29 Countries Urge Venezuela to Free Prisoners, Launch Peace Talks

Opposition supporters take part in a rally to demand a referendum to remove Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro, in Caracas, Venezuela, Sept.16, 2016. Twenty-nine nations called on Venezuela to launch a national dialogue to preserve peace and security.

Paraguay led nearly 30 countries Thursday in calling on Venezuela to engage in a national dialogue with the opposition to preserve peace and security, and to release political prisoners.

Oscar Cabello Sarubbi, Paraguay’s vice minister of foreign affairs, read the statement on behalf of 29 countries, including Britain and the United States, at the U.N. Human Rights Council.

It drew a rebuke by Venezuela and its allies, including Cuba and Syria, at the Geneva forum.

The joint statement urged all parties in Venezuela to hold a timely and effective dialogue “to preserve peace and safety, to ensure the full respect of human rights, due process, the separation of powers and the consolidation of a representative democracy.”

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro arrives at a press conference after the 17th Non-Aligned Movement Summit in Porlamar, on Margarita Island, Venezuela, Sept 18, 2016. Venezuela rejected a call for a national dialogue.

The government of President Nicolas Maduro is struggling under an unraveling socialist economic system that suffers from triple-digit inflation, extensive shortages of staple products, and food riots. He says the OPEC-member country is a victim of an economic war backed by the United States and the Venezuelan political elite.

Venezuela’s opposition has called for rallies nationwide on October 12 to push for a recall of Maduro this year, as it seeks to oust his Socialist Party in an early presidential election.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al Hussein, in an opening speech to the forum September 13, highlighted “allegations of repression of opposition voices, arbitrary arrests and excessive use of force against peaceful protests” in Venezuela, as well as “increasingly widespread hunger and sharply deteriorating health care.”

The Paraguay-led statement said it shared Zeid’s concerns about repression and called for “the early release of persons arrested for political reasons” including opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, whose wife Lilian Tintori brought his case to Zeid two years ago.