The Tudares Case and the Regime’s New Constraints
The son-in-law of Edmundo González was released after his wife denounced coercion from intermediaries presumably acting on the regime’s behalf
| CARVIEW |
The son-in-law of Edmundo González was released after his wife denounced coercion from intermediaries presumably acting on the regime’s behalf
Every year on January 23, Venezuelans remember the fall of a 20th-century dictator. This time, the date offers a distorted mirror
A possessed copying machine, the smell of microwaved fish at lunch, excel sheets, and the fate of the hemisphere. Just another day at The Branch
Maduro is gone, just like Pérez Jiménez and Pedro Estrada 68 years ago, but the current political atmosphere is… quite different.
Relatives of political prisoners have been camping outside jails and prisons for 14 consecutive days. Leading Catholic priests stood alongside those outside El Rodeo (Miranda state), which is particularly meaningful following a recent accusation against the Archbishop of Caracas. Two veteran anti-chavista politicians have shown their faces after going into hiding since August 2024. Today, campuses in at least seven universities across the country woke up with banners calling for the freedom of all dissidents and the shutdown of El Helicoide and other detention centers. UCV student leaders led a protest next to the capital’s main highway to honor the 23E anniversary, joined by some human rights groups and trade union representatives.
This may not be enough to shake the dictadura and force concessions. Sustaining such pressure requires time and careful coordination with party structures and the wider Venezuelan population. But it is, without a doubt, a more than decent way to push for political freedoms on this weird, confusing anniversary. The sort of freedoms that other non-Venezuelan stakeholders will be much slower to demand.
🫓 Jan. 23 is the day to honor 🇻🇪 democratic legacy. UCV students led a protest next to Caracas’ main highway, demanding the release of dissidents and respect for human rights. They were careful not to block traffic or call for chavismo's removal (as in previous protest cycles). https://t.co/FCFhj7lrV5
— Caracas Chronicles (@CaracasChron) January 23, 2026
Today, we celebrate the day democracy was born in our country. 60 years on, we keep trying to find reasons to celebrate it. So far, we haven’t found many.
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Betancourt’s civilian republic was born out of confrontation rather than consensus, and with the essential support of the Venezuelan armed forces
Óscar Murillo, Provea coordinator:
“Despite the repression that’s still going on, civil society and social organizations remain in the streets. Today has been a civic, peaceful expression that affirms the spirit of Jan. 23: the people’s right to decide their future.
“A democratic roadmap and human dignity are needed across all spheres: economic, political, social, and cultural.”
🫓 Good news. The student movement has made some noise on the 68th anniversary of the fall of the Pérez Jiménez regime (our old right-wing, Cold War dictadura).
— Caracas Chronicles (@CaracasChron) January 23, 2026
Campuses in at least 7 universities across 🇻🇪 woke up with banners calling for the release of all political prisoners. pic.twitter.com/NkbX3kxJZC
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