government. We demand respect".

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin justified the sanctions by saying that "President Maduro and his inner circle continue to put their own interests above those of the Venezuelan people".

Under the Treasury order, the governor of Aragua state, retired General Rodolfo Clemente Marco Torres, stands accused of involvement in food smuggling.

Two years ago President Maduro put the military in charge of food distribution after shortages led to food riots.

US press reports described military kickbacks to generals for food contracts and bribes to move food out of ports.

The opposition-led National Assembly pointed the finger at Gen Torres and publically censured him.

Separately, prosecutors in the US began investigating the allegations believing some of the bribes had passed through the US financial system.

Another retired general and the former governor of Bolivar state, Francisco José Rangel Gomez, is accused of pressuring Venezuelan courts to release suspected members of armed pro-government gangs.

General Fabio Enrique Zavarse Pabón, commander of an area including the capital Caracas, is accused of using National Guard troops to violently repress street protests.

Major General José Izquierdo Torres is accused of using his position for illicit enrichment.