The rebuke comes as President Nicolas Maduro is due to start a second term, following a controversial election.
Diplomats from a dozen Latin American countries and Canada have urged Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to abstain from being sworn in for a second term after a widely criticised election, saying it is the only way to restore democracy to the country.
The Lima Group, which includes Brazil, Argentina and Colombia, issued a joint statement on Friday calling on Maduro to cede power to the opposition-controlled National Assembly until new elections can be held, following a meeting in the Peruvian capital.
Thirteen of the group's members will not recognise Maduro's new term and will also bar high-ranking Venezuelan officials from entering their territory as much as their domestic laws allow, the statement said.
The strong rebuke comes just days before his January 10 inauguration to a second six-year term.
Mexico, once one of the most outspoken critics of Maduro, was the only member of the coalition to abstain from the vote.
Relations have warmed under leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who faced criticism for inviting Maduro to his inauguration in December.
'Humiliating subordination'
Even before announcing its decision, the gathering prompted a sharp response from Venezuela's Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza, who said the coalition is taking orders directly from US President Donald Trump, who Caracas frequently accuses of spearheading an economic war against the country.
"What a display of humiliating subordination!" Arreaza said on Twitt
The United States is not formally a member of the Lima Group, but US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo participated in the meeting via video conference.
The Trump administration considers Maduro's government a "dictatorship". It has sanctioned around 70 top officials and blocked US banks from doing business with Venezuela, putting a financial stranglehold on the cash-strapped country.
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