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Venezuela rescues 252 nationals detained in El Salvador’s CECOT ‘concentration camp!’

July 22, 2025

The following is a July 19, 2025, lightly edited press release from Caracas-based OrinocoTribune.com.

The U.S. wants to create more Guantanamos: illegal prisons, immoral concentration camps, paying impoverished nations to take migrants they violently deport. This must stop.

Venezuela was able to exchange 252 innocent citizens for a few dastardly U.S. criminals that had been tried in court and sentenced for attempting to overthrow the government with violence. Good riddance! The U.S. is welcomed to these criminal scum.

Venezuela gets its own people back — courageous, innocent citizens who are now home with their loved ones.

As part of the Return to the Homeland program, two new flights returned 252 Venezuelan nationals to the country on July 18. They had been arbitrarily detained in the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) in El Salvador after being deported from the U.S. by order of President Donald Trump. These actions took place without access to justice or due process.

Injured Venezuelan migrant arrives in La Guaira state, Venezuela, from El Salvador on July 18, 2025. (Fuser News)

Earlier Friday afternoon [July 18], the Venezuelan government announced via a statement the release of Venezuelan migrants abducted by the U.S. regime. This followed a negotiation involving the handover of 10 U.S. nationals prosecuted for crimes against national security and some imprisoned far-right politicians.

The statement emphasized, “Venezuela has paid a high price to secure the freedom of these nationals through an exchange with U.S. authorities of a group of U.S. citizens who were at the mercy of justice for their proven involvement in serious crimes against the peace, independence and security of the nation.”

On Friday, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio also announced the release of 10 U.S. citizens detained in Venezuela. On social media, Rubio stated his fellow citizens “are on the path to freedom,” crediting “the leadership” of U.S. President Donald Trump.

“I want to thank my team at the State Department,” Rubio said, extending special thanks to Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele for helping secure an agreement to release all U.S. detainees and Venezuelan political prisoners.

Meanwhile in Venezuela, in a televised address covering the migrants’ arrival, President Nicolás Maduro explicitly thanked the U.S. government and President Donald Trump for their “rectification.” He also recognized the work of Jorge Rodríguez, the Catholic Church, Pope Leo XIV, Salvadoran Cardinal Gregorio Chávez and former Spanish President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero.

Venezuela’s Vice President Delcy Rodríguez received the unjustly detained migrants at Maiquetía International Airport in La Guaira state. She was joined by Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello and National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez, Venezuela’s main negotiator.

“We went to look for them from the concentration camps, and we brought them back safe and sound,” declared President Maduro upon the aircraft’s arrival in Venezuelan territory. He explained that authorities handed over “ten convicted and confessed foreign terrorists, CIA agents” who had attempted violent acts and assassinations of Venezuelan political leaders since February in exchange for the Venezuelans’ return.

The migrants sang Venezuela’s national anthem, “Gloria al Bravo Pueblo,” upon initial contact with Venezuelan authorities. Minister Diosdado Cabello reported that at least 50 repatriated migrants were tortured, with some shot by pellets that left injuries and caused [them] difficulty walking, during boarding in El Salvador.

“The world needs to know. Since he [Nayib Bukele] was left out of this negotiation … they took revenge on our young people,” Cabello stated, claiming Salvadoran authorities acted with violence after being excluded from the U.S.-Venezuela talks.

Cabello added: “As Delcy Rodríguez says, they lost the deal where they were supposed to be paid per migrant in the concentration camp. If there is any justice, the U.N. should investigate this. We will prepare a dossier about all arriving youth” subjected to human rights violations.

From kidnapping to return

In March 2025, El Salvador’s government initially received 238 Venezuelan migrants deported from the U.S. by order of President Donald Trump, as reported by Telesur.

Accused without evidence of ties to the defunct Tren de Aragua criminal gang, these migrants were sent to CECOT, a Salvadoran maximum-security prison designed for gang members. Abuse, torture and medical neglect at CECOT have been reported by local and international human rights advocates. Washington allegedly paid $6 million for the arrangement.

Cabello clarified that only seven returnees had criminal records, consistent with his earlier statistic that just 2% of over 8,000 Venezuelans repatriated since March have such backgrounds.

After 100 days in El Salvador, the 252 Venezuelans remained detained at CECOT without formal charges or judicial review. Families and activists described their “ordeal” of total isolation under the country’s permanent state of emergency. Neither U.S. nor Salvadoran authorities permitted relatives to verify detainees’ status.

U.N. sources report CECOT prisoners endure “particularly harsh treatment” without lawyers, legal representation or family contact. NGOs document overcrowding, collective punishment, torture and deliberate efforts to keep detainees incommunicado.

Venezuelans facing injustice

Dozens of Venezuelan families reported “forced disappearances” and illegal detentions, noting none of the youth were charged or appeared before judges, with no contact since March 15.

In a public letter released by Venezuela’s National Assembly president last month, families insisted detainees were migrants “without ties to criminal organizations” and demanded immediate repatriation. They emphasized that El Salvador’s failure to provide an official detainee list heightens uncertainty about their fate.

The U.N. Human Rights Office warned that the case may constitute forced disappearance, as neither Salvadoran nor U.S. authorities have disclosed detainees’ whereabouts, detention circumstances or official rosters.

The Venezuelan government intensified diplomatic demands, with President Maduro holding Nayib Bukele directly responsible for the prisoners’ lives and health while demanding respect for their human rights.

The Return to the Homeland program has accelerated repatriation flights since February 2025, returning over 8,000 migrants by July 2025 according to official figures.