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Breaking: Venezuela attacked by U.S. Update: Maduro and wife captured.

Hentenza

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This is amnesty international report on the atrocities of the Maduro presidency in Venezuela from his “win” in 2024 to present. I am glad that the US had the courage to depose such a terrible dictator. And yet some here accuse the US of kidnapping and of international crimes. Of course none of these are Venezuelans or have a vested interest in the issue. The guy was a pig and needed to be removed.

Background​

The presidential election in July was fraught with controversy. Opposition parties to the government of Nicolás Maduro faced numerous obstacles to participating in the election, including obstructed registration, arbitrary detention of their members and torture.

Despite international pressure on the electoral authorities to publish detailed electoral results, including from the EU and other states in the region, such as Brazil and Colombia, the government rejected any form of inquiry and continued persecuting political opponents.

The Supreme Tribunal of Justice validated the appointment of Nicolás Maduro for a new term as president. Presidential candidate Edmundo González Urrutia, who had contested the results, fled the country in September and was granted asylum in Spain.

In February, staff of the , the UN human rights office, OHCHR were expelled from the country after reporting on Rocío San Miguel’s disappearance. By the end of the year, a small team of OHCHR staff had been readmitted into Venezuela.

The mandate of the UN Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela was renewed for two years by the UN Human Rights Council, although the authorities had not granted access to the country by the end of the year. In October the mission published a report denouncing the continuation of a repression-state policy and crimes against humanity, with emphasis on the electoral and post-electoral crisis.

Right to life​

Between 28 July and 1 August, immediately after the presidential election, at least 24 people died as a result of the government’s repression of protests against the appointment of Nicolás Maduro. Most of these killings could amount to extrajudicial executions. Two of the victims were children and one police officer was reportedly killed. All but one of the deaths resulted from gunshot wounds. Human rights organizations pointed at the Bolivarian National Guard, Bolivarian National Police, army and pro-government civilian armed groups known as “colectivos” as the perpetrators of these killings.

Arbitrary detention and unfair trials​

Since the announcement of the presidential election results, the authorities intensified their policy of repression, including widespread arbitrary detentions on political grounds, enforced disappearances and torture. According to official figures, more than 2,000 people were detained after 28 July. By October, the NGO Foro Penal confirmed more than 1,900 of the detentions, of which 129 were of children. By the end of the year, the government had freed 1,369 people and detained 15 others. However, hundreds of people remained arbitrarily deprived of their liberty, including three children.

These mass arrests were carried out without either warrants or those detained being caught committing an illegal act. Many detainees were subjected to enforced disappearance for several days. They were forced to have court-appointed lawyers who lacked independence. Families of the detainees were denied information about their whereabouts for several days, including in cases where children were detained. The detainees were charged with generic terrorism-related offences and the hearings were conducted by counterterrorism courts, which lacked impartiality and independence. As of December, 221 women were still in detention.

Jesús Armas and Luis Tarbay, activists from the opposition political party Vente Venezuela, were arbitrarily arrested by unidentified individuals in Caracas on 11 and 24 December respectively. By the end of the year around 160 members of Vente Venezuela and 34 members of Primero Justicia, another opposition political party, were in detention or forcibly disappeared.

Between April and the end of the year, six members of Vente Venezuela requested asylum in the Argentinian embassy in the capital, Caracas. In August, after the government ceased diplomatic relations with Argentina, the Brazilian government took over the protection of the premises. By the end of the year, Venezuela had not granted safe conduct to the individuals to leave the country.

The government launched a new function in its mobile application VenApp to enable users to report government critics in the aftermath of the July presidential election. Denunciations via VenApp were supposedly responsible for many of the detentions after the election-related protests.1

The Attorney General announced the arrest of a prosecutor on charges of “intentional delay or omission of functions” for refusing to prosecute detainees for terrorism crimes following post-election protests.

Torture and other ill-treatment​

The UN Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela reported allegations of torture of people detained before and after the presidential election.

Human rights organizations denounced torture and other ill-treatment in detention centres, including beatings, suffocation, electric shocks and threats, and sexual violence against women.

