Spain urges EU to lift sanctions on Venezuela’s interim president after Amnesty Bil

WorldPolitics
21 Feb 2026 • 7:38 AM MYT
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Spain urges the EU to lift sanctions on Venezuela’s Delcy Rodriguez after approval of a limited amnesty bill for some prisoners

MADRID: Spain’s ​foreign minister urged the European Union on Friday to lift its sanctions on Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodriguez, after lawmakers in the South American ⁠country approved a limited amnesty bill for certain prisoners.

Rodriguez, who took power last month after the ​U.S. ouster of President Nicolas Maduro, has bowed to Trump ‌administration demands on oil sales and released ​hundreds of people who human rights groups class as political prisoners, as part of a normalisation of relations between the countries.

Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares ​said the EU should “send a signal that (Venezuela) is heading down the right path in ⁠this ‌new phase”.

“Sanctions ​are never an end in themselves. ​They are a means to achieve ends so that ​this broad, peaceful and democratic dialogue can take place,” Albares told reporters in Barcelona.

Later on Friday, EU Commission spokesperson Anouar El Anouni declined to directly address Madrid’s proposal, saying: “We do stand ready to use every tool ‌at our disposal in our toolbox to support a transition towards democracy in Venezuela.”

In 2017, the EU imposed a slew of sanctions on Venezuela, including an arms embargo and a ban on surveillance equipment, following regional elections ⁠that it said ‌were marred by irregularities.

A year later, it imposed economic sanctions on 11 senior Venezuelan officials including Rodriguez, who was Maduro’s vice president, saying they ​were responsible for human rights violations while undermining democracy and the rule ​of ​law.

Human rights groups say the amnesty bill approved unanimously by ‌Venezuela’s ruling ​party-controlled legislature on Thursday falls short of offering relief for hundreds of political prisoners. Caracas has always denied holding political prisoners and says those jailed have committed crimes.