Russian military planes land near Caracas
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About $315 million of euros and greenbacks were transferred
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Bills allow Venezuela to use hard currency to skirt sanctions
Hundreds of millions of dollars in cash has been shipped from Russia
to Venezuela, providing a lifeline to the South American country as U.S.
sanctions limit its access to the global financial system.
A
total of $315 million of U.S. dollar and euro notes were sent in six
separate shipments from Moscow to Caracas from May 2018 to April 2019,
according to data reviewed by Bloomberg from ImportGenius,
which compiled Russian customs records it obtains through private
sources. The cash came from lenders run by the countries’ governments
and went to Venezuela’s development bank, the records show.
While
the money could be for any number of things -- like Venezuela
repatriating cash held overseas or dividends from a stake in a
Moscow-based bank or revenue from sales of crude or gold -- the complex
logistical feat shows one of the ways President Nicolas Maduro’s
administration has sought to skirt aggressive U.S. financial sanctions.
As a consequence of the scrutiny, the central bank is conducting more
transactions in cash, sometimes offering local clients access to euro
bills.
ImportGenius’s data goes through April this year. That month,
about $97 million in notes were sent in two loads from Moscow-based
bank Evrofinance Mosnarbank
to Venezuela’s Banco de Desarrollo Economico y Social de Venezuela, or
Bandes. Evrofinance is a joint venture between Bandes and Russia’s state
property management agency.
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In January, $113 million worth of 100-euro bills were sent
from state-controlled lender Gazprombank, which at the time had a stake
in Evrofinance. The same entity shipped $50 million in U.S. dollar bills
just two days earlier, and two separate shipments of unspecified
currency totaling $55 million were made in May and July of last year.
Press
officials for Evrofinance didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Requests made to Bandes through Venezuela’s Finance Ministry were
redirected to the Information Ministry, which didn’t respond.
A
Venezuelan government official, who asked not to be identified
discussing sensitive matters, confirmed the country had received cash
shipments tied to Evrofinance but declined further comment.
Gazprombank spokesman Anton Trifonov declined to comment on
any cash shipments but noted that “the correspondent account of Bandes
with Gazprombank, as well as any cooperation between the banks, was
totally terminated in March 2019.”
The
Venezuelan regime has gone to great lengths to maintain access to hard
currency as the U.S. crackdown leaves it isolated from conventional
financial systems, with major banks mostly refusing to do business with
Maduro. Among other ventures, the regime has used secret gold sales to
raise funds, while also studying the possibility of using
cryptocurrencies or a Russia-run global payment system to send money.
Bandes was sanctioned
in March by the U.S., which alleged Maduro uses the bank’s accounts to
keep a substantial amount of money abroad, mostly in Europe. The
officials said the Venezuelan government had started moving funds away
from the central bank, shifting them to Bandes.
Last year, Evrofinance was selected by the Maduro government
to handle some payments to its suppliers, which were urged to channel
international transactions through the Moscow bank. Later that year,
Venezuela appointed a former Evrofinance board member as a top official in the nation’s banking system.
ake Rudnitsky, and Ben Bartenstein
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