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Tag: María Corina Machado

  • Venezuela’s acting president proposes legislation that could lead to release of hundreds of political prisoners

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    Venezuela’s acting President Delcy Rodríguez on Friday announced an amnesty bill that could lead to the release of hundreds of prisoners, including opposition leaders, journalists and human rights activists detained for political reasons.

    The measure had long been sought by the United States-backed opposition. It is the latest concession Rodríguez has made since taking the reins of the country on Jan. 3 after the brazen seizure of then-President Nicolás Maduro in a U.S. military attack in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas.

    Rodríguez told a gathering of justices, magistrates, ministers, military brass and other government leaders that the ruling party-controlled National Assembly would take up the bill with urgency.

    “May this law serve to heal the wounds left by the political confrontation fueled by violence and extremism,” she added in the pretaped televised event. “May it serve to redirect justice in our country, and may it serve to redirect coexistence among Venezuelans.”

    This comes as the U.S. Embassy for Venezuela also announced Friday that all American citizens detained in Venezuela have been released.

    “We are pleased to confirm the release by the interim authorities of all known U.S. citizens held in Venezuela,” the embassy said in a social media post. Secretary of State Marco Rubio reposted the news on his personal X account.

    It wasn’t immediately clear how many people were released. CBS News has reached out to the State Department. 

    Earlier this month, a hostage advocate familiar with the situation had told CBS News that at least four Americans were still detained in Venezuela.

    In July, 10 Americans were freed from Venezuela as part of a prisoner swap involving the U.S. and El Salvador. The Americans were freed in exchange for El Salvador returning 252 Venezuelans who were deported from the U.S. to El Salvador’s notorious Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT.

    The U.S. does not physically operate an embassy in Venezuela, after it shuttered its embassy in Caracas in 2019 amid mass protests and political unrest. Since then, it has operated its consular services out of Bogota, Colombia. In the wake of the U.S. capture of Maduro in early January, the Trump administration this week notified Congress that it would begin steps to eventually reopen its embassy in Venezuela.

    Laura Dogu, the chief U.S. diplomat to Venezuela, traveled to Caracas Saturday to meet with Venezuelan officials, Yvan Gil, Venezuela’s foreign affairs minister, posted on social media. Gil said their meeting is “aimed at charting a roadmap for work on matters of bilateral interest, as well as addressing and resolving existing differences through diplomatic dialogue and on the basis of mutual respect and International Law.”

    Rodríguez, meanwhile also announced the shutdown of Helicoide, a prison in Caracas where torture and other human rights abuses have been repeatedly documented by independent organizations. The facility, she said, will be transformed into a sports, social and cultural center for police and surrounding neighborhoods.

    Acting Venezuelan President Delcy Rodriguez speaks at a rally after lawmakers approved a legislative initiative to strengthen the oil industry, opening the country’s oil sector to privatization. Jan. 29, 2026. 

    Javier Campos/Picture Alliance via Getty Images


    Rodríguez made her announcement before some of the officials that former prisoners and human rights watchdogs have accused of ordering the abuses committed at Helicoide and other detention facilities.

    Relatives of some prisoners livestreamed Rodríguez’s speech on a phone as they gathered outside Helicoide. Some cried. Many chanted “Freedom! Freedom!”

    “God is good. God heard us,” Johana Chirinos, a prisoner’s aunt, said as tears rolled down her face.

    Opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate María Corina Machado in a statement said the announced actions were not taken “voluntarily, but rather in response to pressure from the U.S. government.” She also noted that people have been detained for their political activities from anywhere between a month and 23 years.

    “The regime’s repressive apparatus is brutal and has responded to the numerous criminal forces that answer to this regime, and it is all that remains,” Machado said. “When repression disappears and fear is lost, it will be the end of tyranny.”

    The Venezuelan-based prisoners’ rights group Foro Penal estimates that 711 people are in detention facilities across the South American country for their political activities. Of those, 183 have been sentenced.

