By Corina Pons and Marianna Parraga
CARACAS/HOUSTON (Reuters) - Venezuela has released two local executives of U.S. oil major Chevron Corp
The arrests of Carlos Algarra and Rene Vasquez, by intelligence agents at Chevron's Puerto La Cruz offices, spooked other foreign companies operating in the OPEC nation in partnership with state oil company PDVSA.
"They are free," the state prosecutor's office said in an email to Reuters, adding that both had been given unspecified alternative conditions to jail.
One source close to Chevron confirmed the release, saying the two Venezuelans had to report into authorities every 15 days. "They've freed Carlos, his wife has just confirmed it," added a relative of Algarra.
The arrests were the first at a foreign oil firm since the government launched a purge last year that has resulted in detentions of more than 80 executives at PDVSA and partners.
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In the aftermath, Chevron evacuated other staff.
But the government of President Nicolas Maduro, condemned by the West and major Latin American nations over a May 20 re-election critics said was a farce cementing dictatorship, has been trying to project a more benign image in recent days.
It freed dozens of anti-Maduro activists at the weekend.
And Foreign Minster Jorge Arreaza reiterated calls on Wednesday for dialogue with the U.S. government, which has imposed sanctions aimed at squeezing the socialist government.
The two Chevron employees had been facing possible treason charges for refusing to sign a parts contract for a joint venture with PDVSA, sources said.
Chevron, the world's seventh-largest publicly traded oil producer with 2017 revenue of $135 billion, operates in Venezuela mostly through minority stakes in five projects.
The firm has about 150 employees in its Puerto la Cruz headquarters and has two more offices in the country. Its earnings from Venezuela dropped 18 percent last year, to $329 million, according to regulatory filings.
The arrests marked an escalation of tensions between PDVSA and foreign companies over control of supply contracts and the joint ventures' governance, sources have told Reuters.
Venezuela is engulfed in a severe political crisis and economic meltdown, with oil production declining and the sector in chaos amid corruption, a brain-drain, and U.S. financial sanctions making shipments and transactions ever more difficult.
(Additional reporting by Marianna Parraga in Houston; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; editing by Andreina Aponte, Marguerita Choy and Cynthia Osterman)
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