| The announcement came after Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro visited the Vatican |
Venezuela's government and its
opposition are to meet for crisis talks, the Vatican says, after an
intervention from Pope Francis.
| Students protested against Mr Maduro in San Cristobal on Monday |
Emil Paul Tscherrig, its envoy to Argentina, said "a national dialogue" had already started after meeting representatives from both sides. He said they had agreed formal talks on Sunday on Margarita island in the Caribbean.
Mr Maduro said "at last" dialogue could begin. The head of the opposition coalition, Jesus Torrealba, who met Mr Tscherrig, said while talks were important "it can't continue to be a strategy for the government to win time".
Another top opposition figure, Henrique Capriles, dismissed the announcement as a diversionary ploy. "No dialogue has begun in Venezuela," he said.
Mr Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader, is blamed by the opposition for Venezuela's dire economic situation. The oil-rich country is facing widespread food shortages and spiralling inflation.
The opposition is trying to hold a recall referendum that would allow Mr Maduro to be removed from office but electoral authorities suspended the process last week.
The official reason was allegations of fraud during the gathering of signatures for the first petition required to enable the referendum, but opposition lawmakers have long accused the National Electoral Council of being under the government's control.