Saturday, March 14, 2026
More
    HomeAmericaVenezuela and Colombia discuss security as Rodriguez calls for end to US...

    Venezuela and Colombia discuss security as Rodriguez calls for end to US sanctions

    -

    By Vivian Sequera, Mayela Armas and Luis Jaime ‌Acosta

    CARACAS/BOGOTA, March 13 (Reuters) - High-level Colombian officials, including the ministers of foreign relations and defense, met with their Venezuelan counterparts ​in Caracas on Friday in what acting Venezuelan President Delcy Rodriguez said were productive meetings, as she called for a end to U.S. sanctions against her country.

    The meeting, the first in-person between the two ⁠neighboring South American countries since the ouster in early January of former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, was focused on energy cooperation, security and trade, Rodriguez said.

    Originally, Rodriguez had been slated to meet with Colombian President Gustavo Petro in what would have been her first presidential-level bilateral, but that was canceled due to what ​the governments said was "force majeure," without elaborating.

    Rodriguez, speaking after meeting with the ministers, said collaboration between the two countries would be hugely fruitful economically and would fulfill the vision of their joint founder, ‌South American liberation hero Simon Bolivar.

    "And I want to take this opportunity to also send a message to the president of the United States, Donald Trump, to make it clear that unilateral coercive measures against the Venezuelan people affect the peoples of our Latin America," said Rodriguez.

    "The call is for sanctions against Venezuela to be ⁠lifted."

    Rodriguez, formerly vice president, has been seeking to attract investors in oil and mining as she attempts to stabilize the country since the ⁠capture of Maduro by U.S. forces. Trump has repeatedly praised her, and she has welcomed U.S. officials and potential investors to Caracas. The U.S. and Venezuela have also formally re-established diplomatic ties.

    Washington on Friday said it was expanding sanctions waivers on Venezuela to ease investment in energy and allow for fertilizer exports.

    PIPELINE REPAIRS

    Among those who traveled to Caracas were Colombian defense minister Pedro Sanchez, who met with his counterpart Vladimir Padrino to coordinate security strategies for the shared 2,200-kilometer (1,370-mile) border. Foreign ministers ‌Rosa Villavicencio of Colombia and Yvan Gil of Venezuela also discussed cooperation, they said.

    "We have a very active border, and we are calling — and this is ⁠what I welcome about that meeting — for immediate coordination, for the permanent exchange of information...in order to combat drug ‌trafficking, for example," Rodriguez said.

    Trump has repeatedly demanded more cooperation from Colombia in the fight against drug trafficking. ​Petro says there have been record drug seizures during his tenure.

    Petro, who had a cordial relationship with Maduro, has had numerous squabbles with Trump, though the two men were each positive after a face-to-face meeting in Washington last month and had a friendly call on Thursday, according to Petro's office, during which they ‌discussed the economy along the Venezuela-Colombian border.

    Colombia and Venezuela have deep historical and cultural ties, especially in border ​areas where many families are bi-national. Nearly 3 million Venezuelan migrants have ⁠settled in Colombia in recent years, fleeing economic collapse in their home country.

    Colombia recorded a trade surplus with Venezuela of $973.4 million in ‌2025, exporting goods like food, tobacco, chemicals, plastics and machinery, according to Colombian statistics ⁠agency DANE. Imports from Venezuela totaled $98.3 million and included iron and steel, fertilizer and paper.

    At the meeting, energy officials including Colombian energy minister Edwin Palma and head of state oil company Ecopetrol Ricardo Roa discussed in more detail a project announced earlier this week between Ecopetrol and Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA to repair a damaged ​section of a binational pipeline that will allow Bogota ‌to import natural gas from its neighbor.

    PDVSA will carry out the repairs on the Antonio Ricaurte gas pipeline, which has been inactive for years, Colombia's energy ministry said ⁠in a Thursday statement.

    The pipeline stretches 225 kilometers (140 miles) and has a ​transport capacity of 500 million cubic feet of gas.

    (Reporting by Vivian Sequera and Mayela Armas in Caracas and Luis Jaime Acosta in Bogota, additional reporting ​by Nelson Bocanegra, writing by Julia Symmes Cobb, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)

    tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM2C1EF-VIEWIMAGE

    tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM2C1EG-VIEWIMAGE

    tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM2C1EH-VIEWIMAGE

    Author

    Stay Connected

    1,800FansLike
    259FollowersFollow
    121FollowersFollow
    1,263FollowersFollow
    90,000SubscribersSubscribe

    Related articles

    Latest posts

    Share on Social Media

    spot_img