PRESS RELEASE – THE OBSERVATORY / COFAVIC / CDJ / Vicaría DDHH Caracas
VENEZUELA: “Internal enemies” – the open season on human rights defenders
Geneva, Paris, Caracas, 10 March 2020 - In Venezuela, human rights defenders and organisations are defined as “internal enemies”, and a complex State policy uses public institutions to defame and harass them. A report published today analyses this harsh reality over the past two years.
“Reporting the shortage of basic
services, demanding justice or even merely participating in humanitarian work
implies exposure to attacks by the State. At the same time, the context of the
crisis has led to more and more people participating in actions to demand
rights, which has increased repression”, said Liliana Ortega, Director of
COFAVIC, a leading human rights organisation in Venezuela.
The report is the first to focus on this issue and is published against the
background of almost 11,000 extrajudicial executions since 2012 and a
countrywide crisis that has sent millions of Venezuelans into exile. Published
by two international organisations and three Venezuelan ones, it documents a
total of 121 attacks – considered to be the tip of the iceberg - against human
rights defenders and organisations during 2018 and 2019. The State is reported
to be the perpetrator of most of these attacks, either via their communication
tools or through the action of their security forces.
“In recent years, the Executive,
Legislative and Judicial branches have built a hostile environment for the
defence of human rights. Regressive laws, absolute impunity and stigmatisation
as a State policy promoted by the public media combine to create the perfect
storm for the right to defend human rights in Venezuela”, said Gerald
Staberock, Secretary General of the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT).
The report includes personal stories that illustrate the systematic dimension of the onslaught against human rights defenders in Venezuela. Some of the cases detailed are the attacks against the NGO Prepara Familia simply for their humanitarian work; the harassment of the president of the College of Nurses for her defence of human rights; or the extrajudicial killing of a defender’s nephew in retaliation for her human rights related activities.
The report documents a range of measures aimed at obstructing the defence of
human rights, from restrictions on freedom of association, measures that seek
the economic suffocation of NGOs by restricting international funding, to
restrictions on effective legal protection, and the enactment of laws that
institutionalise the doctrine of the “internal enemy”, including the Decrees of
Exception and Economic Emergency. The report also includes concrete
recommendations that would enable progress to be made in establishing effective
guarantees for the right to defend human rights in the country.
“Defining those who defend human rights
as internal enemies, terrorists or destabilising agents is a perverse action
that reinforces the political, humanitarian and human rights crisis that the
country is experiencing, by hindering the work, precisely, of those who
contribute to strengthening the respect for human rights and the rule of law”,
declared Alice Mogwe, President of FIDH.
For further information, please contact:
· OMCT: Iolanda Jaquemet: + 41 22 809 49 39
· FIDH: Samuel Hanryon: + 33 6 72 28 42 94 / José Carlos Thissen: + 51 95 41 31 650
· COFAVIC: Yeniter Poleo: +58 424 159 84 07
· Centro para los Defensores y la Justicia (CDJ): Marianna Romero +58 4242941609
The Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (the Observatory) is a program created in 1997 by FIDH and the World Organisation against Torture (OMCT) and aims to intervene to prevent or remedy specific situations of repression against human rights defenders. FIDH and OMCT are both members of ProtectDefenders.eu, the European Union Mechanism for Human Rights Defenders implemented by international civil society.
The Committee of Family Members of Victims of the Events of February and March
1989 (Comité de Familiares de Víctimas de los sucesos de febrero y marzo de
1989 - COFAVIC) is a non-profit civil association based in Venezuela that
carries out high-impact work focused on strengthening the Venezuelan justice
system. It is an NGO founded and managed by relatives of victims of human
rights violations, who have now become human rights defenders. The organisation
brings together the most extensive experience in litigating Venezuelan cases
before the Inter-American System for the Protection of Human Rights and other
international protection organisations.
The Archdiocese of Caracas Human Rights Association (Vicaría de Derechos Humanos de la Arquidiócesis de Caracas), created in 1989, is a Venezuelan non-governmental organisation responsible for promoting and defending human rights, applying national and international human rights instruments.
The Centre for Defenders and Justice (Centro para los Defensores y la Justica -
CDJ), is a non-governmental organisation that protects human rights and ensures
the strengthening of justice and democratic institutions in Venezuela in
accordance with international obligations and regulations. It also promotes the
defence and protection of human rights defenders, by strengthening their
capabilities and safeguarding their security.
| Tweet |
English
Spanish