403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Venezuela's Christmas Prisoner Releases: A Gesture, A Warning, And A Message Abroad
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Maduro's government announced 99 releases on Christmas, while monitors initially confirmed 71 departures from specific prisons.
Rights groups say hundreds more remain jailed, and many“releases” are court controls, not cleared convictions.
The timing lines up with tougher U.S. pressure at sea, making the move look like strategy, not surrender.
On Christmas Day, Venezuela 's government said it was granting alternative judicial measures to 99 opposition-linked detainees. The last similar move came on August 2, when 13 people left prison under substitute measures.
This time, the first hard confirmations came from families and activists at prison gates. They reported at least 71 releases that night: 65 men from Tocorón, three women from the Las Crisálidas facility, and three teenagers held in police custody in La Guaira state near Caracas.
A complete official list was not immediately made public. That matters because“release” in Venezuela often means supervision. Many detainees move from a cell to strict conditions, with reporting rules and travel limits.
The change can be reversed. Monitors still count a large remaining population. Foro Penal reported 902 political prisoners as of December 15. Justicia, Encuentro y Perdón put the figure at 1,085 and called the Christmas step insufficient.
Prison Releases Highlight Venezuela's Strategic Leverage
The behind-the-scenes driver looks like a squeeze from two directions. Outside, Washington has been tightening maritime enforcement tied to Venezuelan oil exports, including tanker interceptions and preparations for seizures.
Inside, security forces have continued new detentions, including the analyst Nicmer Evans and union leaders José Elías Torres and William Lizardo.
Then came a darker claim from opposition leader María Corina Machado. Two days before the Christmas releases, she wrote on X that she had received information alleging systematic threats of extrajudicial execution against political prisoners held at El Rodeo prison.
The releases do not disprove that warning. They describe a selective exit elsewhere, not conditions inside one specific facility. There is still no independent confirmation that executions occurred.
For readers abroad, the point is not holiday symbolism. It is leverage. Detentions, releases, and oil pressure are being used as tools in a standoff that can shape energy flows, sanctions enforcement, and migration across the region.
Maduro's government announced 99 releases on Christmas, while monitors initially confirmed 71 departures from specific prisons.
Rights groups say hundreds more remain jailed, and many“releases” are court controls, not cleared convictions.
The timing lines up with tougher U.S. pressure at sea, making the move look like strategy, not surrender.
On Christmas Day, Venezuela 's government said it was granting alternative judicial measures to 99 opposition-linked detainees. The last similar move came on August 2, when 13 people left prison under substitute measures.
This time, the first hard confirmations came from families and activists at prison gates. They reported at least 71 releases that night: 65 men from Tocorón, three women from the Las Crisálidas facility, and three teenagers held in police custody in La Guaira state near Caracas.
A complete official list was not immediately made public. That matters because“release” in Venezuela often means supervision. Many detainees move from a cell to strict conditions, with reporting rules and travel limits.
The change can be reversed. Monitors still count a large remaining population. Foro Penal reported 902 political prisoners as of December 15. Justicia, Encuentro y Perdón put the figure at 1,085 and called the Christmas step insufficient.
Prison Releases Highlight Venezuela's Strategic Leverage
The behind-the-scenes driver looks like a squeeze from two directions. Outside, Washington has been tightening maritime enforcement tied to Venezuelan oil exports, including tanker interceptions and preparations for seizures.
Inside, security forces have continued new detentions, including the analyst Nicmer Evans and union leaders José Elías Torres and William Lizardo.
Then came a darker claim from opposition leader María Corina Machado. Two days before the Christmas releases, she wrote on X that she had received information alleging systematic threats of extrajudicial execution against political prisoners held at El Rodeo prison.
The releases do not disprove that warning. They describe a selective exit elsewhere, not conditions inside one specific facility. There is still no independent confirmation that executions occurred.
For readers abroad, the point is not holiday symbolism. It is leverage. Detentions, releases, and oil pressure are being used as tools in a standoff that can shape energy flows, sanctions enforcement, and migration across the region.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment