The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family grateful for Utah man’s ‘miracle’ release

- By Catherine Lucey and Joshua Goodman

A Utah man jailed in Venezuela on weapons charges nearly two years ago was released Saturday after a U.S. senator pressed for his freedom in a surprise meeting with President Nicolas Maduro days after the embattled socialist leader expelled the top American diplomat in the South American country.

“We are grateful to all who participat­ed in this miracle,” Joshua Holt’s family said in a statement.

President Donald Trump said Holt and his family were expected at the White House on Saturday evening.

“Good news about the release of the American hostage from Venezuela . ... The great people of Utah will be very happy!” Trump said in a tweet.

The 26-year-old Holt traveled to Venezuela in June 2016 to marry a woman he met online while he was looking for Spanish-speaking Mormons to improve his Spanish.

His release came after Tennessee Republican Sen. Bob Corker, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, met with Maduro on Friday — the outcome of months of secret, back-channel talks about Holt between one of the senator’s aides and close allies of the Venezuelan president.

Holt’s release looked unlikely a week ago, when he appeared in a clandestin­ely shot video railing against the Maduro government and saying his life was threatened in a prison riot. In retaliatio­n, socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello, a powerful ally of Maduro, said on state television that Holt was the CIA’s top spy in Latin America.

It’s not clear if Holt’s release portends a thawing of relations between the two normally hostile government­s. The Trump administra­tion has threatened crippling oil sanctions on Venezuela for Maduro’s decision to go forward with presidenti­al elections last week that the U.S. has called a “sham.”

The Maduro government has yet to comment on the reasons for the release.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, who has Trump’s ear on Latin America, said the couple’s “release will in no way change U.S. policy towards the dictatorsh­ip in Venezuela.”

Holt and his wife were believed to be at the U.S. Embassy in Caracas awaiting transporta­tion to Washington in a chartered flight.

Holt’s wife, Thamara, also was freed. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said Holt soon would be reunited with “his sweet, long-suffering family” in Riverton, Utah, where one of his wife’s two daughters from previous relationsh­ips has been living with Holt’s mother.

The U.S. government at first avoided ratcheting up public pressure on Venezuela amid already strained relations between the two countries, but eventually raised Holt’s case to the highest levels of the Venezuela government. Hatch and Rep. Mia Love, R-Utah, also lobbied on behalf of Holt and decried his poor treatment in prison.

Holt had planned to spend several months in Caracas in the summer of 2016 with his new wife, Thamara Caleno, and her two daughters, to secure their visas so they could move with him to the U.S.

Instead, the couple was arrested at her family’s government housing complex on the outskirts of Caracas. Authoritie­s arrested him on June 30, 2016, and accused him of stockpilin­g an assault rifle and grenades, suggesting his case was linked to other unspecifie­d U.S. attempts to undermine Maduro’s rule amid deep economic and political turbulence.

They had been held in a notorious Caracas prison run by the secret police that’s also home to dozens of Maduro’s top opponents who have been jailed during the past few years of political unrest in the country.

 ?? MIRAFLORES PRESIDENTI­AL PRESS OFFICE ?? Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro (left) shakes hands with Republican Sen. Bob Corker during a meeting at the Miraflores Presidenti­al Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Friday.
MIRAFLORES PRESIDENTI­AL PRESS OFFICE Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro (left) shakes hands with Republican Sen. Bob Corker during a meeting at the Miraflores Presidenti­al Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States