Venezuela to release ‘significant number’ of prisoners in bid to ease tensions

Caracas: Venezuela’s government has announced plans to release a “significant number” of prisoners, framing the move as a gesture aimed at easing tensions following mass detentions linked to the 2024 election.
What did Venezuela announce?
Venezuela will release a “significant number” of Venezuelan nationals and foreign citizens currently imprisoned in the country, according to Jorge Rodríguez, the head of the National Assembly and brother of acting President Delcy Rodríguez. The announcement was made on state television, though no timeline or specific details were provided.
Rodríguez did not disclose how many detainees would be freed or whether the releases would include high-profile opposition figures, foreign nationals, or people arrested during recent political unrest.
Why is the government calling this a ‘peace gesture’?
Rodríguez described the planned releases as an initiative “intended to seek peace,” suggesting an effort by the Bolivarian government to reduce political tensions after a turbulent period marked by protests and arrests. The government maintains that it does not hold political prisoners, despite repeated claims to the contrary from opposition groups and international actors.
Following Venezuela’s contested 2024 election, authorities carried out mass detentions amid protests and allegations of repression. Human rights groups, opposition leaders and the US government have accused Caracas of jailing critics and political opponents, demands the Venezuelan government continues to reject.
The opposition and Western governments have consistently called for the release of detainees they describe as political prisoners.
At this stage, officials have not clarified whether those to be freed will include opposition politicians, activists, journalists, or foreign detainees. The lack of specifics has fuelled scepticism among critics, who say previous announcements have not always translated into broad or transparent releases.
If implemented, the releases could signal a limited thaw in Venezuela’s domestic political climate and its strained international relations. However, analysts caution that without clear criteria, verification, and follow-through, the announcement may have more symbolic than substantive impact.
(With AFP inputs)