Chinese business owner in Venezuela warns of knock-on effects following Maduro’s abduction

Eight years after leaving Venezuela, David Hou, a native of southern China’s Guangdong province, returned last year, pleased to find what he described as an improved economic environment.

That optimism is now shrouded in uncertainty after the United States abducted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on allegations of narcoterrorism and possessing “destructive devices” – charges he has firmly rejected.

While the full impact has yet to be felt, the situation is “making people anxious and very cautious”, said Hou, who co-runs a supermarket business in Caracas.

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“If the government and the US remain locked in confrontation, with the situation uncertain and sanctions continuing, ordinary people’s lives will become very difficult and overseas Chinese investments will also be affected,” he said.

The Venezuelan government has vowed to maintain independence from US control. Delcy Rodriguez – Maduro’s former vice-president, who has nevertheless offered to cooperate with the Trump administration – was formally sworn in as interim president on Monday.

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Like Hou, many Chinese, mostly from his home city of Enping in Guangdong province, were lured back to the South American nation over the past couple of years as the economy stabilised and security improved.

South China Morning Post

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