At least 444 political prisoners have been released in Venezuela, according to the NGO Foro Penal
Despite the releases, thousands of released prisoners, their families, and organizations continue to demand a full amnesty
According to statistics provided by the Venezuelan non-governmental firm Foro Penal, at least 444 people who are considered political captives have been released in Venezuela since the government began the process of release on January 8 through the night of February 15, according to the NGO.
The number corresponds to documented produces from that time through the X accounts of Alfredo Romero, the organization's president, without including those instances where independence is conditioned on home arrest or other restrictions.
Foro Penal specifies that it does not take into account as releases cases where people remain deprived of their rights after leaving detention facilities as a result of property imprisonment or other preventative measures that prevent them from having complete freedom.
You are aware of the symbolic case involving former deputy and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, Juan Pablo Guanipa. According to Foro Penal and a number of media outlets, he was released along with other activists, but the Prosecutor's Office afterwards placed him under house arrest and rearrested him. He was later identified as violating precautionary measures.
A group of at least ten women, family of political prisoners, have also been holding a poverty reach in front of a police station in Caracas, where recent releases have occurred, since early on Saturday night. Some of these people have health issues that require medical attention without leaving the opposition page, including fainting magic. The leader of the Chavista Parliament, Jorge Rodriguez, who announced on February 6 that "all" political prisoners would be released once the regulation is approved, is a subject of discussion surrounding this process of release. Due to disagreements over a requirement that requires those seeking legal representation, the government moved the discussion of the next and last article of the initiative to the following week. National and international human rights organizations, as well as companies like Amnesty International, have emphasized that while the releases are a step forward for those who are free and their families, hundreds of people remain imprisoned for political reasons, and some of those released continue to be the subject of random trials, which properly limits their independence. Additionally, they demand a clear end to random detentions in the nation and guarantees of justice, transparency, and transparency. Following the abduction of former president Nicolas Maduro by US troops in January, Delcy Rodriguez taking over as interim president, and the onset of a "new social minute," according to official statements, the political climate in Venezuela has changed. Human rights activists and the criticism point out that the release of political prisoners also reflects a limited or conditional independence, and not the end of authoritarian practices against social dissidents.
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