No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeBolivarian RevolutionExiles in Costa Rica denounce alleged Venezuelan kidnapping plot

Exiles in Costa Rica denounce alleged Venezuelan kidnapping plot

A group of Venezuelan exiles in Costa Rica are allegedly the target of a kidnapping plot by President Nicolás Maduro’s government, according to the ex-governor of the state of Monagas, José Gregorio Briceño, the Nuevo Herald reported on Thursday.

The Miami-based newspaper reported that sources inside the Venezuelan government confirmed that a team of intelligence operatives posing as members of Maduro’s advance team for the upcoming January meeting of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) arrived in Costa Rica to abduct “Gato” Briceño and other prominent exiles.

It is common for security and logistics teams to arrive in a country in advance of a world leader to prepare for the visit like the CELAC event, but in this case there was supposedly another purpose in mind, the newspaper reported. According to an anonymous intelligence source cited in the story:

“Another group arrived under the cover of the advance team, but their task was to locate the majority of those in Costa Rica as political refugees with an emphasis in Gato Briceño, who they wanted to make into a trophy.”

Costa Rica is the current president pro-tempore of CELAC and is set to host a meeting of Latin American leaders in January.

Government-sponsored abductions are evidently not new for the Venezuelan government:

“They tried to do the same thing [Hugo] Chávez did when he was alive, to take a target they wanted by force in Panama,” said Briceño, referring to the Venezuelan businessman Gustavo Arráiz, who was kidnapped in that country in 2007 and later transported to Venezuela where he spent eight years in prison.

During Chávez’s last years, the then-chief of Military Intelligence reportedly prepared to kidnap an important union leader in Panama and a Venezuelan banker with the aim of handing them over to a leader who was already quite ill, said the source.

Briceño was once a pro-Chávez governor until an oil spill put him at odds with the government oil monopoly PDVSA. Bucking government pressure to keep the facility open despite the spill, the governor found himself in the political wilderness.

Briceño told the Nuevo Herald that Venezuelan agents planned on taking him across the border into Nicaragua, where Nicaraguan officials would detain him and send him back to Venezuela.

Costa Rica is home to a small but vocal population of Venezuelan immigrants. San José was the scene of several days of peaceful demonstrations in support of protests against the Maduro government in February. Under ex-President Laura Chinchilla’s administration (2010-2014) the Central American country released a statement as CELAC president rejecting the violence that engulfed the Venezuelan capital, Caracas. Former Costa Rican President Óscar Arias (1986-1990, 2006-2010) met with supporters and condemned the Maduro administration’s handling of the anti-government protests.

There are nearly 5,000 permanent and temporary Venezuelan residents living in Costa Rica, according to 2013 figures from the Immigration Administration. More than 55,000 Venezuelans entered Costa Rica in 2012.

Trending Now

Costa Rica Confirms Sixth Chikungunya Case of 2026

Costa Rica has confirmed its sixth chikungunya case of the year, this time involving a 53-year-old woman from Alajuelita who recently traveled to Nicaragua. The...

What Is the Scope of the Mega-Trial Against MS-13 Leaders in El Salvador?

Shackled hand and foot, visibly aged, the MS-13 leaders on trial in El Salvador are now only a shadow of the violent gang members...

Global Leaders Arrive in Costa Rica for Presidential Transition

Costa Rica will host delegations from around the world Friday as Laura Fernández is sworn in as the country’s next president, turning the May...

Chaves Calls for Radical Overhaul of Costa Rican State in Final Address

Outgoing President Rodrigo Chaves used his final address to Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly today to call for a deep restructuring of the Costa Rican...

Costa Rica Begins New Era as Laura Fernández Takes Office

Laura Fernández will be sworn in today as our new president, opening a four-year term shaped by promises of tougher security policies, closer alignment...

Dollar Exchange Rate Near ₡458 as Rainy Season Begins in Costa Rica

Costa Rica entered the first days of May with the dollar still hovering near historic lows, keeping pressure on tourists, foreign residents and retirees...
Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel