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Toughest US Sanctions Against Venezuela 'Yet to Come' - Bolton

© AFP 2023 / HO / Venezuelan PresidencyHandout photo released by the Venezuelan Presidency of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaking next to gold ingots in Caracas on March 22, 2018
Handout photo released by the Venezuelan Presidency of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaking next to gold ingots in Caracas on March 22, 2018 - Sputnik International
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WASHINGTON (Sputnik) - The United States has yet to impose its toughest sanctions against the government of Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela, US National Security Advisor John Bolton said in a statement on Thursday.

"As President [Donald] Trump clearly stated, the toughest sanctions are yet to come," Bolton said via Twitter. "Unless Maduro's usurpation ends, he and his cronies will be strangled financially. The window is closing."

In the meantime, Jesus Faria, Venezuela's former trade minister who sits on the parliamentary financial commission, told Sputnik that the United States had sanctioned a Venezuelan gold mining firm as a warning to foreign investors.

"These sanctions are a threat and a warning to all actors interested in this economic sector. The US has imposed a batch of sanctions over the last five years, causing an economic blockade of our country. They have been particularly aggressive in the past couple of years," Faria said.

The US Treasury has imposed several rounds of sanctions on Venezuelan state companies since January. On Tuesday, it sanctioned the state gold mining firm Minerven and its president, Adrian Antonio Perdomo Mata.

In this Tuesday, July 22, 2014, file photo, gold bars are stacked in a vault at the United States Mint, in West Point, N.Y. - Sputnik International
US-Based Citigroup to Sell Venezuelan Gold in Another Blow to Maduro - Reports

Recently, the UN has voiced concern about the impact of the American sanctions on the Venezuelans. Thus, the international body warned, the punitive measures might lead to greater economic deterioration in that country and will further affect people's well-being.

READ MORE: UN Concerned by US Sanctions' Possible Impact on Venezuelan People

The United States sided with Juan Guaido, the Venezuelan opposition leader who declared himself interim president in January. President Nicolas Maduro calls him a US puppet. The incumbent president is backed by Russia, China and several other countries.

READ MORE: Trump to Discuss Venezuela With Caribbean Leaders at Mar-a-Lago on Friday

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