    Among the prominent members of the political opposition who were detained after the 2024 presidential election and remain in prison are former lawmaker Freddy Superlano, Machado’s lawyer Perkins Rocha, as well as Juan Pablo Guanipa, a former governor and one of Machado’s closest allies.

    The government did not release the text of the bill on Friday, leaving unclear the specific criteria that will be used to determine who qualifies for amnesty.

    Rodríguez said the “general amnesty law” will cover the “entire period of political violence from 1999 to the present.” She also explained that people convicted of murder, drug trafficking, corruption or human rights violations will not qualify for relief.

    Rodríguez’s government earlier this month announced plans to release a significant number of prisoners in a goodwill gesture, but relatives of those detained have condemned the slow pace of the releases.

    “A general amnesty is welcome as long as its elements and conditions include all of civil society, without discrimination, that it does not become a cloak of impunity, and that it contributes to dismantling the repressive apparatus of political persecution,” Alfredo Romero, president of Foro Penal, said on social media.

    The organization has tallied 302 releases since the Jan. 8 announcement.

    The human rights group Provea in a statement called out the lack of transparency and “trickle” pace of prisoner releases. It also underscored that while the freeing of those still detained “is urgent, the announcement of an amnesty should not be conceived, under any circumstances, as a pardon or act of clemency on the part of the State.”

    “We recall that these people were arbitrarily imprisoned for exercising rights protected by international human rights instruments, the National Constitution, and Venezuelan laws,” the organization said.

    Outside another detention facility in Caracas, Edward Ocariz, who was detained for more than five months after the 2024 election, joined prisoners’ relatives in demanding their loved ones’ swift release.

    “We, Venezuelans, have all endured so much, all unjust, merciless and trampling on our dignity. No one deserves this,” Ocariz said. “And today, the guilty continue to govern Venezuela.”

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  • Trump to meet with Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado

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    Washington — Venezuelan opposition leader and 2025 Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado will meet with President Trump at the White House on Thursday, a White House official said. 

    Mr. Trump has not endorsed Machado to lead Venezuela after the U.S. military operation to remove former President Nicolás Maduro, who is now facing drug trafficking charges in the U.S.. Mr. Trump says the U.S. is taking charge of Venezuela for now and will be heavily involved in its oil market for potentially years. 

    “She doesn’t have the support within, or the respect within, the country,” Mr. Trump said about Machado on Jan. 3. “She’s a very nice woman, but she doesn’t have the respect.”

    Machado has praised Mr. Trump and recently floated the idea of giving him her Nobel Peace Prize. The Norwegian Nobel Institute said the prize cannot be transferred, revoked or shared, and is final. 

    “I certainly would love to be able to personally tell him that we believe — the Venezuelan people, because this is a prize of the Venezuelan people — certainly want to, to give it to him and share it with him,” Machado told Fox News’ Sean Hannity last week. “What he has done is historic. It’s a huge step towards a democratic transition.”

    The institute awarded her the prize for her efforts to promote a peaceful transition to democracy in Venezuela. Mr. Trump has expressed frustration that he wasn’t the recipient of the award, citing the global conflicts his administration has helped settle. 

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  • Machado can’t give Nobel Peace Prize to Trump, organization says

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    The organization that oversees the Nobel Peace Prize is throwing cold water on talk of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado giving her recent award to President Trump.

    Once the Nobel Peace Prize is announced, it can’t be revoked, transferred or shared with others, the Norwegian Nobel Institute said in a short statement on Friday.

    “The decision is final and stands for all time,” it said.

    A representative for Machado did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

    The statement comes after Machado indicated she’d like to give or share the prize with Mr. Trump, who oversaw the successful U.S. operation to capture authoritarian Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro. He is facing drug trafficking charges in New York.

