Caracas-Sana
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro announced that the first point of dialogue with the opposition in his country would be its abandonment of "coups d'état and calls for interventions and the invasion of Venezuela by external forces."
Maduro said in a televised address that "the second point is their disclosure of all the resources that they handed over to the US government and the return of all bank accounts, the Sitgo Venezuelan oil refining company based in the United States, and the Colombia-based petrochemical company Monomeros to the hands of the Venezuelan state."
The Sitgo subsidiary of the state oil company of Venezuela is one of the most important Venezuelan assets abroad.
Maduro announced earlier in the week that he was ready for dialogue with the leader of the right-wing opposition, Juan Guaidó, via Norway or any other mediators.
For years, Venezuela has been subjected to US attempts to interfere in its internal affairs and destabilize it by tightening economic and financial sanctions and supporting right-wing forces to revive their plans to dominate this country that has huge oil wealth and to turn against the legitimate president by using all means, including violence and chaos.