CARACAS, Venezuela — Relatives of Venezuelan prisoners went on hunger strike on Saturday to demand the freedom of their loved ones as politicians in the South American nation debate an amnesty law for dissidents imprisoned under President Nicolas Maduro 's rule.
In a message posted on Instagram, the Committee for the Freedom of Political Prisoners said the hunger strike is being staged by 10 people and would last until the government frees all 33 political prisoners still being held at a prison known as Zona 7, according to the civil society group's estimates.
Earlier on Saturday 17 prisoners were released from the Zona 7 detention center in Caracas and held tearful reunions with their families.
Relatives of dissidents being held at the facility have been sleeping outside since Jan. 8, when Venezuelan officials had announced there would be significant prisoner releases aimed at promoting national reconciliation following a U.S. raid on the country in which Maduro was captured with his wife.
But while hundreds of dissidents have been released from other prisons in Venezuela in recent weeks, liberations at Zona 7 have been scarce.
''We demand that National Assembly president Jorge Rodriguez keep his word and release all of the political prisoners,'' said Yessy Orozco, the daughter of a former legislator who was arrested in November.
Venezuela's authoritarian government has been under pressure from Washington to make political reforms even as the Trump administration eases sanctions on the nation's oil industry and officials from both nations meet to discuss ways to jump start oil production.
The National Assembly, which is still controlled by the ruling party, on Thursday debated a measure that could free hundreds of opposition members, activists and human rights defenders who have been detained for months or years for political reasons.