Trump sanctions Venezuela vice president on drug trafficking

Tareck El Aissami has been the target of U.S. law enforcement for years over his alleged ties to Venezuela's largest convicted drug trafficker and a Middle Eastern militant group.

Por:
Univision y AP
Tarek El Aissami
Tarek El Aissami

The Trump administration slapped sanctions on Venezuelan Vice President Tareck El Aissami on Monday, accusing him of playing a major role in international drug trafficking.

PUBLICIDAD

The announcement was made on the Treasury Department's website late in the day.

El Aissami has been the target of U.S. law enforcement for years over his alleged ties to Venezuela's largest convicted drug trafficker and a Middle Eastern militant group.

The Treasury Department said El Aissami oversaw or partially owned narcotics shipments of more than 1,000 kilograms from Venezuela on multiple occasions, including shipments to Mexico and the United States.

"El Aissami facilitated shipments of narcotics from Venezuela, to include control over planes that leave from a Venezuelan airbase, as well as control of drug routes through the ports of Venezuela," a senior U.S. administration official told reporters.

A former Minister of Interior and Justice, U.S. authorities have had their eyes on El Aissami for some time. He is a hardline follower of Venezuela's deceased socialist president Hugo Chavez, and was linked to clandestine armed organizations as a forebrand student leader.

Of Syrian descent, his father headed the Venezuelan branch of the Iraqi Baath Party, while his great-uncle Shibli el-Aissami was a leading ideologue and assistant secretary-general of the Baath Party in Baghdad under Saddam Hussein.

As part of the action, El Aissami's U.S. assets were frozen and he'll be barred from entering the United States. A U.S. official estimated the value of property blocked in Miami was worth "tens of millions of dollars."

The U.S. government is also sanctioning Samark Lopez Bello, a wealthy Venezuelan businessman believed to be El Aissami's main front man.

PUBLICIDAD

There was no immediate reaction from El Aissami, but he has long denied any criminal ties.

The action is likely to further antagonize the United States' already tense relations with Venezuela, its harshest critic in Latin America.

In pictures: Tareck El Aissami, the meteoric rise of a radical Chavista

El Aissami is named on a list of government officials linked to drug trafficking, according to the Treasury Department, resulting in the freezing of his U.S. assets.
El Aissami during the inauguration of the new director of the state-owned oil company PDVSA, Jan 17, 2017.
El Aissami, then Minister of Interior, with Russian president Vladimir Putin, during a visit to Venezuela in 2010.
El Aissami, with Wilson Ramos, Venezuelan baseball player with the Washington Nationals. Ramos was rescued by Venezuelan authorities in 2011 after he was kidnapped.
El Aissami shows items confiscated in a raid of a drug lab on the Colombian border in 2011.
El Aissami (Ieft), with the former National Anti-drug Organization (ONA) Néstor Reverol, examining a seized drug plane in January 2010. A few months later both men were named by Venezuelan drug trafficker, Walid Makled, of being involved in his cocaine operations.
As Minister of Interior El Aissami created Venezuela's Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN) to replace ther former 'political police' DISIP.
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El Aissami is named on a list of government officials linked to drug trafficking, according to the Treasury Department, resulting in the freezing of his U.S. assets.
Imagen Wikicommons