NewsVenezuela’s acting President Delcy Rodríguez on Thursday signed into law an amnesty measure that interim authorities say is intended to ease political tensions and accelerate the release of political prisoners.
The law, titled the Amnesty Bill for Democratic Coexistence, authorizes a “general and full” amnesty for people prosecuted or convicted for political or related offences. The scope of the bill reaches back to the start of the Chávez era and extends through late January 2026. Rodríguez presented the bill as a step toward consensus among political actors to reduce intolerance and reopen avenues for participation.
However, the amnesty is not unlimited. The law excludes serious offenses including crimes against humanity and war crimes, intentional homicide, drug trafficking, and crimes involving public property; media reports also describe carve-outs for conduct linked to military rebellion or collaboration with foreign actions involving use of force. The legislation further calls for police to halt covered investigations, for some pending proceedings to be dismissed, and for relevant files to be released from police archives for families and survivors of the detained.
Human rights organizations and relatives of detainees have urged the government to translate announcements into rapid, verifiable releases. Families have camped outside detention facilities and staged demonstrations demanding information and timelines, while watchdogs have criticized both delays and restrictive conditions reportedly imposed on some individuals after leaving custody.