    “I certainly would love to be able to personally tell him that we believe — the Venezuelan people, because this is a prize of the Venezuelan people — certainly want to, to give it to him and share it with him,” Machado told Fox News host Sean Hannity earlier this week. “What he has done is historic. It’s a huge step towards a democratic transition.”

    Machado dedicated the prize to Mr. Trump, along with the people of Venezuela, shortly after it was announced. Mr. Trump has coveted and has openly campaigned for winning the Nobel Prize himself since his return to office.

    When asked about Machado’s comments in his own interview with Hannity Friday, Mr. Trump responded, “I’ve heard that she wants to do that, that would be a great honor.” 

    The president told Hannity that Machado is expected to visit Washington next week and meet with him.

    “I look forward to saying hello to her. That would be a great honor,” the president said.

    When it comes to governing Venezuela after Maduro’s capture, though, Mr. Trump has so far backed someone else: acting President Delcy Rodríguez, who served as vice president under Maduro.

    He’s called Machado a “very nice woman” but said she doesn’t currently have the support within Venezuela to govern.

    In an interview with “CBS Evening News” anchor Tony Dokoupil on Tuesday, Machado responded “Absolutely yes,” when asked if she should be Venezuela’s next leader, noting that her coalition has a president-elect in Edmundo González, who the U.S. and other governments recognized as the winner of the 2024 election against Maduro.

    “We are ready and willing to serve our people, as we have been mandated,” she told Dokoupil.

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  • Full interview: María Corina Machado on Maduro and Venezuela

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    María Corina Machado spoke with “CBS Evening News” anchor Tony Dokoupil on Tuesday, January 6, about the U.S. capture of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, her opposition movement that she says is ready to lead the country, Venezuelan Interim President Delcy Rodriguez and more.

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  • Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado releases letter after Maduro’s capture. Read the full text.

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    María Corina Machado released a letter addressing the Venezuelan people after leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife were captured in a U.S. operation overnight Saturday. 

    Machado, an opposition leader who has mostly been in hiding over the last year, said Maduro will “face international justice for the atrocious crimes committed against Venezuelans and against citizens of many other nations.” 

    “The time for freedom has come!” Machado, who was awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize, wrote in the letter posted on X.

    It was not clear on Saturday if Machado, who escaped to Norway in a secret mission last month, was in Venezuela. She told CBS News in mid-December that she was “absolutely” supportive of President Trump’s increasing military pressure on the Maduro regime and said she would welcome “more and more pressure so that Maduro understands that he has to go.”

    Read the full text of her letter, translated by CBS News, below. 

    María Corina Machado’s letter to Venezuelans 

    Venezuelans, The time for freedom has come!

    Nicolás Maduro from today will face international justice for the atrocious crimes committed against Venezuelans and against citizens of many other nations. Given his refusal to accept a negotiated solution, the United States government has fulfilled its promise to enforce the law.

    The time has come for popular sovereignty and national sovereignty to prevail in our country. We are going to restore order, release the political prisoners, build an exceptional country, and bring our children back home.

    We have fought for years, we have given it our all, and it has been worth it. What was meant to happen is happening.

    This is the hour of the citizens. Those of us who risked everything for democracy on June 28th. Those of us who elected Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia as the legitimate President of Venezuela, who must immediately assume his constitutional mandate and be recognized as Commander-in-Chief of the National Armed Forces by all the officers and soldiers who comprise it.

    Today we are ready to assert our mandate and take power. Let us remain vigilant, active, and organized until the democratic transition is complete. A transition that needs ALL of us.

    To the Venezuelans who are currently in our country, be ready to put into action what we will be communicating to you very soon through our official channels.

    To Venezuelans abroad, we need you to be mobilized, engaging the governments and citizens of the world and committing them from now on to the great operation of building the new Venezuela.

    In these crucial hours, receive all my strength, my confidence, and my affection. We remain vigilant and in contact.

    VENEZUELA WILL BE FREE! We go hand in hand with God, until the end.

