[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 82 (Tuesday, May 24, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H2967-H2968]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VENEZUELA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, I rise to discuss the ongoing crisis
in Venezuela due to the incompetence of its leader, Nicolas Maduro. No
matter what Maduro says, the crisis is his fault, not the fault of the
U.S., not the fault of the Organization of American States. Maduro and
his corrupt cronies are the ones to blame for this disaster--no one
else.
While the Obama administration has sometimes tried to concede to the
Maduro regime, it has only been reciprocated with no real positive
change or any way forward by Maduro. Even now, the U.S. Embassy in
Caracas has had to suspend appointments for Venezuelans who seek first-
time tourist and business visas due to staff shortages that it blames
on Maduro.
This is just the tip of the iceberg, Mr. Speaker. For a country that
is rich in oil reserves, it is the sign of incompetence and corruption
that Venezuela is struggling with empty grocery stores, shortages of
medicine, high inflation, and a plummeting economy.
Now Maduro is trying desperately to receive assistance from other
countries to save his corrupt regime. India has offered medicine in
exchange for Venezuelan oil, and China may offer loans to Venezuela in
exchange for oil. But these attempts are possibly too late, and
Venezuela may not be able to survive this incredible economic downward
spiral.
To put it simply, Mr. Speaker, Venezuela is on the verge of total
collapse, and what an impact that will have throughout our hemisphere.
It is not a matter of if. It is a matter of when.
On top of that, Venezuela is also facing medical shortages that have
become a humanitarian crisis. Recently, a group of Venezuelan
legislative members were in D.C., meeting with us to ask for
humanitarian assistance for their people and for medical supplies to
take care of the sick in Venezuela.
Now, these members are the opposition of Nicolas Maduro, but they
know that Maduro doesn't care about helping the people, so they are
rising up to the chore.
The Venezuelan Medical Federation has asked the Maduro regime to
accept humanitarian aid in order to handle the massive shortages of
medicine in the country, a request that has not been agreed upon by
Maduro. The Venezuelan Neurology Society reported that the shortage of
medicines for neurological conditions has reached around 90 percent.
The Venezuelan National Assembly has declared a humanitarian health
crisis that includes the lack of 872 essential medications. In April,
the Venezuelan newspaper El Nacional reported that the Venezuelan
Pharmaceutical Federation declared that the shortage of medicines in
pharmacies has reached 85 percent.
The lack of medicine, Mr. Speaker, impacts people from all walks of
life, from the elderly, to the sick, to the mentally ill, to the
children who cannot receive lifesaving care.
Individuals with serious illnesses have to go from pharmacy to
pharmacy, looking for the medicines. If they don't find them, they
either have to leave the country or try to smuggle the medicines in
through the underground black market. The situation in Venezuela can
also quickly become more violent and even more dangerous if the crisis
is not resolved quickly.
Maduro has issued emergency decrees, even though the National
Assembly rejected it, that will help him consolidate even more of his
power. Power? Maduro doesn't care about the food and medicine for the
people. All he cares about is having more power.
Last week Venezuela launched its biggest military exercise. Who is
invading Venezuela? Why did he do it? To scare the population and to
show the Venezuelan people his military might so as to prevent any
protests by the people. At the same time, the Venezuelan National
Assembly has called for its own country to be suspended from the
Organization of American States.
The crisis in Venezuela must wake up others in the region. The new
leaders of Argentina and Brazil are needed to bring the Southern Cone
together in the name of regional stability.
[[Page H2968]]
Where is the leadership in the United States? President Obama has yet
to add more names of human rights violators in Venezuela. Adding names
would prevent them from coming to the United States. This is a list
that is based on a law that I passed along with my Senate colleague,
Senator Marco Rubio. That law is going to expire, and we need to extend
it a few more years because those rights are being violated every day.
I talked about the economic hardships, but let's talk about the
political and human rights violations that are going on every day in
Maduro's Venezuela--they are committed by the Maduro regime--including
the unconscionable imprisonment of Leopoldo Lopez and scores of pro-
democracy activists.
The dire situation in Venezuela, Mr. Speaker, is out of control.
Let's see what we can do because the Venezuelan people deserve better
than a corrupt Maduro.
____________________