Children arbitrarily detained after the election were tortured to force them to incriminate themselves by stating on video that they had participated in the protests, according to relatives. In many cases children were detained with adults.

Searches at a women’s prison, the National Institute for Women’s Guidance, were reported. Videos shared on social media in August, recorded from outside the detention centre, captured the sound of women screaming that they were being tortured. Human rights organizations reported allegations of ill-treatment in La Crisálida detention centre, where women were detained after the post-election protests.

Inhumane detention conditions​

Prison conditions continued to deteriorate. The Venezuelan Prisons Observatory reported that inmates in Tocorón prison received only two glasses of water per day. Police cells continued to be used as prisons and, by September, overall prison overcrowding had exceeded 184% of capacity.

Protests continued to take place in pretrial detention centres due to procedural delays, overcrowding and lack of healthcare, according to NGOs.

Impunity​

Impunity for human rights violations and crimes under international law remained widespread. A report from the UN Fact-Finding Mission on Venezuela expressed deep concerns about the state’s lack of willingness to prosecute those suspected of criminal responsibility.

According to the civil society organization Venezuelan Programme for Education Action on Human Rights, six officers of the Bolivarian National Police Special Actions Force were sentenced in June for participating in an extrajudicial execution five years previously. There were still no convictions for 95% of killings during peaceful demonstrations between 2014 and 2024.

Venezuela was ranked lowest globally (142nd) in the World Justice Project Rule of Law Index 2024.

Right to truth, justice and reparation​

The Appeals Chamber of the ICC rejected the Venezuelan authorities’ appeal and confirmed the “decision authorizing the resumption of the investigation” into alleged crimes against humanity committed since at least 2014. Despite the lack of progress, the ICC Office of the Prosecutor inaugurated a new in-country office in Caracas “focused on complementarity activities and engagement with the national authorities”.

In September, a federal appeals court in Argentina ordered the arrest of President Nicolás Maduro and minister of interior Diosdado Cabello, among others, for alleged crimes against humanity committed since 2014.

Freedom of expression and assembly​

Throughout the year protests demanding economic and social rights occurred across the country. According to the Venezuelan Observatory on Social Conflict, between 29 and 30 July, 915 protests were registered, of which 138 were violently repressed. The presence of colectivos attacking and threatening protesters was recorded.

In the weeks before and after the presidential election, the authorities increasingly criticized demonstrations to generate fear and crush dissent.

At least 12 journalists were arbitrarily detained and attacks continued against independent media. The NGO Public Space registered 507 violations of the right to freedom of expression from January to September. The government continued shutting down radio stations and hindering access to social media platforms such as X (formerly Twitter). The authorities reportedly continued hacking and phishing the Instagram accounts of journalists and citizens.

Human rights defenders​

Human rights defenders remained seriously at risk. Parliament passed legislation allowing the government to control, monitor, and ultimately close down human rights NGOs. The law entered into force in December imposing deadlines on NGOs to register and fulfil the requirements of the law in order to be able to work in the country legally.

Human rights defender Javier Tarazona remained in detention. In February, human rights defender Rocío San Miguel was forcibly disappeared for three days alongside members of her family. She was later charged with terrorism, denied access to legal representation, and remained in detention at the end of the year. Activist, human rights defender and journalist Carlos Julio Rojas was detained in April and remained in detention at year’s end.

Three human rights defenders – Kennedy Tejeda, Edward Ocariz and Henry Gómez – were detained after the election. Kennedy Tejeda remained in detention at the end of the year.

The NGO Centre for Defenders and Justice recorded 979 attacks and security incidents against human rights defenders during 2024, an increase compared with 524 such events in 2023.

Refugees’ and migrants’ rights​

More than 7.89 million people had fled the country by the end of the year.

The CERD Committee denounced the administrative detention of refugees and migrants in Venezuela pending deportation without access to legal assistance or a procedure to access international protection. Refugees and migrants in the country also faced administrative, economic and geographical barriers to access their personal documentation.

Right to a healthy environment​

Despite requests from civil society organizations, Venezuela again failed to sign its accession to the Escazú Agreement, which aims to guarantee the rights to information, public participation and justice in environmental matters.