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  • Nobel laureate María Corina Machado makes public appearance in Norway

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    Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado appeared in public for the first time in 11 months early Thursday morning local time, when she waved to supporters at a hotel in Norway’s capital hours after her daughter accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on her behalf.

    Machado had been in hiding since Jan. 9, when she was briefly detained after joining supporters in a protest in Caracas, Venezuela’s capital. She had been expected to attend the award ceremony Wednesday in Oslo, where heads of state and her family were among those waiting to see her.

    Machado said in an audio recording of a phone call published on the Nobel website that she wouldn’t be able to arrive in time for the ceremony but that many people had “risked their lives” for her to arrive in Oslo.

    Her daughter, Ana Corina Sosa, accepted the prize in her place.

    “She wants to live in a free Venezuela, and she will never give up on that purpose,” Sosa said. “That is why we all know, and I know, that she will be back in Venezuela very soon.”

    Nobel laureate María Corina Machado waves from a balcony of the Grand Hotel in Oslo, Norway, in the early hours of Dec. 11, 2025. 

    Odd ANDERSEN /AFP via Getty Images


    In a Zoom interview with CBS News just hours after receiving the honor in October, the woman known as Venezuela’s “Iron Lady” said that it served as a message to Venezuelans that they were “not alone.”

    “The world recognizes this huge, epic fight,” Machado said.

    Venezuela’s attorney general told Agence France-Presse last month that Machado would be considered a “fugitive” if she left Venezuela to accept the honor. 

    Machado was awarded the Nobel for “her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy.”  

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  • Maria Corina Machado says her Nobel Peace Prize tells Venezuelans that

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    Maria Corina Machado told CBS News Friday that being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize serves as a message to her fellow Venezuelans that “we are not alone.”

    “They have been part of this huge movement,” Machado told CBS News by Zoom. “We are not alone. The world recognizes this huge, epic fight.” 

    Machado is the leader of the pro-democracy movement in Venezuela, which is under a dictatorship so brutal she has been forced to live in hiding.

    “This is certainly the biggest recognition to our people,” Machado told CBS News, which was the only U.S. media outlet to speak to her following Friday’s announcement. 

    Known as Venezuela’s “Iron Lady,” the 58-year-old Machado has led a massive political movement challenging the country’s authoritarian leaders for over two decades.

    First, she challenged former President Hugo Chavez, and now, his successor, President Nicolas Maduro, whose disputed July 2024 reelection was not recognized by the U.S., which instead declared opposition leader Edmundo González, now exiled, as the winner.

    For the past several months, the Trump administration has placed pressure on Maduro’s regime, deploying warships to the southern Caribbean and conducting military strikes on drug boats it says originated from Venezuela.  

    Last week, the White House notified Congress that the U.S. was in a “non-international armed conflict” with drug cartels it has designated as terrorist organizations.

    Machado was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for keeping “the flame of democracy burning amidst a growing darkness,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee said in a statement.

    A video captured the emotional moment Machado accepted the award in a phone call from Kristian Berg Harpviken, the director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute.

    “Oh my God. I have no words. Thank you so much,” Machado said on the call. “I hope you understand this is a movement, this is an achievement for a whole society. I am just one person; I certainly do not deserve this. Oh my God.”

    Machado’s defiance has come at a price. She has spent the last year in hiding after Maduro repeatedly threatened to arrest her.

    CBS News was with Machado in Venezuela last year during the presidential elections, when Maduro claimed victory despite the international outcry of fraud.

    Maduro’s crackdown on dissent escalated, but that didn’t stop her.

    “I think it does give me a lot of protection,” said Machado of how receiving the Nobel may have changed her future and her security situation. “But the most important thing, is that it highlights, worldwide, the importance of the struggle of Venezuela.”

    Machado told CBS News she spoke to President Trump Friday and thanked him “from the bottom of the heart of Venezuelans.”

    She said she told Mr. Trump that he can “be sure that we are a society committed to freedom, that we will prevail.”

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