A mix of hope and fear settles over Venezuela after US-imposed government change

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Time in Venezuela feels like it's moving both too fast and too slow. The pillars of the country's self-proclaimed socialist government are falling at a dizzying pace or not quickly enough. Economic relief is finally on the horizon or already too late.

Thirty days after the U.S.raid and capture of then-President Nicolás Maduroupended Venezuela, adults and children alike are still unsure of what exactly is happening around them. And as the initial shock gives way to a mix of uncertainty, hope and disappointment, a pervasive fear of another attack or more government repression continues to hang over them.

In the capital,Caracas, where government-sponsored billboards and graffiti demand that the U.S. free Maduro, many residents wonder whether his successor,acting President Delcy Rodríguezhas any autonomy or is capitulating to White House demands; whether she is Maduro by another name, and — crucial to their immediate needs — whether to believe, as indicated by her, that a long-sought wage increase is on the horizon. Meanwhile, long-silent opposition leaders have finally emerged to speak publicly.

"It's an important change, certainly, but everything is the same, everything," retiree Julio Castillo, 74, said of the removal of Maduro from office. "I feel as if nothing much has happened."

'We are acting under coercion'

Venezuela's government and its supporters consider the capture of Maduro and first lady Cilia Flores a kidnapping. Rodríguez and senior officials have pledged to fight for the couple's freedom sinceU.S. President Donald Trumpfirst announced their seizure in the early hours of Jan. 3.

The ruling party has organized demonstrations to show their loyalty to Maduro, whom the fiery Hugo Chávez anointed as his self-proclaimed socialist revolution's torchbearer before dying in 2013. It has also adjusted its messaging from threatening a Vietnam-like war with the U.S. to admitting being militarily outmatched and needing to transform the relationship with Goliath.

Supporters — a minority compared to the crowds during Chávez's presidency — see Rodríguez as lacking free will but trust that she can carry Chavismo, their political movement, through the next diplomatic battle.

"The Venezuelan state, and Venezuelans, are accepting this new situation in which we are acting under coercion," José Vivens, a Maduro loyalist, said of Rodríguez's decision to allow the Trump administrationto control Venezuela's oil money, the country's engine. "They kidnapped our commander. And we have to give in because we have to live for another battle."

Vivens, a justice of the peace, was in his apartment's parking lot in Caracas when he heard a loud whistle, then a deafening explosionthe night of the attack. He ducked behind his car, and when he looked up, helicopters were flying unnervingly close to his building.

"They've invaded us," was Vivens' immediate thought. Not exactly, but he would learn a few hours later that the U.S. military's elitehad captured Maduro at a nearby compoundand loaded him onto a helicopter.

Abandoning a pillar of Chavismo

Rodríguez has used public events and gatherings with Venezuela's private sector to assure anyone listening that she, not the Trump administration, is governing the South American country, even if she later acknowledges having a mutual agenda with the U.S., which was unthinkable weeks earlier.

"The people of Venezuela do not accept orders from any external factor," she said during a meeting with oil executives to discuss an overhaul of the country's energy law. "The people of Venezuela have a government, and this government obeys the people."

Her proposed overhaul, which lawmakers swiftly approved and she signed into law Thursday, opens thenation's oil sectorto privatization, abandoning a pillar of Chavismo.

She introduced it following Trump's assertion that his administration wouldtake controlof Venezuela's oil exports andrevitalize the ailing industrybyluring foreign investment.

Testing the waters

Many within the opposition had long expected that Maduro's ouster, especially if led by Trump, would immediately result in one of their own taking the reins of the country. Trump's decision to work with Rodríguez, instead ofopposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate María Corina Machado, continues to leave them baffled.

But as Machado's supporters keep looking for signs that the White House will incorporate her meaningfully into its plans for their country, Venezuelans have begun testing Rodríguez's commitment to what she has called "a new political moment" for Venezuela.

For days, dozens of peoplehave kept vigil outside prisonsdemanding the release of loved ones they believe were detained for political reasons, including journalists, human rights advocates and members of the military. A handful of opposition leaders who had not been seen in public in Venezuela or made any statements for more than a year have spoken out.

