Venezuela Condemned for Violations in Draft UNGA
MEDIA RELEASE
Venezuela Condemned for
Violations in Draft UNGA
Resolution Circulated by Human Rights Groups
GENEVA, Oct. 7 – As Venezuela this
afternoon defended its human rights record before a
mandatory examination by the UN Human Rights Council in
Geneva (click
here for live tweets), a coalition of dissidents and
rights groups circulated an unprecedented draft resolution
to UN member states (see text below), calling on them to
condemn "the ongoing, systematic violations of human rights
and fundamental freedoms of the people of Venezuela," and to
repeal "laws that restrict freedom of
expression."
According to Hillel Neuer, director of the
Geneva-based non-governmental organization UN Watch, which
organized the campaign, "Venezuela's Chavez government has
already been found guilty of gross violations by UN human
rights experts for arbitrary detention of dissidents, and
then for shockingly imprisoning a judge who dared to comply
with one of these UN rulings."
"Therefore, the time has
come for the UN General Assembly to finally hold Venzezuela
accountable through a resolution on its human rights record,
and for the 47-nation UN Human Rights Council to do the
same. There's no excuse for the UN to turn a blind eye to
the excesses of the Chavez regime, which has even sent its
police to harass student leaders."
The draft resolution
on Venezuela was adopted at a recent summit of
dissidents held in New York during the UN General
Assembly opening. The gathering was organized by UN Watch,
together with Advancing Human Rights, American Islamic
Congress, Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, Collectif
Urgence Darfour, Darfur Peace and Development Center,
Directorio, Human Rights Foundation, Initiatives for China,
Freedom Now, Freedom and Roam Uganda, Free the North Korean
Gulag, Human Rights Activists in Iran, Liberty in North
Korea, Ligue Internationale Contre le Racisme et
l’Antisémitisme (LICRA), Stop Child Executions, Tom
Lantos Foundation, Uighur American Association, UN Watch,
Viet Tan, World Uighur Congress and the Zimbabwe Advocacy
Office.
_____________
The following draft UNGA
resolution is proposed by dissidents and human rights
activists, as adopted in the Declaration of Dissidents for
Universal Human Rights, at the We Have A Dream: Global
Summit Against Discrimination and Persecution, United
Nations, New York City, 22 September 2011. www.ngosummit.org
Draft Resolution for the United Nations General
Assembly
Situation of Human Rights in Venezuela
The General Assembly,
Guided by the
Charter of the United Nations and the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, and recalling the International Covenants
on Human Rights and other relevant human rights
instruments,
Reaffirming that all Member States
have an obligation to promote and protect human rights and
fundamental freedoms and the duty to fulfil the obligations
they have undertaken under the various international
instruments in this field,
Gravely concerned that
the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has severely restricted
freedom of expression, prosecuted government critics,
inhibited the activities of human rights organizations, and
undermined the independence of its judiciary, thereby
creating a chilling effect amongst the general public and
media at large within Venezuela,
Reaffirms that an
essential condition for the proper functioning of a
pluralistic and democratic society requires that the State
guarantee the necessary conditions for uninhibited
democratic political debate which includes the operation of
a media free to engage in dissent without fear of government
reprisal,
Deeply concerned that the Government of
the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has engaged in the
arrest, incarceration, and criminal prosecution of
individuals for having expressed opinions that disturb State
authorities, in gross violation of the right to freedom of
expression as guaranteed under Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration on Human Rights,
Alarmed by
legislation and actions by the Bolivarian Republic of
Venezuela which have criminalised legitimate opinion and
criticism regarding public officials, disregarding the
principles of accountability and transparency which are
necessary for efficient, ethical and honest
government;
Deeply concerned by an orchestrated
campaign to delegitimize, stigmatise and cripple the ability
of human rights organizations to work in Venezuela,
including through the pursuit of unjustified investigations,
alarmingly broad rulings by the Supreme Court designed to
prevent such organizations from conducting activities not
sanctioned by the Government, the aggressive smear campaign
launched by the government against human rights advocates,
legislative measures that restrict the ability of human
rights organizations to obtain critical international
funding, the expulsion of foreigners from the country if
they express opinions that offend state institutions or
senior officials,
Alarmed by the Government’s
calculated efforts in 2004 and 2010 to achieve a political
takeover of the Supreme Court by stacking it with government
supporters and creating mechanisms designed to purge other
judges, thereby significantly altering the makeup of the
judiciary of the lower courts, undermining the rule of law,
preventing the court from legitimately serving as a check on
executive powers and inhibiting its ability to uphold
fundamental constitutional rights,
Gravely concerned
regarding the plight of Judge María Lourdes
Afiuni, who was immediately arrested by intelligence police
officers after she ordered, on 10 December 2009, the
conditional release pending trial of Eligio Cedeño, whose
detention for nearly three years without trial was declared
arbitrary by the United Nations Human Rights Council Working
Group on Arbitrary Detention in its 1 September 2009 Opinion
citing violations of the right to fair trial;
Noting
that the case of Judge Maria Lourdes Afiuni has been
previously addressed in Human Rights Council reports and by
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in her
statement at the tenth Biennial Conference of the
International Association of Women Judges in
Seoul,
Welcoming further the 16 December 2009
joint urgent appeal by three independent UN human rights
experts to the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela which called
for the immediate release of Judge Afiuni, criticized the
infringement by President Hugo Chávez of the independence
