Freed Argentine officer urges release of remaining foreign prisoners in Venezuela

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — In his first public appearance since being released from Venezuelan custody, Argentine military police officer Nahuel Gallo made an emotional appeal Wednesday for the international community to secure the freedom of two dozen foreign nationals still detained at the notorious Rodeo I prison in Venezuela.

Gallo, who endured 448 days of incarceration in a facility outside Caracas before his Sunday release, declared that he cannot truly consider himself free while these detainees remain imprisoned. “My mind is still in prison,” the officer stated during a press conference in the Argentine capital, where he was flanked by high-ranking officials including Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno.

The Argentine government maintained that Gallo had traveled to Venezuela in December 2024 on personal leave to visit his Venezuelan partner and their son. However, Venezuelan authorities under then-Attorney General Tarek William Saab arrested him on espionage charges, alleging he had attempted “irregular entry” into the country while concealing what they described as a “criminal plan” beneath the pretext of a romantic visit. Saab further accused Gallo of connections to “international far-right groups.”

Foreign Minister Quirno expressed gratitude to several nations including the United States, Italy, and Israel for their diplomatic efforts in securing Gallo’s release. The development occurs against a backdrop of heightened international scrutiny regarding Venezuela’s judicial system and human rights record.

In a significant judicial development hours before the press briefing, Argentine Federal Judge Sebastián Ramos summoned Gallo to testify as a witness in an investigation into alleged crimes against humanity attributed to the administration of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. According to the summons obtained by The Associated Press, Gallo potentially possesses knowledge of “events carried out by the Venezuelan state apparatus” that are under examination.

The recently freed officer declined to address the summons during the conference, instead requesting patience from journalists, indicating he remains unprepared to fully disclose his experiences. “I still can’t talk about the atrocities they committed,” Gallo stated, suggesting deeper revelations may emerge in time.