"I believe that Venezuela's destiny cannot be an oil agreement and a dictatorship headed by Delcy Rodríguez, because we could simply define that as a continuation of the dictatorship," opposition leader Andrés Velásquez told reporters, reemerging after more than a year in hiding.

A privately owned television channel with national reach on Wednesday even aired a clip of Machado addressing reporters in Washington. Neither public nor private media outlets had shown a similar segment in years.

Still, many Venezuelans continue to self-censor as they remain deeply fearful ofgovernment repression. Their social media posts make no mention of politics. Written or audio messages on WhatsApp do not criticize the government. Some video calls involve writing and erasing information on whiteboards as an extra layer of protection.

There have been no large demonstrations calling for a new government or a presidential election. Nor has anyone dared to publicly celebrate Maduro's capture — even if many had long hoped to see him handcuffed.

Many opposition leaders remain in exile. Wanted posters ofEdmundo González, the opposition's candidate during the 2024 presidential election, are still on display at airports and government offices.

Balancing hope and fear

Margaret García's son could not sleep for days after Jan.3. He also did not want to go back to school fearful of not knowing what to do if another attack happened.

"We thought we were going to die," she said of the moment her family heard a helicopter open fire near their 15-story apartment building near where Maduro was captured.

Her son's fear was far from unique. Some Venezuelans still fear a second attack if Rodríguez's government does not meet U.S. expectations — even as Washington has indicated it has no plans for further escalation.

"I can tell you right now with full certainty, we are not postured to nor do we intend or expect to have to take any military action in Venezuela at any time," U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told a U.S. Senate committee on Wednesday.

García, a teacher, said she could not understand how anyone could find satisfaction in the U.S. operation thatkilled dozens. Still, she said she believes that under Rodríguez's watch, the country could see the lasting economic improvements that workers have hoped for more than a decade.

Like García, many public sector workerssurvive on roughly $160 per month, while the average private sector employee earned about $237 a month last year. Venezuela's monthly minimum wage of 130 bolivars, or $0.35, has not increased since 2022, putting it well below the United Nations' measure of extreme poverty of $2.15 a day.

"We see that a negative moment has brought us positive things," she said of the potential changes that Rodríguez has signaled will come with an envisioned oil boom.

Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

A mix of hope and fear settles over Venezuela after US-imposed government change

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Time in Venezuela feels like it's moving both too fast and too slow. The pillars of the cou...
Takeaways from AP's report on Latin American markets flooded by cheap Chinese goods

HONG KONG (AP) — Low-priced Chinese electric vehicles and cheap e-commerce goods are gaining ground in Latin American countries like Brazil and Mexico and local governments and industries are growing alarmed.

Latin America plays a strategically important role for China as Beijingforges closer tieswith fast growing markets like Brazil and Chile.

Chineseautomakersand other manufacturers facing sluggish demand as theeconomy slowsare targeting customers abroad. Mexico, Brazil and Chile are among countries which have rolled out measures to curb some cheap Chinese imports, looking to protect their own industries.

Here are the main takeaways from AP's report:

Chinese imports flood Latin American markets

With prices lower than their competitors thanks to massive government subsidies and support and low production costs, Chinese car brands are zooming into Latin America.

More than 80% of the over 61,000 EVs sold in 2024 in Brazil were Chinese brands, predominantly BYD and GWM. In Mexico, sales of Chinese-made cars accounted for about 15% of the domestic market last year, according to a Mexican automotive industry group, a stark contrast to how the U.S. has been keepingChinese cars out of its marketwith hefty tariffs.

Chinese carmaker BYD, which overtook Tesla as the world's biggest EV maker, recentlyunloaded from its vesselmore than 5,800 EVs and hybrid vehicles in Argentina, racing to profit from a policy allowing up to 50,000 electric and hybrid vehicles to be imported tariff-free.

Low-priced goods from Chinese e-commerce platforms, led by Temu and Shein, also are flooding Latin American markets.

China is catching up fast intechnologiesand innovation in products such as EVs, said José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean which is headquartered in Chile. "You can't think of China as an exporter of anything that's, let's say, basic anymore," he said.

