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US extends protection to Venezuelan-owned Citgo against creditors

A notice on the Treasury Department's website showed that the U.S. Treasury Department had extended until early July a licence protecting Venezuelan-owned refiner Citgo Petroleum against creditors.

The move came after President Donald Trump's government terminated a license for Chevron that allowed it to operate in Venezuela.

Venezuela's opposition asked the U.S. for protection of Citgo - the crown jewel in the South American nation's overseas assets - as an American court proceeds this year with the auction of parent shares to pay its creditors.

After the auction, the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) must approve any new owners of shares. These owners will ultimately run Citgo's plants.

Venezuelan opposition leaders asked Trump's government to stop any funding to President Nicolas Maduro. Washington does not recognise his two reelections. This led to the cancellation of an authorization this month that allowed Chevron's to export Venezuelan oil since 2022.

The new license, which supersedes a previous authorization issued in early November, puts on hold until July 3 all transactions related to a bond maturing in 2020 issued by Citgo's ultimate parent, Caracas-headquartered PDVSA.

Citgo, and related U.S. companies, were sued by many bondholders for compensation after PDVSA defaulted.

Maduro, along with his government, have accused the U.S.A. of attempting to "steal Citgo". Washington hasn't recognized Maduro's re-elections in 2018 and sanctions have been imposed on Venezuela for the past six years. (Reporting and writing by Brendan O'Brien, Marianna Pararaga and Susan Heavey. Editing and proofreading by Leslie Adler and David Gregorio.

(source: Reuters)