CARACAS, Venezuela — Self-exiled Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo González, who claims to have defeated President Nicolás Maduro in last year's presidential election, said his son-in-law was kidnapped Tuesday in Venezuela's capital.
González, who was traveling in the United States, said Rafael Tudares was kidnapped while on his way to drop off González's two grandchildren at school in Caracas.
In a post on X, González said ''hooded men, dressed in black'' intercepted the vehicle and loaded Tudares ''into a gold-colored van.'' He did not say what happened to his 6- and 7-year-old grandchildren.
The kidnapping happened despite a significant increase in police and military presence since New Year's Day across Caracas ahead of Friday's swearing-in ceremony for Maduro, who the government says won a third term in the July election.
The government's centralized press office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
González, a retired diplomat, represented Venezuela's Unitary Platform opposition coalition in the presidential election, which he and Maduro both claim to have won. The platform in a statement characterized Tudares' kidnapping as a ''forced disappearance for political reasons.''
''We demand the immediate release of Rafael Tudares and all political prisoners, who are hostages of a regime that knows it is rejected by the vast majority of Venezuelans who spoke with the force of the vote (on July 28),'' the coalition said in the statement.
González left Venezuela for exile in Spain in September after a judge issued a warrant for his arrest in connection with an election-related investigation. In recent weeks, he has vowed to return to his homeland to take the oath of office.