The Prague Post - Venezuela looking to 'new era' after Maduro ouster, says interim leader

EUR -
AED 4.276788
AFN 76.286791
ALL 96.636249
AMD 442.910615
ANG 2.084627
AOA 1067.886876
ARS 1692.643459
AUD 1.744335
AWG 2.097635
AZN 1.978078
BAM 1.955522
BBD 2.345456
BDT 142.309749
BGN 1.955701
BHD 0.439071
BIF 3447.179863
BMD 1.164544
BND 1.499874
BOB 8.046786
BRL 6.278757
BSD 1.164529
BTN 105.169034
BWP 15.561585
BYN 3.388858
BYR 22825.06798
BZD 2.342067
CAD 1.616329
CDF 2529.968312
CHF 0.931518
CLF 0.026244
CLP 1029.52717
CNY 8.126192
CNH 8.119395
COP 4283.741215
CRC 578.415208
CUC 1.164544
CUP 30.860424
CVE 110.249311
CZK 24.252275
DJF 206.962396
DKK 7.471739
DOP 74.145947
DZD 151.35086
EGP 55.09046
ERN 17.468164
ETB 181.360848
FJD 2.656436
FKP 0.866894
GBP 0.867131
GEL 3.126789
GGP 0.866894
GHS 12.548053
GIP 0.866894
GMD 85.612324
GNF 10193.549452
GTQ 8.928691
GYD 243.633239
HKD 9.080295
HNL 30.715179
HRK 7.533669
HTG 152.411114
HUF 386.79348
IDR 19632.236915
ILS 3.673998
IMP 0.866894
INR 105.122656
IQD 1525.510871
IRR 49056.428177
ISK 146.01028
JEP 0.866894
JMD 183.603873
JOD 0.825646
JPY 184.434117
KES 150.226695
KGS 101.837421
KHR 4687.312868
KMF 492.601908
KPW 1048.123187
KRW 1705.498568
KWD 0.358494
KYD 0.970454
KZT 594.425413
LAK 25171.418093
LBP 104278.688407
LKR 360.427164
LRD 209.618371
LSL 19.107799
LTL 3.438596
LVL 0.704421
LYD 6.3281
MAD 10.730573
MDL 19.907911
MGA 5399.231686
MKD 61.518813
MMK 2445.141875
MNT 4148.405657
MOP 9.352369
MRU 46.325408
MUR 54.116344
MVR 18.004214
MWK 2019.703923
MXN 20.753809
MYR 4.714086
MZN 74.398621
NAD 19.106979
NGN 1656.587773
NIO 42.853902
NOK 11.712981
NPR 168.26861
NZD 2.027577
OMR 0.447757
PAB 1.164529
PEN 3.911943
PGK 4.971293
PHP 69.35911
PKR 325.893526
PLN 4.214049
PYG 7903.875274
QAR 4.245696
RON 5.088589
RSD 117.382599
RUB 91.417574
RWF 1697.843816
SAR 4.367628
SBD 9.467996
SCR 15.9742
SDG 700.470236
SEK 10.716249
SGD 1.499815
SHP 0.87371
SLE 28.123561
SLL 24419.910525
SOS 664.405455
SRD 44.592677
STD 24103.715488
STN 24.496409
SVC 10.18955
SYP 12879.364735
SZL 19.100282
THB 36.647016
TJS 10.824267
TMT 4.075905
TND 3.409315
TOP 2.803943
TRY 50.281063
TTD 7.904841
TWD 36.760937
TZS 2923.005763
UAH 50.297443
UGX 4145.39231
USD 1.164544
UYU 45.103582
UZS 14030.003523
VES 384.251308
VND 30601.312441
VUV 140.83932
WST 3.235712
XAF 655.858039
XAG 0.012776
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.147239
XCG 2.098801
XDR 0.81629
XOF 655.86367
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.630706
ZAR 19.148569
ZMK 10482.294377
ZMW 22.969548
ZWL 374.982785
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.4

