A US shipment of medicines and medical supplies to Venezuela signals a new era of cooperation
The United States has sent a shipment of medicines and medical supplies to Venezuela, reflecting what many say is a new spirit of cooperation between the two countries

A shipment from the United States of medicines and medical supplies arrived in Venezuela on Friday, reflecting the new spirit of cooperation between the two countries following the stunning capture last month of then-President Nicolás Maduro.
Laura Dogu, the U.S. top diplomat in the South American country, and Venezuelan diplomat Félix Plasencia, received the shipment containing 6 metric tons of medications at the airport outside Venezuela's capital, Caracas.
“It’s very important to stabilize the health system here in Venezuela,” Dogu told reporters at the airport in Maiquetía. She added that the shipment was “the first of many donations” that will arrive “in the coming days.”
Venezuela's complex crisis, which began more than a decade ago, led to the collapse of the country's public health care system. Hospitals are so poorly equipped that patients are asked to provide supplies needed for their care, from syringes to surgical screws.
Plasencia described the donation as a "message of cooperation among two sovereign countries.
"We’re doing the best for our people," he said.
Bookmark popover
Removed from bookmarks