Families of prisoners in Venezuela wait in anguish as promised releases trickle
- - Families of prisoners in Venezuela wait in anguish as promised releases trickle
REGINA GARCIA CANO January 13, 2026 at 1:04 AM
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1 / 2Venezuela PrisonersRelatives wait outside Zone 7 of the Bolivarian National Police, where political detainees are held, after spending the night there in Caracas, Venezuela, Monday, Jan. 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) â Yaxzodara Lozada woke up Monday freezing after sleeping on the sidewalk outside a prison in Venezuelaâs capital, hoping her husband, a police officer who was detained on Nov. 17, will walk free as part of a goodwill effort the government announced last week.
While Venezuelan commerce and daily life have begun to resume â with malls, schools and gyms reopening a week after a stunning U.S. attack led to the arrest of President NicolĂĄs Maduro â the promised release of imprisoned opposition figures, civil society leaders, journalists and more remains stalled.
Relatives of many of the more than 800 people that human rights organizations say are imprisoned in Venezuela for political reasons began gathering outside prisons Thursday, when the government of acting President Delcy RodrĂguez pledged to free a significant number of prisoners in what it described as a gesture to âseek peace.â Officials have not identified or given a number of prisoners being considered for release, leaving rights groups scouring for hints of information and families to wait anxiously.
As of Monday morning, Foro Penal, a Venezuelan advocacy group for prisoners, had confirmed the release of 41 prisoners. Also on Monday, the White House confirmed that Venezuelan opposition leader MarĂa Corina Machado is set to meet with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday,
Over the weekend, Trump said the releases came at Washingtonâs request.
âVenezuela has started the process, in a BIG WAY, of releasing their political prisoners,â Trump wrote Saturday on his Truth Social platform.
Lozada said she had not seen her husband, a police officer, since he was detained on Nov. 17 â an arrest for which she says no reason was ever given.â
Next to her, relatives of other detainees stretched and looked for water after spending the night on the ground, using old couch cushions and pieces of foam. In front of them, cars kept going by to drop off students at a school adjacent to the prison.
âThese are two realities. They want the world to see that everything is normal, that nothing happened here,â said Jenny Quiroz, whose husband was detained Nov. 26 at his pharmacy in Caracas for allegedly criticizing the government in a WhatsApp group. âBut itâs a mixture of anguish, despairâŠ. You know what itâs like to have 48 days without knowing if he eats, if they have him isolated, if they are psychologically or physically torturing him?â
Quiroz said she wanted Trump to know that the information he is receiving regarding prison releases âis not 100% true.â
As relatives awaited news of their loved ones at prisons, the government deployed security forces to public schools around the country for the first day of classes since the holiday break. Uniformed students walked the streets of Caracas some alone and others accompanied by adults.
Teachers braced for questions from students about the Jan. 3 attack. But preschool teacher Ăngela Ramires said the topic did not come up in her classroom.
âI didnât address it because I didnât notice the interest and a need in them to know whatâs going on,â she said. âThey are happy to be back at school."
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Source: âAOL Breakingâ