of judges and lawyers, and noted that reprisals for the
exercise of constitutionally guaranteed functions, and the
creation of a climate of fear among the judiciary and the
legal profession, serve no purpose other than to undermine
the rule of law and obstruct justice,
Deeply concerned
that previous appeals by relevant United Nations bodies
and independent experts concerning the situation of human
rights in Venezuela have not been heeded, and emphasizing
that, without significant progress towards heeding those
calls of the international community, the situation of human
rights in Venezuela will continue to
deteriorate,
1. Condemns the ongoing, systematic
violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms of the
people of Venezuela;
2. Demands that the Government of Venezuela ensure, enable and cultivate the existence of a free, independent, pluralistic, and diverse media;
3. Urges the Government of Venezuela to adopt all necessary measures to ensure that freedom of expression is respected and guaranteed, in accordance with the international human rights treaties to which Venezuela is a State party;
4. Calls upon the Government of Venezuela to repeal all laws that impinge on and restrict freedom of expression, including, but not limited to so-called “disrespect” (desacato) laws that unfairly prohibit the legitimate scrutiny and criticism of public figures and officials, thereby restricting the public’s ability to monitor government actions;
5. Demands that the Government of Venezuela repeal all laws that promote self-censorship and cultivate a palpable chilling effect that impacts not only individuals facing such charges, but also the general public, as well as all media outlets in Venezuela;
6. Calls upon the Government of
Venezuela to lift restrictions on the freedom of expression,
and instead guarantee and safeguard a free and independent
media that is at liberty to report on or express views
critical of the Government, free of any censorship;
7. Urges the Government of Venezuela,
in accordance with international human rights standards, to
take measures to prevent intimidation and reprisals against
individuals and groups that seek to cooperate with the
United Nations, to publicly support activities in defence of
human rights and cooperation with the United Nations, its
representatives and mechanisms in the field of human rights,
to inform the population of ways and means to effect such
cooperation, and to prosecute those who order or undertake
such unlawful acts of intimidation or reprisal;
8. Demands that the Government of
Venezuela to repeal all legislative measures, including
through restrictions on fundraising, designed to curtail the
legitimate activities of human rights organizations and
other non-governmental bodies;
9. Stresses that the Government
of Venezuela must refrain from engaging in campaigns that
stigmatise and unfairly attack human rights organizations as
well other non-governmental organizations, retract all pubic
statements and media campaigns that have unjustly maligned
these organizations, and instead pursue a path of
constructive and meaningful dialogue with these
organizations toward the goal of ending human rights
violations;
10. Requests the
Government of Venezuela to promptly and effectively
prosecute and address all acts of intimidation and reprisal
against human rights organizations and other
non-governmental bodies in an appropriate manner, in order
to combat impunity, bring perpetrators to justice and
provide victims with appropriate remedies;
11. Urges the Government of Venezuela
to ensure the independence and impartiality of the judiciary
and to guarantee due process of law;
12. Calls upon the Government of
Venezuela to implement measures to restore the integrity and
independence of the Supreme Court and the judiciary,
including measures to review the composition of the court,
allow for current judges to be replaced, ensure the absence
of conflicts of interest, in particular for cases concerned
with fundamental human rights or that challenge Government
authority;
13. Demands that the
Attorney General immediately release and quash all charges
against Judge María Lourdes Afiuni;
14. Condemns the Venezuelan Government’s
retaliation against those who express critical or dissenting
opinions, including:
(a) the
investigation and subsequent arrest of Guillermo Zuloaga,
president of the private TV news channel Globovisión, which
was deemed by the UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of
expression to be a politically motivated arrest designed to
intimidate Mr. Zuloaga from criticizing the President, in
regard to which the Venezuelan Government must take all
necessary steps to guarantee the right to freedom of opinion
and expression of all people, in line with fundamental
principles stipulated in Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and Srticle 19 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to
which Venezuela is a party;
(b) the decision to
temporarily ban circulation of the weekly publication
Sexto Poder in Venezuela, as well as the arrest,
detention, and criminal prosecution of the publication’s
editorial director;
(c) the sentencing of former
Governor of the state of Zulia and potential presidential
candidate Oswaldo Álvarez Paz for “disseminating false
information,” in connection with comments he made in a
television interview about investigations into the alleged
presence of drug trafficking and armed groups in
Venezuela;
15. Requests the
Government of Venezuela to engage in a dialogue with the
Office of the High Commissioner with a view to ensuring full
respect for all human rights and fundamental
freedoms;
16. Strongly encourages
the thematic special procedures mandate holders to pay
particular attention to the situation of human rights in the
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, including the Special
Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to
freedom of opinion and expression, the Special Rapporteur on
the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of
association, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of
human rights defenders, and the Special Rapporteur on the
independence of judges and lawyers;
17. Requests that the Secretary-General report to the General Assembly at its sixty-seventh session on the progress made in the implementation of the present resolution, including options and recommendations to improve its implementation, and to submit an interim report to the Human Rights Council at its nineteenth session.
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