Venezuelan acting President Delcy Rodriguez sent a letter to King Charles on July 8 requesting the release of approximately 31 tonnes of Venezuelan gold held at the Bank of England. The gold, frozen since 2019, is needed to fund recovery from the devastating earthquakes that struck the country on June 24.

The quakes, which hit Caracas and the coastal state of La Guaira, have killed at least 3,811 people as of July 8. Rodriguez called the reserves the property of the Venezuelan people, framing the request not as a geopolitical chess move but as a matter of survival for a country digging itself out of rubble.

A vault full of complications

The gold is valued somewhere between $1.95B and nearly $5B, depending on which estimate you use and how gold prices have moved. The Bank of England froze access in 2019 amid international sanctions and a legitimacy dispute over Venezuela’s government.

The situation grew even more tangled earlier in 2026 when a US military operation detained former President Nicolas Maduro. That intervention reshaped the political landscape but didn’t exactly clarify things for international institutions trying to figure out which Venezuelan government to recognize, and therefore, which one gets the keys to the vault.