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What Latin America’s press misses about Venezuela

Spanish-language media moved from migration fatigue to geopolitical fervour after the kidnapping of Nicolás Maduro

What Latin America’s press misses about Venezuela
Relatives attend a demonstration demanding the release of political prisoners outside the El Helicoide building, headquarters of the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN), in Caracas on January 30, 2026 - Juan Barreto / AFP via Getty Images
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Before US helicopters landed in Caracas to kidnap Nicolás Maduro last month, Venezuela occupied an intermittent place on the international news agenda – even in Spanish-language media. Its political, economic, and humanitarian crises surfaced only at moments of high impact – elections fraud, protests, migration spikes – before fading back into the global background hum.

“This is the first time in a long while that so many voices are commenting on, opining about, and analysing what is happening here,” Venezuelan journalist Valentina Gil, who specialises in fact-checking and digital content production, told openDemocracy.

Latin America’s Spanish-language media is incredibly diverse and reflects the region’s complex history and the multitude of present interests. There are national outlets and regional outlets in each country, but also a wide array of Hispanic media based in the United States, the region’s military hegemon, ‘media in exile’ scattered through North and Central America and Europe and also the major Spanish-language online newspaper from Spain, the region’s former colonial power.