Mexico, Brazil are hitting back to protect their industries

China needs Latin America's vast natural resources for its hungry industries, from lithium in Brazil to copper in Chile and fishmeal in Peru. But trade deficits with China have been growing across the region as its global surplus rose toa record $1.2 trillionlast year.

Mexico's trade deficit with China was $101 billion between January and October 2025, while Argentina's trade deficit with China rose to nearly $8.2 billion last year.

China's exports to Mexico surged roughly 150% between 2017 and 2024, according to research from ING Bank, as shipments of autos and auto parts more than tripled.

To protect local industries, Mexico has imposedtariffs of up to 50%on imports from China, includingautos, appliances and clothing. Brazil is eliminating or phasing out "de minimis" import tax exemptions for overseas parcels costing less than $50, in part to target cheap imports from China. It also is increasing tariffs on EV imports. Chile has raised tariffs and began charging a 19% value-added tax on low-value parcels starting in October.

Latin America has limited leverage on China

In most cases, China exports mostly manufactured goods from Latin America and imports raw materials. But the relationship goes far beyond those basics.

China provided loans and grants to countries in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2014-2023 worth roughly $153 billion -- the largest source of official sector financing for the region -- compared to approximately $50.7 billion that the U.S. provided, according to AidData, a research lab at William & Mary, a public university in Virginia.

That means for every dollar donated or lent by Washington, Beijing provides $3.

State-backed Chinese companies also have made massive investments in dams, mines and other infrastructure across the region.

"There may be deep concern about competitiveness, but politically, many countries don't feel they have the space to resist China's export surge," said Margaret Myers, director of the Asia and Latin America program at the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington. "The relationship has become too important economically."

Sá Pessoa reported from Sao Paulo, Brazil. Janetsky reported from Mexico City. AP journalists Isabel DeBre in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Nayara Batschke in Santiago, Chile, Tatiana Pollastri in Sao Paulo, Brazil and Fabiola Sánchez in Mexico City also contributed.

Takeaways from AP's report on Latin American markets flooded by cheap Chinese goods

HONG KONG (AP) — Low-priced Chinese electric vehicles and cheap e-commerce goods are gaining ground in Latin American cou...
Groundhog Day puts Punxsutawney Phil's forecast about winter's length in the spotlight

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP) — It's already been a long, cold winter across much of the United States, and on Monday, Punxsutawney Phil's handlers will announce whether the weather-predicting groundhog says there's more of the same to come.

When Phil is said to have seen his shadow upon emergence from a tree stump in rural Pennsylvania, that's considered a forecast for six more weeks of winter. If he doesn't see his shadow, an early spring is said to be on the way.

Tens of thousands of people will be on hand at Gobbler's Knob for the annual ritual that goes back more than a century, with ties to ancient farming traditions in Europe. Punxsutawney's festivities have grown considerably since the 1993 movie "Groundhog Day," starring Bill Murray.

Last year's announcement was six more weeks of winter, by far Phil's more common assessment and not much of a surprise during the first week of February. His top-hatted handlers in the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club insist Phil's "groundhogese" of winks, purrs, chatters and nods are being interpreted when they relate the meterological marmot's muses about the days ahead.

Phil isn't the only animal being consulted for long-term weather forecasts Monday. There are formal and informal Groundhog Day events in many places in the U.S., Canada and beyond.

Groundhog Day falls on Feb. 2, the midpoint between the shortest, darkest day of the year on the winter solstice and the spring equinox. It's a time of year that also figures in the Celtic calendar and theChristian holiday of Candlemas.

Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Groundhog Day puts Punxsutawney Phil's forecast about winter's length in the spotlight

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP) — It's already been a long, cold winter across much of the United States, and on Monday, Punxs...
Disgruntled with Western pork, China wants to go back to black pigs

By Daphne Zhang, Go Nakamura and Xihao Jiang

Reuters An employee serves a customer shopping for pork at a black pork shop in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 16, 2026. REUTERS/Go Nakamura Farm manager Gao Qinshan feeds pigs in a pig pen at a farm in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 15, 2026. REUTERS/Go Nakamura Workers artificially inseminate sows at a pig farm in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 15, 2026. REUTERS/Go Nakamura A worker serves a customer shopping for pork at a black pork shop in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 16, 2026. REUTERS/Go Nakamura Cuts of pork and knives sit on a chopping board at a black pork shop in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 16, 2026. REUTERS/Go Nakamura

Black pork shop in Taizhou

TAIZHOU, China Feb 2 (Reuters) - Gao Xianghua is a happy mom this year because she knows her teenage kids will eagerly finish the pork belly she is braising for the Lunar New Year feast.

Her secret? Chinese black pork.

"I want my kids to eat the good pork I used to have when I was little," Gao said at a neighbourhood butcher ​as she ordered 1,000 yuan ($144) worth of black pork ribs, feet and sausages. "Not the cheap, low-quality, fast-produced pork that has penetrated my kids' lives." She plans to rub the pork with Sichuan numbing pepper and ‌salt it before hanging it on her balcony to dry for the holiday.

Gao, a crab roe seller, is a member of China's rising middle class who, no longer satisfied with mass-produced pork from imported Western "white pig" breeds, is hungry for premium products. For older buyers in particular, black pork evokes ‌childhood, when black-haired pigs were raised at home and slaughtered for family gatherings around Lunar New Year.

Demand for what has been marketed as the "Wagyu of pork," known for its fattier and more tender texture, is in turn a lifeline for China's beleaguered pork producers. The premium cut, which is up to four times more expensive than more common white pork, is one of the remaining profitable segments after years of overcapacity and falling prices in the world's largest market for hogs, according to interviews with more than two dozen meat producers, analysts and academics.

'THE ONLY WAY OUT'

The red-braised pork, or hongshao rou, that Gao prepares - a favorite dish of Chairman Mao Zedong, made with caramelized sugar, soy sauce and spices - was a rare luxury before reforms in the 1980s ⁠and 1990s ushered in a long economic boom and gave many the means to ‌enjoy meat more than a handful of times a year. To meet that demand, in the 1990s China began importing Western varieties that matured in five months versus the year that was needed for Chinese black pigs. Last year, China - the world's largest hog producer - slaughtered 720 million pigs. And in the final quarter of 2025, it produced 15.7 million metric tons of ‍pork, the highest fourth-quarter tally since 2018.

But size has become a liability and Mao's favourite flavor was lost.

Pork prices have been falling for years due to weak demand, a stagnating economy and changing tastes; in December, they declined 14.6% from a year earlier. And rampant overcapacity, triggered in part by the government's reaction in 2018 to the outbreak of African swine fever, has cost the industry profits. A major Chinese pork producer, Wen Foodstuff Group, in January said its 2025 net profit fell 40.7% to 46.1% from a year earlier. And ​Muyuan Foods, the world's largest hog producer, also said it expects its 2025 profit to fall 12.2% to 17.8%.

For some, black pork offers a way out.

Yang Xinchun, a 49-year-old pig farmer in Taizhou, about two hours by train from ‌Shanghai, earned a net profit of over 1 million yuan from black pork in 2025. His 1,000 black hogs offset the losses from his herd of 6,000 white pigs.

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He said his gamble paid off. He started raising black hogs in late 2024 after learning that state-owned giant Bright Food Group was looking at the premium market to avoid losses.

"People come to my butcher store every day to learn from my experience," Yang said, referring to other hog producers.

He plans to expand his herd to 15,000 black pigs and his three black pork butcher stores to 40 franchises this year.

"Black pigs are the only way out for pig producers, especially small-to-medium producers who were pressured by falling white pork prices," said Gao Qinxue, a director at the Chinese Association of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine.

The total number of black hogs in Yang's town, Taizhou, increased to 30,000 in 2025 from 10,000 in 2024 and local pork farmers hope the herd grows to 100,000 by ⁠2027, Gao said.

