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Venezuelan mother dies 10 days after state confirms missing son died in custody

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Navas became a prominent figure ​in Venezuela while publicly pleading for information ​on her 50-year-old son, Victor Quero. Ten ⁠days ago, authorities revealed he died in Rodeo I prison last July

(Reuters) – Carmen Navas, the 82-year-old mother who spent nearly a year searching for her detained son ​in Venezuela, has died just 10 days ‌after the government confirmed he had died in state custody, the NGO that handled his case reported.

Navas became a prominent figure ​in Venezuela while publicly pleading for information ​on her 50-year-old son, Victor Quero. Ten ⁠days ago, authorities revealed Quero died of respiratory failure ​in the infamous Rodeo I prison last July.

Foro Penal ​head Alfredo Romero said prison officials had repeatedly told Navas they did not know where her son was.

Venezuelan opposition ​leader Maria Corina Machado mourned Navas on social ​media, praising her for confronting a "terror apparatus" to find her ‌son.

"Not ⁠just a mother died; a woman who turned pain into courage and despair into denunciation was extinguished," Machado wrote, adding that Navas' voice had become ​that of ​thousands of ⁠mothers seeking disappeared or imprisoned children.

Early this year, after the US attacked Caracas ​and captured President Nicolas Maduro and ​his ⁠wife, Venezuela's government passed an amnesty law intended to free hundreds of people rights groups consider political ⁠prisoners.

Venezuelan ​authorities have always denied holding ​ political prisoners and said those detained committed legitimate crimes.

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