US ‘concerned’ as Venezuela activist accused of treason
AFP :
The United States said Tuesday it was “deeply concerned” about the detention of a human rights activist in Venezuela who stands accused of involvement in an alleged plot to assassinate President Nicolas Maduro.
The Spanish-Venezuelan lawyer and government critic Rocio San Miguel, 57, was detained on Friday in the immigration area of an airport in the capital Caracas.
Her detention comes in a crunch election year that has already seen Maduro block his main opposition rival, prompting the United States to threaten to reimpose recently eased oil sanctions.
San Miguel’s defense team said she had been arrested in a “forced disappearance” alongside her ex-husband, while her daughter, two brothers and father had been detained and later released.
Attorney General Tarek William Saab wrote Monday on X that San Miguel was accused of “the crimes of treason, conspiracy, terrorism and association, among others.”
Her ex-husband, retired soldier Alejandro Jose Gonzales De Canales Plaza, is being held for allegedly revealing “political and military secrets concerning the security of the nation,” Saab added.
White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby warned the administration of President Joe Biden was “deeply concerned” and was watching the situation “very, very closely.”
He said Maduro “needs to meet the commitments that he made … about how they’re going to treat civil society, political activists as well as mopposition parties.”
EU spokeswoman Nabila Massrali called for San Miguel’s immediate release.
But Saab slammed a “ferocious campaign from abroad against the justice system and the Venezuelan state.”
Maduro’s government and the opposition reached a deal in Barbados to hold a free and fair vote in 2024 with international observers present, prompting the United States to ease sanctions.
However, the Supreme Court, loyal to Maduro, recently upheld a 15-year ban on opposition primary winner Maria Corina Machado, prompting Washington to reimpose some sanctions.
The United Nations rights office’s independent fact-finding mission to Venezuela denounced the arrests as part of a “wave of repression against opponents.”
“These are not isolated incidents, but rather a series of events that appear to be part of a coordinated plan to silence critics and perceived opponents,” said Marta Valinas, chairwoman of the mission, in a statement.
