HomeAmericaItaly to upgrade relations with Venezuela as two more Italians freed

Italy to upgrade relations with Venezuela as two more Italians freed

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ROME, Jan 12 (Reuters) - Venezuela has ​released Italian citizens Alberto Trentini and Mario Burlo from prison, Italy said on Monday, pledging to upgrade relations with Caracas in response.

Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said no other citizens ⁠with solely Italian nationality remained in prison, after Venezuela freed two other Italian nationals, journalist Biagio Pilieri and businessman Luigi Gasperin, last week.

Dozens of dual Italian-Venezuelan nationals continue to ‍be held.

Venezuela's leadership said on January 8 it was going to release a significant number of prisoners, including ​foreign nationals, as a gesture of goodwill.

The move, heeding demands from human rights groups, international bodies and opposition figures, came after the U.S. attacked Venezuela and captured its president, Nicolas Maduro.

Trentini, a ​charity worker from Venice, was the most well-known among the Italian nationals held in Venezuelan prisons.

He was arrested in November 2024 with his Venezuelan driver Rafael Machado. He was working for Humanity & Inclusion, an NGO that assists disabled people.

Burlo, a businessman from Turin, was also arrested in November 2024 and held in the same prison as Trentini, ‌the El Rodeo I facility in Caracas.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said a plane was on ‌its way from Rome to bring Trentini and Burlo home.

"I welcome with joy and satisfaction the release of our compatriots ​Alberto Trentini and Mario Burlo, who are now safely at the Italian Embassy in Caracas," Meloni said in a statement.

UPGRADE IN DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS

Tajani told reporters in Rome that Venezuela had ‌not given reasons for the pair's prolonged detention.

"What matters now is that they are returning home", ⁠he said, adding that they were expected to land on Monday or early ‌on Tuesday.

Tajani said there were still 42 ​prisoners in Venezuela with dual Italian-Venezuelan citizenship, including 24 held for "political" reasons.

Meloni thanked Venezuela's authorities, including interim President Delcy Rodriguez, "for the constructive cooperation demonstrated in recent days."

Tajani said Rome would upgrade ⁠relations with Venezuela, changing the ⁠status of its top envoy from charge d'affaires to fully-fledged ambassador.

He described Venezuela as a "very important ​country" for Italy, noting its sizeable Italian immigrant community and Italian energy company Eni's presence there.

(Reporting by Alvise Armellini and Angelo ‌Amante; Editing by Michael Perry, Aidan Lewis)

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