Galvanized by the release from jail of hardline leader Leopoldo López , Venezuelan opposition supporters on Sunday marked 100 days of protests against a socialist government they blame for political repression and economic misery.

Thousands of people gathered in an east Caracas square to hear opposition figures including the wife of López, Lilian Tintori , speak.

Many protests have ended in clashes between masked youths and security forces, with more than 90 killed , hundreds arrested and thousands injured since the unrest began at the start of April .

While López was at home with his two young children, Tintori, who has campaigned for him around the world, said she was relieved to have her husband home but the fight was not over.

"I can't say I'm happy when we know our country is suffering, when there are children eating out of the trash, when there is no medicine in Venezuela," she said, surrounded by opposition legislators.

She added that former foreign minister Delcy Rodríguez as well as her brother Jorge Rodríguez , another Socialist Party heavyweight, had escorted López to his home at 3 a.m. on Saturday.

Parallel Assembly

López, 46, was sentenced to nearly 14 years in jail on charges of inciting violence during 2014 protests against President Nicolás Maduro that led to 43 deaths.

But he was surprisingly granted house arrest and sent home due to what the Supreme Court called "irregularities" in his case and for health reasons.

The government seems to be calculating that his return home may ease domestic protests and international censure, but opposition leaders are viewing it as vindication of their strategy and have vowed to step up their street tactics.

For more than three months, tear gas, rubber bullets, rocks and petrol bombs have flown between protesters and security forces in hotspots around the OPEC member nation.

Four years of brutal recession have underpinned the protests, as millions of Venezuelans suffer food shortages, runaway inflation, and long shopping lines.

While foes slam him for incompetence and failed socialist policies, Maduro blames an " economic war " against him by pro-opposition businessmen and Washington .

The opposition is organizing an unofficial referendum on Maduro next weekend, after which they are promising " zero hour ", a presumed reference to an escalation of tactics that could include a general strike or march on the presidential palace.

Maduro, in turn, is seeking to create a new super body called a Constituent Assembly , which would have powers to rewrite the constitution and dismiss the current opposition-controlled legislature, via a July 30 vote.

Maduro's foes are boycotting the July 30 election, saying it is a sham designed to keep an unpopular leader in power.

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