Text size

France’s Emmanuel Macron called Thursday for an end to “pressures, threats and arrests” in Venezuela following July elections that both President Nicolas Maduro and his opposition challenger claim to have won.

The French president, on a two-day state visit to Chile, addressed its parliament in the city of Valparaiso.

In a speech focused on EU-Latin America ties, Macron paused on Venezuela — where Maduro insists he won the election despite the opposition saying it can provide substantial proof of its victory.

“The pressures, threats and arrests against opponents must stop and their release must continue,” the French leader said, also calling for “full transparency” of the election results.

Venezuela’s electoral commission has not released a detailed vote count despite domestic and international pressure, and only a handful of countries — including Venezuela ally Russia — have accepted Maduro’s claim of victory.

About 2,400 people were arrested in post-election protests, of whom Venezuela’s Foro Penal rights group says 131 have been released.

The opposition coalition’s leader, Maria Corina Machado, has gone into hiding since the election while its presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia has fled to Spain.

Gonzalez Urrutia has been recognized by the United States and others as Venezuela’s “president-elect.”

On Wednesday, Macron held talks with Chilean counterpart Gabriel Boric in the capital Santiago.

fff-sf/lab/sba/mlr/aha