Venezuelans fear for relatives after mass arrests
“I haven’t been able to see him, provide him with food, or give him his clothes. I don’t know if he has been beaten, bathed, or eaten.”
Isabella, who wishes to remain anonymous, is deeply anxious about her son.
Through her tears, she reveals that her 28-year-old son and his 17-year-old girlfriend were arrested and beaten after the family participated in a march in Caracas protesting against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the day after Sunday’s presidential election.
President Maduro declared victory, which was immediately contested by the opposition. They claim to have evidence from electronic voting machines showing they, not the government, won.
Both the opposition and numerous governments around the world are calling for proof of President Maduro’s election victory.
Maduro has promised to release the vote tallies, though he has not specified when.
Opposition leader María Corina Machado has called for protests “in every city” in Venezuela on Saturday against President Maduro and the contested election results.
She said on social media “We must remain firm, organized, and mobilized with the pride of having achieved a historic victory on 28 July”.
The government has said Ms Machado should be arrested.
It comes after Ms Machado wrote in the Wall Street Journal she is in “hiding” and fearing for her “life” and “freedom.”