BBC. July 5, 2019
Venezuela released 22
prisoners, including high-profile judge Maria Afiuni and journalist Braulio Jatar,
on Thursday, according to the UN.
They were released on the same
day the UN published a report by its human rights chief Michele Bachelet
detailing alleged rights abuses in the country.
Ms Bachelet had separately
asked President Nicolás Maduro to release the prisoners, her spokesperson said.
Venezuela said that Ms Bachelet's report was biased.
The 16-page document
highlighted the arbitrary arrest, ill-treatment and torture of government
critics. It also accused the state of removing numerous opponents by
extrajudicial killings.
The UN said the prisoner releases may mark a new beginning for the Maduro government on human rights issues, but many were sceptical.
Venezuela remains gripped by a
long-running and highly polarised crisis. Pro-government celebrations took
place for independence day on Friday, while supporters of opposition leader
Juan Guaidó rallied in the capital, Caracas.
Mr Guaidó called for citizens
to march on the headquarters of secret services to protest against the brutal
killing of a detained naval officer last month, but few joined the
demonstration.
Who has been released?
Ms Afiuni, the newly-freed
judge, told news site La Patilla that she was surprised by her release and
looked forward to rebuilding her life after nine years in detention.
She was detained in 2010, when
the country was ruled by President Hugo Chavez and his opposition considered
her to be a major political prisoner.
Chávez objected to her
releasing a businessman who was accused of corruption. She insisted he had been
detained for too long without trial. Part of her time in detention was under
house arrest after she claimed she was raped in prison. In March 2019, a court
sentenced her to five years.
Mr Jatar was jailed in 2016,
after reporting on a protest against President Maduro on Margarita Island. He
was later accused of money-laundering. On Twitter on Friday, he said he had
only been granted partial freedom, as he has been told to stay in his home
state and report to authorities once a fortnight.
Twenty students were also
among those said to have been freed on Thursday, and 62 prisoners were released
last month.
Last week, a Venezuelan navy
captain died in custody, amid allegations that he had been tortured. Rafael
Acosta, 49, was arrested over an alleged plot to assassinate President Nicolás
Maduro.
Two men, Lt Ascanio Tarascio
and Sgt Estiben Zarate, have been charged with murder.
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