Former Spanish prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero on Saturday met with jailed Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, the first meeting of its kind in more than two years.
The prison visit was part of a high-risk diplomatic effort to defuse Venezuela’s escalating crisis.
The meeting between Lopez and Zapatero lasted about 90 minutes, Lopez’s sister told reporters. She said she did not know what the two discussed and declined further comment.
It is the first time in more than two years an outside visitor, besides Lopez’s family or lawyers, has met with the combative leader in the military prison outside Caracas where he is being held.
Last year, he was sentenced to nearly 14 years in jail for inciting violence at anti-government protests in proceedings widely condemned as a politically motivated show trial by the US and human rights groups.
Venezuela’s opposition is demanding the release of Lopez and dozens of other activists it considers political prisoners as part of an international mediation effort led by Zapatero and the former presidents of Panama and the Dominican Republic.
Last month, the three presided over two days of informal meetings in the Dominican Republic in which they shuttled messages between representatives of the opposition and the government.
One of the government’s participants at that meeting, Caracas Mayor Jorge Rodriguez, escorted Zapatero to the jail on Saturday, but did not take part in the meeting, according to a source close to the family, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the conversation was private.
Zapatero has kept quiet about his dealings and many observers believe they are doomed to fail so long as Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro refuses to yield to the opposition’s demands that his government allow to go forward this year a proposed recall referendum on whether to cut short his six-year term.
However, Saturday’s meeting is likely to give more oxygen to the mediation effort, which has the support of US President Barack Obama’s administration and regional governments, and comes as pressure is mounting on the Organization of American States to suspend Venezuela for violating standards of democracy and the rule of law.
Lopez’s jailers have turned back attempted visits by the former leaders of Colombia and Chile, as well as legislative delegations for from Brazil and Spain.
Maduro is under pressure to negotiate an end to the stalemate as Venezuelans’ frustration with an economic crisis marked by triple-digit inflation and widespread food and medicine shortages grow.
Venezuela’s government has yet to comment on the meeting.
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