Prominent Venezuelan opposition politician detained hours after release
One of Venezuela’s most prominent opposition politicians, Juan Pablo Guanipa, has been detained by security forces just hours after being released from prison, as the South American country’s leaders sent mixed signals about their commitment to political reform after Nicolás Maduro’s downfall. Guanipa, who is a close ally of the Nobel laureate María Corina Machado, emerged from nearly nine months’ detention on Sunday – one of at least 35 political prisoners to be freed over the course of the day. One of Guanipa’s first acts as a free man was to ride across Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, in a convoy of motorbikes to attend a rally outside the country’s most notorious political prison, El Helicoide. Such scenes of political defiance would have been unimaginable until just a few weeks ago, before Maduro’s capture turned Venezuelan politics on their head. “We are going to build a Venezuela of democracy, of freedom, of justice, of pluralism and coexistence,” the 61-year-old former governor told reporters outside the detention centre, adding that he believed Venezuela had “completely changed”. But Guanipa’s freedom was short-lived: just hours later he appeared to have been taken back into custody after being stopped by unidentified armed men. “I want to let the whole world know that my father has once again been kidnapped,” his son, Ramón, announced in a social media video, claiming that he had been captured about 11.45pm on Sunday. “I will hold the regime responsible for anything that happens to my dad,” the 29-year-old added, demanding proof of life. “Heavily armed men, dressed in civilian clothes, arrived in four vehicles and violently took him away,” Machado claimed on X. “We demand his immediate release.” Alfredo Romero, president of the Venezuela-based prisoners’ rights group Foro Penal, voiced serious concern about Guanipa’s disappearance. “So far, we have no clear information about who took him,” he wrote on X. “We hope he will be released immediately.” On Monday, Venezuela’s top prosecutor announced that his office had requested Guanipa’s re-arrest “due to his non-compliance with … the terms [of his release]”. It did not say what those conditions were but some released political prisoners have been barred from travelling outside the country or speaking to the press. Human rights activists say about 425 political prisoners have been released in Venezuela since Donald Trump ordered the controversial abduction of Maduro in the early hours of 3 January. Maduro’s successor Delcy Rodríguez, the former vice-president, used her first major speech to declare a “new chapter” in the oil-rich country, although made no mention of holding fresh presidential elections in Maduro’s absence. Rodríguez’s regime has moved to pass a new amnesty law, seemingly designed to benefit both the victims of Maduro’s dictatorship and some of those responsible for the repression. Observers warn that despite the regime’s recent concessions, they have yet to see any real indication that it is prepared to dismantle the security forces and paramilitary groups responsible for propping up years of authoritarian rule. Orlando Pérez, a Latin America expert from the University of North Texas at Dallas, said Guanipa’s re-arrest suggested “a push and pull” was playing out between different factions of Venezuela’s new leadership. Pérez believed Rodríguez and her brother, the powerful national assembly president, Jorge Rodríguez, appeared to favour making some concessions in order to speed up engagement with the United States and the transition to a new form of government, even if it was only a “competitive authoritarian” one. “But there are clearly forces that want to slow it down,” added Pérez, pointing to the feared interior minister, Diosdado Cabello, and the defense minister, Vladimir Padrino López. “It’s an indication that we really are in a very slow process that can easily be reversed,” Pérez said. Guanipa was seized in May last year by “anti-subversion” agents and held in a Caracas prison on charges of terrorism, treason and conspiring with a foreign government. During more than eight months behind bars he saw his son only once. At the time, the opposition politician’s capture was celebrated by Cabello, who many suspect was behind his re-arrest yesterday. Speaking in Washington, Machado called Guanipa’s arrest a “reaction” from part of the “tyranny” that continued to rule Venezuela, despite Maduro’s exit. “What’s happening in Venezuela is a demonstration that we aren’t just facing a criminal regime but also a regime that is terrified of the truth and terrified of its citizens,” she told reporters. At a press conference on Monday, Ramón Guanipa called for the immediate release of his father and the hundreds of other political prisoners still thought to be behind bars. “This must end – and it must end now,” he said.






