Venezuela_Attorney_General
Attorney General Tarek William Saab AFP

A Venezuelan court has imposed prison sentences of up to 30 years on 29 people found guilty of participating in a failed attempt to upend President Nicolas Maduro's government.

A sea-borne incursion dubbed Operation Gideon was foiled by Caracas in May 2020, with eight participants killed by the military.

Officials said operatives had sought to invade Venezuela by sea from Colombia to overthrow Maduro.

Caracas claimed it was headed by retired soldiers and foreign mercenaries and financed by the opposition -- which has denied the allegations.

The United States also denied involvement.

Attorney General Tarek William Saab said Wednesday that 20 of the 29 accused were sentenced to the maximum of 30 years in prison, and the rest to 21 years.

The charges included terrorism, treason and trafficking in weapons of war.

"We are talking about an operation that was born abroad, specifically in the United States, (and) was prepared in Colombia, to attack, to raid, to invade Venezuela and bathe our country in blood," Saab told journalists in Caracas.

On X, he said the invaders had "sought to murder officials at the highest level," including Maduro.

'Torture'

The Coalition for Human Rights and Democracy, an NGO, published the names of those sentenced, including Josnars Adolfo Baduel -- the son of a general who had turned on Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chavez and died in prison in 2021.

Baduel's sister Andreina said her sibling had been the victim of "torture" in detention and called his sentence "unjust."

"The judiciary has been hijacked" by the state, she told AFP, and said the sentence would be appealed, to international courts if possible.

The JEP rights watchdog said there had been an "instruction" from up high to sentence the accused to the highest-possible penalties.

"We had no expectations of reduced sentences or acquittals," said JEP spokeswoman Martha Tineo.

The government has accused exiled former opposition leader Juan Guaido -- briefly recognized by the United States and other countries as Venezuela's legitimate president after Maduro's widely-questioned 2018 reelection -- of having financed the operation with US funds then under his control.

According to Saab, some participants in the failed mission remain at large -- some of them living in Colombia, the United States, Spain and Panama.

He named American Jordan Goudreau, a former special forces member and founder of the Silvercorp security company Venezuela says was hired by Guaido to train the invasion force.

Two American former soldiers were sentenced in Venezuela to 20 years in prison, but later freed in a prisoner exchange.