Top Chinese pork producers are also scaling up. In November, Wen Foodstuff told investors it aims to become the No. 1 ​Chinese black pork brand and lift these hogs to 5% of its herd by 2027. Pork giant New Hope also said last fall it was ​expanding its herd of more than 150,000 black hogs.

Analysts said they expected black hog numbers to rise 50% to 30 million to 32 million between 2024 and 2026, or roughly 5% of all the pigs in China.

NO INDUSTRY STANDARD

Demand exceeds supply in China's premium pork market by about 15% to 20%, but it is unclear whether black pork can fill the whole gap because producers ‍must develop brands and supply chains in this nascent industry, analysts ⁠said. The black pork businesses are also competing with imported products and Chinese pork moguls that are developing premium pork from fast-growing Western breeds.

Today, China has more than four dozen local black or black-dotted pig breeds that are sold at varying premiums. Producers like Yang raise black hogs that are crossbred with Western Berkshire or Duroc lines to accelerate pig growth while maintaining their black coats and meat quality. The niche market could ⁠fall into oversupply if too many producers pile in and margins may not be sustained, observers said.

"If you flood the market with lots of black pigs, will people pay it, or will the price come down?" said David Casey, senior product development and supply director at the Pig Improvement ‌Company, a major global breeder. "Most people are still buying cheaply raised, low-priced pork."

"Unlike Spanish Iberico pork, there is no standard in China. I could bring in a Hampshire pig, call it black, and I ‌qualify. I've heard scientists talk about changing Western pigs' hair colour to black."

(Reporting by Daphne Zhang; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

Disgruntled with Western pork, China wants to go back to black pigs

By Daphne Zhang, Go Nakamura and Xihao Jiang Black pork shop in Taizhou TAIZHOU, China Feb 2 (Reuters) - ...
Kennedy Center to cease entertainment operations for two years, Trump says

Feb 1 (Reuters) - The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center ​for Performing Arts should ‌not host any events for two ‌years, starting on July 4, President Donald Trump posted on Sunday.

Reuters

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"Based on these findings, ⁠and totally ‌subject to Board approval, I have determined that ‍the fastest way to bring The Trump Kennedy Center to the ​highest level of Success, Beauty, ‌and Grandeur, is to cease Entertainment Operations for an approximately two year period of time, with a scheduled Grand ⁠Reopening that will ​rival and ​surpass anything that has taken place with respect to ‍such a ⁠Facility before," Trump wrote on the social media ⁠platform Truth Social.

(Reporting by Greg Bensinger; ‌Editing by Sergio Non ‌and Chris Reese)

Kennedy Center to cease entertainment operations for two years, Trump says

Feb 1 (Reuters) - The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center ​for Performing Arts should ‌not host any events for two ‌years, st...
Venezuela releases 30 prisoners including activists, says rights group

Feb 1 (Reuters) - More than 30 people in Venezuela considered to be "political prisoners" were released on Sunday, legal rights group Foro Penal said, as part of a prisoner release process that families have said ​is too slow.

The releases come after Venezuela's interim President Delcy Rodriguez on Friday announced a proposed "amnesty law" ‌for hundreds of prisoners, and said the Helicoide detention center in Caracas would be converted into a center for sport and social services.

A 2022 United ‌Nations report said prisoners in Helicoide were subjected to torture, an accusation the government rejected.

Rights group Foro Penal said it had verified that 344 "political prisoners" had been freed since the government announced the new series of prisoner releases in early January, 33 of them on Sunday.

Government officials - who deny holding political prisoners and say those jailed have committed crimes - have put the total ⁠number of releases much higher at more ‌than 600, though that figure appeared to include releases from prior years.

Among those freed on Sunday was human rights activist Javier Tarazona, who had been in prison since mid-2021 in the Helicoide ‍center.

"After 1,675 days, four years and seven months, the day we've so wished for has arrived, my brother Javier Tarazona is free," Jose Rafael Tarazona said on X. "The freedom of one is hope for all."

Tarazona is the director of FundaRedes, which tracks alleged abuses by ​Colombian armed groups and the Venezuelan military along the countries' border. He was arrested and accused of terrorism and ‌conspiracy.