Frequent oil spills at El Palito refinery in Carabobo state severely impacted marine fauna. The lack of environmental public policies to address the spills and the opacity of information from the authorities was highlighted by activists and affected groups.

Economic, social and cultural rights​

Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis continued and economic, social and cultural rights were systematically violated. Poverty levels increased and the situation was aggravated by high fuel costs and scarcity of electricity and drinking water.

Electricity supply failure persisted. According to press reports, a blackout in August left 80% of the country without electricity; some areas were without power for 10 hours. There was no official technical report on the reasons for the blackout.

The CERD Committee reported high pupil dropout rates and a lack of qualified schoolteachers in its review on Venezuela in August.

Right to health​

The CERD Committee denounced the limited access to high-quality healthcare, mainly in rural areas or areas with a predominantly Indigenous population.

Treatment and access to health services for those suffering chronic diseases remained extremely precarious. The National Hospitals Survey, carried out in July by the civil society organization Doctors for Health, recorded that 57% of the monitored health centres lacked a regular water supply in critical areas such as emergency, intensive care and operating rooms. Scarcity of medical equipment and supplies was also reported in hospitals, with shortages of approximately 35%. People living with HIV continued to face scarcity of the resources necessary for their treatment, including diagnostic and infection control tests and breast milk substitutes for HIV-exposed infants.

Health-sector NGOs warned of the need to expand the coverage of vaccinations under the Expanded Plan of Immunization, and to guarantee and strengthen the Global Plan of Action published by the Pan American Health Organization, to prevent the reappearance of preventable diseases.

Right to food​

By December a basic food basket for a household of five cost the equivalent of USD 498.47, while the monthly minimum wage was only USD 2.36, leaving the majority of the population facing severe food insecurity.

In February, the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food visited Venezuela. He reported that nearly 82% of the population were living in poverty and 53% were exposed to extreme poverty with insufficient income to purchase a basic food basket. He reported that people were having to reduce portion sizes, skip meals and buy less nutritious food items as a result of poverty. He also stated that women were disproportionately affected by food poverty since they were often the caregivers for their families and communities while working for a wage. Some women resorted to exchanging sex for food. Pregnant and breastfeeding women and girls were particularly at risk of undernourishment.

 
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wing2000

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In order for that to work, you need someone with power to authorize the extradition, who would've signed the order of extradition for Maduro (being that he was the guy who had to personally sign off and approve all extraditions)?

Yes. Maduro's arrest and extraction was not an extradition. That was the point.
 
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Hentenza

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Aryeh Jay

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Why was his wife kidnapped.

President Trump is a compassionate leader, a war President if you will, he doesn't want to break up families like that evil Biden.
 
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Aryeh Jay

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In terms of pragmatic policy making?

Yes. Liberating 30 million people at the expense of 40 casualties (some of which were military men shooting at our guys) is far from the worst case scenario.

Yeah, what kind of lunatic soldiers shoot at invading force taking their leader? One can hope our troops would never stoop to that level to defend our sovereignty.
 
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wing2000

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There are reports that Maduro had a Cuban security detail....many of whom were killed or injured during the operation.

In a rare admission, Cuba announces 32 of it's soldiers/security agents were killed in the operation:

Cuban state media reported that 32 Cubans were killed in the U.S. attacks in Venezuela on Saturday. President Miguel Díaz-Canel of Cuba said the people were from Cuba’s armed forces or its interior ministry, on a mission at the request of Venezuela, according to state media.

 
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NxNW

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Yeah, what kind of lunatic soldiers shoot at invading force taking their leader?
I remember a cop shooting a woman in the Capitol who was trying to assassinate our leaders.
 
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Aryeh Jay

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In a rare admission, Cuba announces 32 of it's soldiers/security agents were killed in the operation:

Cuban state media reported that 32 Cubans were killed in the U.S. attacks in Venezuela on Saturday. President Miguel Díaz-Canel of Cuba said the people were from Cuba’s armed forces or its interior ministry, on a mission at the request of Venezuela, according to state media.


Well that explains why everyone was yelling in Spanish on the radio.
 