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.1800

    84.05

    +0.21%

  • RIO

    2.2900

    85.88

    +2.67%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.76

    -0.44%

  • BCE

    0.5000

    24.22

    +2.06%

  • CMSD

    0.0080

    23.908

    +0.03%

  • NGG

    0.8000

    78.88

    +1.01%

  • GSK

    0.8900

    50.79

    +1.75%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    17.14

    -0.82%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    41.92

    -0.64%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.57

    0%

  • BTI

    0.8200

    57.44

    +1.43%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    13.37

    +1.42%

  • AZN

    1.8300

    96.34

    +1.9%

  • BP

    0.4600

    35.82

    +1.28%

Venezuela looking to 'new era' after Maduro ouster, says interim leader
Venezuela looking to 'new era' after Maduro ouster, says interim leader / Photo: Juan BARRETO - AFP

Venezuela looking to 'new era' after Maduro ouster, says interim leader

Venezuela's interim president Delcy Rodriguez declared Wednesday her country was entering a new era marked by greater tolerance towards political rivals, following the US ouster of her former boss Nicolas Maduro.

Text size:

At her first press conference since Maduro's dramatic capture by US forces on January 3, Rodriguez cast herself as a unifier.

Following 12 years of repressive rule by Maduro, Venezuela is "opening up to a new political era," Maduro's former deputy told reporters at the presidential palace.

The new Venezuela, she said, "allows for understanding despite differences and through ideological and political diversity."

After toppling Maduro, US President Donald Trump agreed to let Rodriguez take over, provided she toes Washington's line.

- Calls for 'peace' -

In doing so, Trump sidelined the leader of the anti-Maduro opposition, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Corina Machado, claiming she did not have enough "respect" in Venezuela.

Machado will meet Trump on Thursday at the White House to press her demands for a democratic transition that includes herself and Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, her candidate in 2024 elections which the opposition claims were stolen by Maduro.

So far, Trump has focused his energies on securing access to Venezuela's vast oil reserves.

But he claimed that he had also been planning a second attack on Venezuela until the government last week announced the release of "large numbers" of the dissenters languishing in prison, sometimes for years.

Rodriguez claimed authorities had released 406 prisoners since December in a process that accelerated since last week, and which she said "has not yet concluded."

The Foro Penal legal rights NGO, which defends many of the detainees, gave a much smaller tally of around 180 freed.

AFP's count, based on data from NGOs and opposition parties, showed 70 people going free since January 8.

They include some Americans, a US State Department official confirmed on Tuesday, without saying how many.

The trickle of releases continued on Wednesday, with the release of 17 journalists and media workers.

Roland Carreno, a journalist and prominent opposition activist, who was detained in August 2024 during post-election protests, was part of the group.

According to the National Union of Press Workers he spent "one year, five months, and 12 days" behind bars.

A member of the Popular Will party, he was previously imprisoned between 2020 and 2023 on charges of terrorism -- a charge frequently used to lock up opposition members in Venezuela.

In a video shared by another freed journalist, he called for "peace and reconciliation."

Political analyst Nicmer Evans, director of the Punto de Corte news outlet was also released.

- Balancing act -

Rodriguez has been engaged in a delicate balancing act, trying to meet US demands without alienating the Maduro loyalists, who control the security forces and intelligence services.

To avoid scenes of jubilant opposition activists punching the air as they walk free from prison, the authorities have been releasing them quietly at other locations, far from the TV cameras and relatives waiting outside detention centers.

Carreno was released at a shopping mall.

Former presidential candidate Enrique Marquez, one of the first to be released, was driven home in a patrol car.

A number of Spanish and Italian citizens have also walked free from Venezuelan prisons in the past week.

The United States had already secured freedom for some of its nationals in a deal with Maduro last year.

- X access restored -

Domestically, Venezuelans regained one freedom on Tuesday -- the ability to post on social media platform X, which had been blocked for more than a year by Maduro's government.

Rodriguez updated her profile's bio to "acting president" -- she served as vice president under Maduro -- and wrote: "Let us stay united, moving toward economic stability, social justice, and the welfare state we deserve to aspire to."

Maduro's X account was updated Tuesday with a photo of the deposed leader and his wife, Cilia Flores.

"We want you back," the post reads.

burs-cb/des

I.Mala--TPP