Multiple insiders briefed on the planned itinerary have confirmed to independent outlet Middle East Eye that Venezuela’s interim president Delcy Rodriguez will embark on an official visit to Turkey this coming Monday, marking a key step in the Latin American nation’s new outreach to global partners following recent political shifts.
Sources familiar with the schedule note that the trip will include a high-stakes meeting between Rodriguez and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, scheduled to take place in Istanbul. The visit comes as an extension of Rodriguez’s ongoing regional and global tour, which has already included a week-long stop in India. During her time in New Delhi, she held extensive talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration on expanding bilateral cooperation in energy, trade and cross-border investment, according to prior updates from the trip.
Turkey and Venezuela have shared deep political and economic bonds for nearly a decade, a relationship rooted in mutual diplomatic support. For years, Erdogan maintained a close working relationship with former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who was removed from power and taken into US custody earlier this year. Maduro is currently being held at a detention facility in New York as he faces ongoing federal criminal charges. Following Maduro’s ouster, Rodriguez assumed the interim presidency with the formal backing of US President Donald Trump, and has overseen a steady expansion of American economic interests in Venezuela, including expanded operations for US oil giant Chevron.
The bilateral relationship between Ankara and Caracas was built on early reciprocal support. In 2016, right after a failed military coup attempt against Erdogan, Maduro was among the first global leaders to reach out and express solidarity—a gesture that laid the groundwork for years of growing cooperation. When the 2018 Venezuelan presidential election sparked controversy and the opposition-led National Assembly labeled Maduro an illegitimate leader in 2019, Erdogan publicly backed the then-president, telling him in a direct call: “Brother, you should stand firm. We are with you.”
By 2023, bilateral trade between the two nations had climbed to nearly $1 billion, with heavy focus on the mining and gold sectors that hold major untapped potential in Venezuela. The two countries have already laid formal groundwork for expanded cooperation: in February 2024, their respective energy ministries signed two memorandums of understanding covering collaboration in oil, natural gas and mining. Later that year, Maduro confirmed that the pair had also agreed to a deal allowing Turkish firms to extract gold from fields in southern Venezuela. For years starting around 2019, Turkey imported large volumes of Venezuelan gold in exchange for exporting manufactured goods to the Latin American country, though the trade arrangement shrank over time after it drew scrutiny from US regulators.
For years, widespread US sanctions imposed on Venezuela’s energy and mining sectors blocked further progress on these bilateral initiatives. But earlier this year, the Trump administration rolled back a portion of these restrictions, creating new openings for investment from both Turkish public and private entities in Venezuela’s key commodity sectors.
Insiders told MEE that Rodriguez’s upcoming visit is rooted in a recognition of Turkey’s long-standing diplomatic support for Venezuela across successive administrations, and Caracas is open to deepening bilateral trade and investment through new joint projects. Sources add that Ankara is expected to prioritize discussions around expanding access to Venezuela’s lucrative oil and gold reserves during the talks. While Rodriguez’s administration has prioritized expanding US economic access, the upcoming meeting signals that Venezuela’s new government also aims to cultivate diversified economic partnerships with other global powers.









