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Venezuelan interim President Rodriguez meets with US ambassador

The U.S. Embassy and Venezuelan government announced?on Monday? that Delcy Rodriguez, interim president of Venezuela, met with U.S. ambassador Laura?Dogu as the two nations gradually resume their bilateral relations which were broken in?2019.

In a press release, the government stated that the meeting was held at the Miraflores Presidential Palace to discuss "the agenda of work between the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (BVR) and the United States."

Foreign Minister Yvan Yvan Gil said on state television the conversation was about the "common agenda", including energy, trade, economic and political issues.

He said that Felix Plasencia - a former foreign minister who served as Venezuela's ambassador in China - will be traveling to Washington, D.C., to serve as Venezuela's 'diplomatic representative', within the next few days.

The government reported that Jorge Rodriguez, Rodriguez's brother and head of the National Assembly, was also present at the meeting. Gil, whom Dogu had met the weekend after her arrival in Caracas, also attended.

The statement said that "the governments of Venezuela and the United States are working on a roadmap for addressing bilateral interests, through diplomatic dialog and based on mutual respect and international laws."

On social media, the U.S. Embassy in Venezuela reported that Dogu had met with Venezuelan officials "to reiterate the three phases that U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio outlined three phases for Venezuela, including stabilization, economic recover and reconciliation, as well as transition.

After months of increased tensions, U.S. captured Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro one month ago. This triggered a series of changes, including the swearing-in of Rodriguez, passage of the flagship oil law reform and the release of some political prisoners. Rodriguez said that she wants "balanced, respectful and?international relations' with the U.S. Trump said the relationship between the U.S. and the interim government was going well.

The two countries have reached an agreement to export crude oil worth up to $2 billion to the United States. On Friday, Rodriguez announced that he would be introducing a "amnesty" law for hundreds of Venezuelan prisoners, something the human rights movement and the opposition had long sought. (Reporting and Editing by SonaliPaul)

(source: Reuters)