
'I'm free now': Venezuelans held in El Salvador reunite with families
Singer Arturo Suarez was greeted with hugs and tears in working-class El Valle, south of capital Caracas, by his sister, aunt and cousins. He later wiped away tears as he spoke to his wife and daughter, who live in Chile, via video call.
"I'm free now, thank God, at last," said Suarez, who was arrested in February in North Carolina while filming a music video. He serenaded a crowd gathered in his family's living room. "I still can't believe it."
The Venezuelans were sent to El Salvador from the United States in March, after U.S. President Donald Trump invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport alleged members of the Tren de Aragua gang without normal immigration procedures.
The deportations drew fierce criticism from human rights groups and a legal battle with the Trump administration. Families and lawyers of many of the men have denied they have gang ties.
His wife has said Suarez had gone to the U.S. to boost his emerging music career and that he denied being a member of Tren de Aragua.
"I thought of my daughter, I thought of my wife, of my siblings, of my family, I asked for strength to not give up, to not allow myself to die," Suarez told journalists about his detention. "I didn't - because I'm tough, I'm a Venezuelan."
Suarez and the other detainees deported to El Salvador from the U.S. were returned to Venezuela on Friday in a prisoner exchange. Since arriving, they have been undergoing medical checks and interviews with officials.
Two brothers - Darwin Hernandez, a 30-year-old barber, and 23-year-old house painter Yeison Hernandez - were arrested alongside Suarez in February. They arrived home to their parents and other family members in central Valencia on Tuesday.
"I asked God only for freedom, but more than anything that my family also be alive, to be able to leave and be with them like we are now," said Darwin Hernandez, a husband and a father to a six-year-old daughter.
Suarez and Hernandez both said guards at the CECOT prison told detainees they would only leave dead, and Suarez said some detainees considered suicide.
Their comments tallied with other allegations of abuse made by former prisoners in videos broadcast on state television, including during a program with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Monday night.
Venezuela's attorney general said on Monday his office will investigate El Salvador President Nayib Bukele and other top officials over the alleged abuse.
Bukele's office did not respond to requests for comment on the alleged torture, but he said on social media late on Monday that the Maduro government was "indignant" because they realized they no longer held "hostages from the most powerful country in the world," - a reference to ten Americans formerly held in Venezuela who were freed under the deal.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, State Department and White House did not immediately respond to comment requests.
Reuters was not able to immediately confirm the abuse allegations.
Eighty Venezuelan prisoners - including opposition politicians - held within Venezuela are also supposed to be released in the swap. Judicial NGO Foro Penal said on Monday it had verified 48 releases.
The Venezuelan opposition has regularly critiqued the Maduro government for holding activists and others in abusive conditions within Venezuela.
Andry Hernandez, a gay make-up artist who was detained at the U.S.-Mexico border during the Biden administration, had an active asylum case when he was deported to CECOT. The U.S. alleged gang membership based on his tattoos.
His parents were anxiously awaiting him in Capacho, near the Colombian border, on Tuesday.
"All this time I've slept badly. My wife would serve me a plate of food and I would wonder 'is he eating?'" said Hernandez's father Felipe.
Hernandez, who said he suffered sexual abuse at CECOT in a video broadcast on state television on Monday, was able to call his parents to say he was on his way.
His mother, Alexi Romero, says she told him she is waiting with open arms.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
2 minutes ago
- Reuters
Japan's PM Ishiba to quit after election drubbing and Trump trade deal, source
TOKYO, July 23 (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba plans to step down following a bruising upper house election defeat, a source told Reuters, as the embattled premier announced a long-sought trade deal with U.S. President Donald Trump. Ishiba chose not to quit straight after the election to prevent political instability as an August 1 deadline for clinching the trade deal approached, the source close to the prime minister said, asking not to be identified because they are not authorised to talk to the media. Ishiba will announce his resignation next month, Japanese media reported earlier. Ishiba andTrumpon Tuesday unveiled a trade deal that lowers tariffs on imports of Japanese autos and spares Tokyo punishing new levies on other goods. His departure less than a year after taking office will trigger a succession battle within the ruling Liberal Democratic party as it contends with challenges from new political parties, particularly on the right, that are stealing its support. Among them is the "Japanese First" Sanseito far-right group which surged in Sunday's vote, growing its representation in the 248-seat upper house to 14 from one. The party has attracted voters with pledges to curb immigration, slash taxes, and provide financial relief to households squeezed by rising prices. Ishiba defeated hardline conservative Sanae Takaichi in a party leadership runoff last year. Whoever succeeds him as head of the LDP would have to govern without a majority in either house of parliament following the government's lower house election defeat in October. The new leader's immediate priority will be to secure support from enough opposition party lawmakers to win confirmation as prime minister. The incoming leader is unlikely to call a general election straight away, instead holding off on strengthening the party's appeal before seeking a mandate from voters, the source said.


