
The Lima Group regional bloc participate in a summit in Lima, Peru May 3, 2019.
Peru's foreign minister Nestor Popolizio told a Wednesday press conference that his government has sent out invitations to some 100 countries to join the August 6 meeting of the 14-member Lima Group.
Among the invitees are Russia, China, Cuba, Bolivia and Turkey, the countries that have rejected the attempt by Western-backed Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido to overthrow the government and stood by elected Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
The US, which was the first nation to recognize Guaido and has since been aggressively promoting his cause, including encouraging the Venezuelan military to defect to Guaido's side, has also been invited to the August gathering.
Popolizio said that by seeking to gather both Guaido allies and those backing the Maduro government, Lima is "looking for a point of convergence that allows us to establish a credible dialogue" that might eventually pave the way for snap elections in the crisis-hit country. However, taking into account the sides' opposing takes on the Venezuelan issue, there is no talk about drawing up any binding document in the wake of the meeting.














Comment: Part of the solution? The whole solution should be to honor the Venezuelans' legitimately elected president, to support an economic return to solvency and to unequivocally respect Venezuela's right to self determination.
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