An activist of Venezuelan opposition arrested during anti-government protests in January died in prison, his party said.
Reinaldo Araujo, a leader of the Ventezuela Party in the State of Trujillo, suffering health problems, which his wife said was not taken care of while he was imprisoned.
Vente Venezuela’s leader, María Corina Machado, said he held the “regime” to Nicolás Maduro responsible for the death of Araujo.
According to Venezuelan prisoner of NGO prison, 20 political prisoners were killed while in custody in the past few years.
Vente Venezuela said Araujo was covered with masculine masks on 9 January in a protest on the eve of Nicolás Maduro for a third term as president.
His wife said he returned from a medical appointment and was observed only in the protest when he was taken.
He is in the state custody since then.
Read: Venezuelan-imprisoned activists detailed in prison life cruelty
His wife accused the authorities to fail to give her husband to medical care until it was late, even if he warned them that his health was harmed.
The president of the regional organization of the United States of America, Luis Almagro, who criticized Araujo’s death, writing X that was a “new violence”.
He added: “There is no political suffering, no pain, no death.”
Almagro is an unchanged critic of Nicolás Maduro, which accuses the Venezuan leader who blasphemes the opposition to the run-up and after the July Presidential Election.
The National Electoral Council in Venezuela, a government-close body, declared to be deceived the winner of the election without providing detailed high votes.
The OAS’s Electoral Obstoral Department says it cannot recognize the result because CNE “has changed the government”.
Copy of Copy of Venezuela also refuses to recognize the result, saying that votes of ancestors gathered, with the help of its official lock, Edmundo González, is the most winner.
The opposition also organized protests on Maduro’s eve’s eve and it was at a such occurrence that Reardo Arauujo won.
According to Wenezuelan Ordervatoratory, hundreds of protesters were arrested on the days leading to Maduro’s inauguration and sent to prisons famous for the inmates of the inmates.
Among the seized was Rafael Tudares, the son-in-law of Edmundo González.
Mr. Tudares’s wife says he has not given any information about her husband where she is carried by security forces on 7 January.
He also accused the government to hold his husband to force Edmundo González, who lived in the exile in the region, many of the regional leaders.