Scotsman
31 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Putting out the unwelcome mat for Donald Trump in Scotland
US President Donald Trump, pictured at Trump Turnberry in 2023, is expected to come to the UK for a state visit later this year (Picture: Andy Buchanan) Donald Trump is due to visit these shores later this week which, he maintains, means a great deal to him as it is the land of his mother's birth. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Mary Anne MacLeod was born and raised in Tong on the island of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides before later emigrating to New York at the age of 18, where she sought work as a domestic servant. In common with tens of thousands of Scots who embarked upon the same journey across the Atlantic in the early part of last century, in search of a better life in the USA and Canada, she left the hardships of her life in the Hebrides behind her. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Leaving Lewis in 1930, she landed in New York and just six years later, she married a rich property developer namely Frederick Trump, the son of German migrants, who was regarded as one of the most eligible men in the city. She returned to visit Lewis throughout her life and always spoke Gaelic. She died in the year 2000 at the age of 88. So, given his family background it is easy to see why Donald Trump has an affinity with Scotland, yet his impending visit is set to be marked with protests and demonstrations, with some justification. And as you would expect, his trip has already been the subject of some controversy. Never one to respect the freedom of the press, he has ejected a Wall Street Journal reporter from his press pool for his visit. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This is in retaliation after the paper published an article alleging that he sent Jeffrey Epstein a 50th birthday letter that included a drawing of a naked woman and concluded with the message 'Happy Birthday - and may every day be another wonderful secret.' Trump has said that he intends to sue Rupert Murdoch's 'ass off' but undeterred, a spokesperson for the journal's parent company, Dow Jones, said that the company 'has full confidence in the rigour and accuracy of our reporting' and 'will vigorously defend against any lawsuit.' So, let battle commence, but, given Trump's propensity for lying, my money is on the newspaper. Trump's last visit here prompted demonstrations in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Glasgow and a paraglider flew into the 'no fly zone' which operated at Turnberry golf course, which he owns, trailing a banner which read 'Trump: well below par.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This time protestors who have formed the 'Stop Trump Coalition' are planning to display a huge rude message on the Aberdeenshire coastline which they are confident he will see as he flies in to visit his Turnberry golf course. The coalition is also organising a protest this Saturday in Edinburgh outside the US consulate where Palestinian flags in particular will be out in force. There are some who say that Trump's visit presents an opportunity for politicians to meet him and press Scotland's case on tariffs, which is all well and good. But (among other things) given his support of Israel's actions in Gaza and his attacks on the free press, my sympathies lie with the protesters.


Scotsman
31 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Carney shows our leaders how to handle Trump - Alex Cole-Hamilton
US President Donald Trump greets Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney as he arrives at the White House in Washington, DC, on May 6 As Donald Trump descends on Scotland this week, there will be an understandable clamour for politicians to boycott opportunities to meet him and for the citizenry to protest against him. I understand that impulse, I travelled across the Atlantic in October to help Kamala Harris try to defeat him. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... But here's the deal: like him or loathe him, Scotland and the UK export billions of pounds worth of good to the US and without American arms, the prospects for Ukraine look grim. Donald Trump holds plenty of cards right now and it's just not serious politics to think that shutting him out in the cold and refusing to speak to him will do any good whatsoever. To my mind, our political leaders should look to the approach taken by new Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney as to how we deal with President Trump. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Days after the Scottish Parliament broke up for the summer, I took my family to visit my sister in Vancouver. She has a house on the water, a ferry ride away from the city and, bathed in the sunshine of the Pacific North West, we swam in the sea, went paddleboarding every day and watched on as black bears devoured the cherry trees in her garden. It was a terrific break, but one thing I noticed about my visit this time was the proliferation of Canadian flags. They're everywhere. There was a time when the Canadian flag had been a symbol for the alt-right political wing of Canadian politics. During Covid times, truck drivers and anti-vaxxers would descend on Ottawa to protest against the Liberal government. Well now the maple-leaf has been reclaimed by the normal people of Canada and is proudly displayed on cars and shops in defiance of the belligerence of their southern neighbour. American products have been stripped from Canadian supermarket shelves and companies are both quick and proud to demonstrate their Canadian heritage. In large part it's a response to the trade hostility and the tariffs imposed on them by Trump, but a more sinister apprehension also lies beneath the surface of Canadian sentiment. Readers will be aware of the provocative talk by Trump of his desire to make Canada the 51st state of the US. Well in Canada, I was surprised at just how seriously people had taken this. Some people there really thought that there was a solid chance of American military invasion and had started making plans, gathering emergency supplies and even starting to think about what a resistance movement would look like. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Canada's new Liberal Prime Minister, Mark Carney offers the rest of the right-thinking leaders of the world a masterclass in how to handle the Orange One. Against all this, he calmly dismantled the lunacy of Trump's assertions and he did so on camera and in the White House. When Trump started with the 51st state schtick, Carney calmly said 'As you know from real estate, there are some places that are never for sale. We're sitting in one right now, Buckingham Palace that you visited, as well. And having met with the owners of Canada over the course of the campaign the last several months, it's not for sale, it won't be for sale, ever.' It was an elegant piece of diplomacy. One which both the Prime Minister and the First Minister would do well to well to emulate. And we should not forgot that the Scotland has cards to play too. Trump has ancestral and business ties to Scotland. He admires our Royal family. Britain and America have long shared vital intelligence. As distasteful as it may be, we need to keep Trump on side, for Ukraine, for our trade prospects, but we need not and should never kowtow to him.