The Guardian, Reuters, Saturday 26 November 2011
Vehicles carrying gold bars drive past Miraflores Palace in Caracas. Photograph: Reuters |
A first
shipment of gold bars arrived in Venezuela on Friday after President Hugo Chávez ordered almost all of the country's foreign bullion reserves to be
repatriated from western bank vaults.
Experts
have cautioned that the operation, which will eventually transport more than
160 tonnes of ingots worth more than $11bn (£7.1bn) to Venezuela – will be
risky, slow and expensive.
Central
bank chief Nelson Merentes did not say how much gold was brought back in the
first shipment.
The bars
were unloaded at Maiquetia international airport, driven across the runway and
packed on to pallets with an armed soldier riding on top, before being
transferred to several grey armoured cars for the journey to Caracas.
"They
say Chávez is going to take the gold … and give it to Cuba as a gift," the
president chuckled yesterday, mocking rivals who accuse him of planning to sell
the ingots to fill his warchest ahead of next year's presidential election.
"It's
coming to the place it never should have left … the vaults of the Central Bank
of Venezuela, not the bank of London or the bank of the United States," he
said. "It's our gold."
A senior
government source involved in transporting the bars, which amount to 90% of
Venezuela's gold held abroad, has said they will be shipped in several cargo
flights before the end of the year.
"The
gold comes from European countries," Merentes told reporters at the
airport. "We cannot give exact dates [for the arrival of the other gold]
due to questions of security. When we bring the last shipment, the people will
learn about it."
Chávez
announced the repatriation in August as a sovereign step that would help
protect Venezuela's foreign reserves from economic turbulence in the US and
Europe. It also was seen as a populist measure ahead of next October's
election, when the socialist leader will seek another six-year term.
Next year's
vote is likely to be contentious, and some critics suggest Chávez is worried
about Venezuela's foreign reserves being frozen - as happened to Muammar
Gaddafi.
The
repatriattion also reduces the risk of assets seizures related to arbitration
cases, including those linked to the nationalisation of oil projects run by big
US companies.
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