Prisoner releases have accelerated since Venezuela announced a release policy on January 8, in the wake of the U.S. capture of former President Nicolas Maduro.

"Every step towards freedom and the definitive end of repression is important," Gonzalo Himiob, vice president of Foro Penal, said on X.

The Venezuelan communications ministry, which handles press queries, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Foro Penal has said more than 300 political prisoners have been released in recent weeks and estimated that more than 700 ⁠remain jailed.

The government has not said how many prisoners will be ​released or identified them.

Families of prisoners say the releases have progressed too ​slowly, and relatives and human rights advocates have demanded that charges and convictions against detainees who are considered political prisoners be expunged.

Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who has ‍several close allies imprisoned, has ⁠advocated for their release.

Prominent figures still detained include opposition politician Juan Pablo Guanipa and lawyer Perkins Rocha, both close Machado allies, and opposition Voluntad Popular party leader Freddy Superlano.

Guanipa's son Ramon said in a post on X ⁠that he and his young siblings had seen their father for the first time in months on Sunday and that he was in good ‌condition.

Rafael Tudares, the son-in-law of former opposition presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez, is among those freed since January ‌8.

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Michael Perry)

Venezuela releases 30 prisoners including activists, says rights group

Feb 1 (Reuters) - More than 30 people in Venezuela considered to be "political prisoners" were released on Sund...
Venezuela releases 30 prisoners including activists, says rights group

Feb 1 (Reuters) - More than 30 people in Venezuela considered to be "political prisoners" were released on Sunday, legal rights group Foro Penal said, as part of a prisoner release process that families have said ​is too slow.

The releases come after Venezuela's interim President Delcy Rodriguez on Friday announced a proposed "amnesty law" ‌for hundreds of prisoners, and said the Helicoide detention center in Caracas would be converted into a center for sport and social services.

A 2022 United ‌Nations report said prisoners in Helicoide were subjected to torture, an accusation the government rejected.

Rights group Foro Penal said it had verified that 344 "political prisoners" had been freed since the government announced the new series of prisoner releases in early January, 33 of them on Sunday.

Government officials - who deny holding political prisoners and say those jailed have committed crimes - have put the total ⁠number of releases much higher at more ‌than 600, though that figure appeared to include releases from prior years.

Among those freed on Sunday was human rights activist Javier Tarazona, who had been in prison since mid-2021 in the Helicoide ‍center.

"After 1,675 days, four years and seven months, the day we've so wished for has arrived, my brother Javier Tarazona is free," Jose Rafael Tarazona said on X. "The freedom of one is hope for all."

Tarazona is the director of FundaRedes, which tracks alleged abuses by ​Colombian armed groups and the Venezuelan military along the countries' border. He was arrested and accused of terrorism and ‌conspiracy.

Prisoner releases have accelerated since Venezuela announced a release policy on January 8, in the wake of the U.S. capture of former President Nicolas Maduro.

"Every step towards freedom and the definitive end of repression is important," Gonzalo Himiob, vice president of Foro Penal, said on X.

The Venezuelan communications ministry, which handles press queries, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Foro Penal has said more than 300 political prisoners have been released in recent weeks and estimated that more than 700 ⁠remain jailed.

The government has not said how many prisoners will be ​released or identified them.

Families of prisoners say the releases have progressed too ​slowly, and relatives and human rights advocates have demanded that charges and convictions against detainees who are considered political prisoners be expunged.

Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who has ‍several close allies imprisoned, has ⁠advocated for their release.

Prominent figures still detained include opposition politician Juan Pablo Guanipa and lawyer Perkins Rocha, both close Machado allies, and opposition Voluntad Popular party leader Freddy Superlano.

Guanipa's son Ramon said in a post on X ⁠that he and his young siblings had seen their father for the first time in months on Sunday and that he was in good ‌condition.

Rafael Tudares, the son-in-law of former opposition presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez, is among those freed since January ‌8.

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Michael Perry)

Venezuela releases 30 prisoners including activists, says rights group

Feb 1 (Reuters) - More than 30 people in Venezuela considered to be "political prisoners" were released on Sund...

 

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