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Holding limbo bar above head
Holding limbo bar above head












holding limbo bar above head

“ In 2012, Chavez withdrew 40% of this gold, leaving 50 tonnes there by 2015“. See table below of the distribution and location of Venezuela’s gold reserves as of August 2011.ĭistribution and locations of Venezuela’s gold reserves, August 2011, Source: BCV The BCV had 99.2 tonnes of gold stored at the Bank of England since 1980. “ From 1980 and up until 2011, Venezuela had 99 tonnes of gold at the BoE." True. Having previously done a detailed analysis of Venezuela’s gold and its repatriation, including the article “ Venezuela’s Gold Reserves – Part 1: El Oro, El BCV, y Los Bancos de Lingotes“, I can say that most of what Borges and Vecchio state looks accurate. However, since 2015, Maduro’s regime lost most of it as collateral in gold swap transactions, leaving fourteen tonnes, worth $550 million.“

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Consequently, by 2015, the BoE’s vaults held about fifty tonnes of Venezuelan gold. In 2012 Hugo Chávez withdrew forty percent of this gold as part of his plan to repatriate the majority of Venezuelan gold from American and European banks. The gold was entrusted to the BoE in 1980 by the democracy. “ In 2011, there were over 99 tonnes of Venezuelan gold in the BoE’s vaults, equivalent to $4.5 billion. Introduction of Borges-Vecchio letter to Bank of England governor, īefore looking briefly at the letter’s arguments for not allowing the gold to be withdrawn, its interesting to see how Borges / Vecchio explain how the now infamous 14 tonnes of gold came to be still sitting in the Bank of England’s vaults in London.

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Borges is a former Venezuelan national assembly (legislature) president and also founder of Venezuelan political party Primero Justicia (Justice First). Vecchio is co-founder of and coordinator for another Venezuelan political party Voluntad Popular (Popular Will).Ī summary of this letter and its background can be read in a 3 December Univision News article by David Adams in a link here. The actual letter in pdf format can be read here at this link -> Borges-Vecchio-Letter-to-the-BoE. Julio Borges and Carlos Vecchio, political opposition figures in Venezuela who sent a letter to the Bank of England Borges and Vecchio appeal to Mark Carneyįirst up was a letter to the Bank of England Governor Mark Carney, dated 30 November, from two dissident figures of the Venezuelan political opposition, Julio Borges and Carlos Vecchio. One reason the Bank might have been stalling was to wait for the introduction of US Executive Order 13850 which was signed on 1 November, imposing US economic sanctions on anyone doing business with the Venezuelan gold sector.Īs far as the BCV’s gold withdrawal request and the Bank of England’s refusal, nothing much happened in the public domain until early December when there came a flurry of news and activity showing that the Venezuelan custodied gold matter at the Bank of England was far from resolved, and indeed that the heat had been turned up a few notches by both sides. So the BCV had been looking for its gold back for sometime, and the Bank of England was stalling. The more logical and likely explanation is that the US, through the White House, US Treasury and State Department have been liaising with the British Foreign office, HM Treasury to put pressure on the Bank of England to delay and push back on Venezuela’s gold withdrawal request.”Īccording to the Reuters report dated 5 November, the Venezuelan central bank gold withdrawal plan had “ been held up for nearly two months”, which would put the original withdrawal request by the BCV to the Bank of England at a date in at least September and probably earlier.

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The reasons put forward by official sources in the Reuters and Times articles for why Venezuela can’t withdraw its gold from the Bank of England are clearly bogus. As I stated at the time in my conclusion: In all cases, these excuses were bogus, as I explained in the article “ Bank of England refuses to return 14 tonnes of gold to Venezuela” on the BullionStar website, dated 15 November, and that the real reasons for the Bank of England’s refusal were political. In early November news was placed into the British media (Reuters and The Times) revealing that the Bank of England in London, one of the world’s largest custodians of gold bars on behalf of other central banks, was refusing to allow the withdrawal and repatriation of 14 tonnes of gold belonging to Venezuela’s central bank, the Banco Central de Venezuela (BCV).Īccording to these media reports, the delays / refusals by the Bank of England to allow the Venezuelan gold repatriation ranged from excuses about the prohibitive cost of transport insurance to concerns about future money laundering.














Holding limbo bar above head