2 Jun 2021

Legal hearings to start over Venezuela gold held by Bank of England

4:47 pm on 2 June 2021

A London court next month will hold hearings in a dispute between Venezuela's government and opposition over control of gold held in the Bank of England, the head of the South American nation's central bank has announced.

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaking  during a broadcast message at Miraflores Presidential Palace in Caracas on 4 April 2021.

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro attempted to have the gold released, but it has been kept by the Bank of England. Photo: AFP

The English Court of Appeal in October set aside a previous decision which concluded that opposition leader Juan Guaido was Venezuela's legitimate leader, in a victory for the government of President Nicolas Maduro.

The ruling sent the case back to the High Court for it to determine more definitively which of the two rival leaders is in charge.

"We are currently waiting for these hearings to take place, they should take place next month, the end of next month," said Calixto Ortega in a virtual forum held by Venezuela's Foreign Ministry.

"The reality in Venezuela is that there is only one government, which is led by President Nicolas Maduro."

The central bank last year sued the Bank of England to recover control of gold stored in the BoE vaults, which it said it would sell to finance Venezuela's response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The BoE refused to release the gold after the British government in early 2019 joined the US and its allies in backing Guaido on the basis that Maduro's election win the previous year had been rigged.

Guaido's press team did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Venezuela's opposition has alleged that Maduro wanted to use the money to pay off his foreign allies, which the government denied.

- Reuters

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