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wing2000

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ThatRobGuy

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Yeah, what kind of lunatic soldiers shoot at invading force taking their leader? One can hope our troops would never stoop to that level to defend our sovereignty.
In the case of Maduro?...the dumb ones. Being that they all got greased and there were no causalities for us, clearly trying to defend an illegitimate leader against a US Special Forces team is a job that comes with some hazards.

Did a miss a memo where Maduro was considered on of the "good guys" or something?

Chile president-elect José Antonio Kast, who will be sworn in in March, called Maduro's arrest 'great news for the region' and called for regional authorities to dismantle the complete apparatus of authoritarian rule.

Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa said "Venezuelans opposed to Maduro have an ally in Ecuador"

UK Labour prime minister rejects call to condemn Donald Trump, saying the UK would “shed no tears” about the end of Nicolas Maduro's regime.

France's Macron said, "The Venezuelan people are now free from the dictatorship of Nicolás Maduro."



However, some of the governments that are opposing the move and publicly denouncing it are Cuba, China, Russia, and North Korea... so if anyone wants to be on that team...by all means, have at it lol.

I must admit, I did like this response from Zelenskyy
"Regarding Venezuela? How should we respond to this?" Zelenskyy asked in Ukrainian. "Well, what can I say is, if you can do that with dictators, then the United States knows what to do next," he said with a smile.

Obviously it's not an apples to apples situation there in terms of the security apparatuses that exist in the two nations, but I found his comment amusing.
 
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ThatRobGuy

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Where did you get that idea?
There seem to be a lot of people who are fixated on the approach/process rather than the end result (noting that the approach is not unique in modern history by any means)

Keeping a sensitive operation covert and then briefing congress after the fact (since it's not a full scale war, but a strategic operation) has been the norm for a while. In the digital intelligence age (which has been amplified by social media), that's about the only way things can be done.

How does any sensitive mission get accomplished if people blab about it on Twitter a week beforehand or it's a matter of public record?
 
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MarkSB

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In terms of pragmatic policy making?

Yes. Liberating 30 million people at the expense of 40 casualties (some of which were military men shooting at our guys) is far from the worst case scenario.

No one was “liberated”. The regime that was ruling the country is still in place.

Removing a regime like this overnight with only 40 casualties is something that just isn’t going to happen in the real world. If the Trump administration wants regime change, it’s going to be far more costly (time, money, and lives) than that.
 
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Landon Caeli

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If we've unleashed Pandora box... Then... We have to go all the way. Unfortunately, that's the way it may have to be.

Prepare yourselves. We have to stand together as a nation, and may have to do nation building by force, one more time, in unity.
 
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RocksInMyHead

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There seem to be a lot of people who are fixated on the approach/process rather than the end result
That would seem to suggest that people don't particularly care about Maduro - exactly the opposite of what you said. Virtually everyone is in agreement that he was a bad person and a terrible leader, and that Venezuela is better off (or at least has the potential to be) without him in charge. The problem is the manner in which it was achieved.
(noting that the approach is not unique in modern history by any means)
Sure, but it's never not been controversial - just as it is in this case.
Keeping a sensitive operation covert and then briefing congress after the fact (since it's not a full scale war, but a strategic operation) has been the norm for a while. In the digital intelligence age (which has been amplified by social media), that's about the only way things can be done.

How does any sensitive mission get accomplished if people blab about it on Twitter a week beforehand or it's a matter of public record?
Name a single case in which the Gang of Eight (the only members of Congress I would expect to be briefed ahead of such an operation, per convention) have leaked any operational intelligence. Heck, both the NY Times and WaPo knew in advance and held off. Publicizing operational details of a mission that has not been completed yet is still one of the lines that no one is willing to cross, and for good reason.
 
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wing2000

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There seem to be a lot of people who are fixated on the approach/process rather than the end result (noting that the approach is not unique in modern history by any means)

Speaking for myself, the end result (of this action) is yet to be determined.

Failing to brief the "Gang of Eight" (as every President has done in the modern era) reflects the arrogance of this Administration. As one example in an operation every bit as complex and risky: The Obama Administration briefed the Gang of Eight. Did any of those members leak?
 
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