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US reopens embassy in Venezuela months after military operation to remove Maduro

· English· 南华早报

he US embassy in Caracas, Venezuela on Monday.

The State Department said Washington had officially resumed operations at the embassy.

Photo: EPA The United States has formally reopened its embassy in Caracas, Venezuela, after the restoration of full diplomatic relations with the South American country following the Trump administration’s removal of then-president Nicolas Maduro in early January.

The State Department announced on Monday that it had resumed normal operations at the embassy in Caracas – which had been in need of significant repair, including remediation from mould – after a seven-year closure that began during US President Donald Trump’s first term.

A small team of US diplomats, based in neighbouring Colombia, has been working in Caracas for more than a month and hosted a flag-raising ceremony on March 14 but the embassy itself had not yet been reopened until Monday. “The resumption of operations at US embassy Caracas is a key milestone in implementing the president’s three-phase plan for Venezuela and will strengthen our ability to engage directly with Venezuela’s interim government, civil society and the private sector,” the State Department said.

It said the move marked “a new chapter in our diplomatic presence in Venezuela”.

Work to restore the consular section of the embassy, where Americans and Venezuelans must go for passport and visa services, is not yet complete and those seeking help still need to contact the US embassy in Bogota, the department said.

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