Five foreign journalists arrested in Venezuela

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CARACAS, Jan 31, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Venezuelan authorities have detained five
foreign journalists covering the standoff with opposition forces seeking the
ouster of President Nicolas Maduro.

Two others, from Chile, were deported as the crisis spilled over to hit
journalists covering the oil-rich but economically crippled nation’s latest
taste of crisis.

Two of the detained are from France, two from Colombia and one from Spain.

The latter three worked for the Spanish national news agency Efe and had
all come from Colombia to cover the growing turmoil.

Their detention was reported by the Efe bureau chief in Venezuela, Nelida
Fernandez.

Two French journalists working for a TV program called Quotidien were
detained Tuesday while filming outside the presidential palace, diplomatic
sources said. A local producer working with them was also detained.

Two Chilean TV journalists were detained Tuesday night near the
presidential palace and held for 14 hours before being expelled from the
country, Chilean Foreign Minister Roberto Ampuero said.

The reason stated for their arrest was that they had been working in a
“security zone,” he said.

“This is what dictatorships do. Stomp on freedom of the press,” the
minister wrote on Twitter.

In recent years, several foreign journalists have been detained or kicked
out of the country on grounds that they did not have press passes.

Without mentioning the latest arrests, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge
Arreaza said Wednesday that foreign reporters have entered the country
without work permits.

Venezuela’s political crisis intensified this month as national assembly
speaker Juan Guaido declared himself interim president.

Protests against the Maduro government have left around 40 dead and 850
have been arrested since they started on January 21, according to UN figures.