CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela's acting President Delcy Rodríguez on Wednesday vowed to continue releasing prisoners detained under former President Nicolás Maduro during her first press briefing since Maduro was ousted by the United States earlier this month.
Addressing journalists from a red carpet at the presidential palace, Rodríguez struck a conciliatory tone and said the Venezuelan government was entering a ''new political moment." She offered assurances that the process of releasing hundreds of detainees — a move reportedly made at the behest of the Trump administration — "has not yet concluded.'' The releases have drawn criticism for being too slow and secretive.
''This opportunity is for Venezuela and for the people of Venezuela to be able to see reflected a new moment where coexistence, where living together, where recognition of the other allows building and erecting a new spirituality,'' Rodríguez said in the address, which lasted just over five minutes. She took no questions.
Flanked by her brother and National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez, and Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, she also criticized organizations that advocate on behalf of prisoners' rights. She pledged ''strict'' enforcement of the law and credited Maduro with starting the prisoner releases as a signal that her government meant no wholesale break from the past.
''Crimes related to the constitutional order are being evaluated,'' she said, in apparent reference to detainees held on what human rights groups say are politically motivated charges. ''Messages of hatred, intolerance, acts of violence will not be permitted.''
Despite sanctioning her for human rights violations during his first term, President Donald Trump enlisted Rodríguez to help secure U.S. control over Venezuela's oil sales. To ensure the former Maduro loyalist does his bidding, he threatened Rodríguez with a ''situation probably worse than Maduro,'' who faces federal charges of drug-trafficking from a Brooklyn jail.
In endorsing Rodríguez, Trump sidelined María Corina Machado, the leader of Venezuela's opposition who won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for her campaign to restore the nation's democracy.
After dismissing her as lacking the sufficient support and respect to govern, Trump said he'll meet Machado in the Oval Office on Thursday for the first time since Maduro's capture. The meeting is seen as a key opportunity for Machado to press Trump on her hopes for a democratic transition in Venezuela.