Venezuela arrests two Chevron executives amid oil purge

Reuters  |  CARACAS/HOUSTON 

By Alexandra and Parraga

Venezuelan Sebin intelligence agents burst into the Petropiar joint venture's office in the coastal city of on Monday and arrested the two Venezuelan employees for alleged wrongdoing, a half-dozen sources with knowledge of the detentions told

and company did not respond to a request for information about the detentions, which come amid a crackdown on alleged graft in the sector.

One of the detainees, Carlos Algarra, is a Venezuelan engineer and expert in upgrading whom Chevron had brought in from its operations. The other, Rene Vasquez, is a procurement adviser, according to his profile.

The U.S. confirmed the arrests, which are believed to be the first to affect a foreign company's direct employees.

"is aware that two of its Venezuelan-based employees have been arrested by local authorities," Chevron said in a statement.

"We have contacted the local authorities to understand the basis of the detention and to ensure the safety and wellbeing of these employees. Our legal team is evaluating the situation and working towards the timely release of these employees."

A Chevron declined to provide further details on the case or the status of its operations. The U.S. State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The arrests highlight risks for foreign companies in Venezuela, home to the world's biggest crude reserves but heaving under a fifth straight year of recession. Some insiders say a ruling elite is using the purge to wage turf wars or settle scores.

"Our view has been that industry companies would do well to be cautious and stop assuming that good relations with can last forever due to a common interest in pumping oil," said Raul Gallegos, with the consultancy Control Risks.

"The level of corruption in PDVSA, especially under a military administration, can and will trump production logic."

since last year has overseen the arrest of dozens of executives, including the former and

The purge comes years after industry analysts began criticizing for widespread graft. The government long decried such accusations as "smear campaigns." But last year, Maduro changed his tone and started blaming "thieves" for rampant graft in the sector and an economic crisis that has spawned malnutrition, disease and emigration.

Vowing a cleanup, Maduro replaced many jailed executives with soldiers, but the unpopular management has spurred a wave of resignations.

(Reporting by Alexandra in Caracas and Parraga in Houston; Additional reporting by in Houston; Editing by and Matthew Lewis)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 18 2018. 03:11 IST