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Anxious Venezuelans seek clarity on new amnesty law
Families in Venezuela continued to wait anxiously outside prisons Friday, as questions swirled about a newly passed mass amnesty law pushed through by interim authorities following the US toppling of Nicolas Maduro.
Venezuela's National Assembly unanimously adopted the law early Friday, providing hope that hundreds of political prisoners behind bars may be soon released.
But it was unclear how quickly or what process would be used to implement the law.
Opposition figures criticized the legislation, which appears to include carveouts for some offenses previously used by authorities to target Maduro's political opponents.
It explicitly does not apply to those prosecuted for "promoting" or "facilitating... armed or forceful actions" against Venezuela's sovereignty by foreign actors.
In a recent interview, interim president Delcy Rodriguez leveled such an accusation against opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who hopes to return to Venezuela at some point from the United States.
"One must know how to ask for forgiveness and one must also know how to receive forgiveness," Rodriguez said after signing the bill into law early Friday.
Narwin Gil, a relative of a detainee in the Caracas jail known as Zone 7, demanded "action, not words."
Many relatives of prisoners across Venezuela have waited outside jails for weeks for the potential release of their loved ones.
Gil had joined a hunger strike starting on February 14 demanding the quick passage of the amnesty bill, which faced repeated delays since Rodriguez proposed it late last month.
"We are waiting for those actions, and for them to happen as soon as possible, because we need to go home," Gil said.
Hundreds of alleged political prisoners have already been granted conditional release by Rodriguez's government since the deadly US raid that seized Maduro, but the Foro Penal NGO says some 650 remain detained.
- Opposition criticism -
Opposition politician Juan Pablo Guanipa, a Machado ally, announced his release from detention shortly after the bill was passed.
He had recently been freed from prison but then quickly re-detained and kept under house arrest.
"After 10 months in hiding and almost nine months of unjust imprisonment, I confirm that I am now completely free," Guanipa wrote on social media, posting an image of him holding the country's flag.
He called for all other political prisoners to be freed and exiles to be allowed to return. He criticized the law as not an amnesty but a "flawed document."
The legislation has also faced criticism from rights groups over its potential use to excuse abuses under Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chavez.
Exiled Venezuelan opposition figurehead Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia on Friday said there would be "no lasting reconciliation without memory or responsibility" in his country.
"A responsible amnesty is the transition from fear to the rule of law. It is the pledge that power will not be exercised again without limits and that the law will be above force," Gonzalez Urrutia wrote on X.
Exiled in Spain, Gonzalez Urrutia is widely considered the rightful victor of 2024 presidential elections marred by fraud allegations in which Maduro was declared the winner.
Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Venezuelans have been jailed in recent years over plots, real or imagined, to overthrow the government of Maduro, who was in the end seized in the deadly January 3 raid and taken to New York.
Rodriguez was formerly Maduro's vice president and took his place as the South American country's leader with the consent of US President Donald Trump -- provided that she toe Washington's line.
The United States has taken over control of Venezuela's oil sales, with Trump vowing a share for Washington in the profits.
T.Perez--AT