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Montevideo, December 22nd 2024 - 06:13 UTC

 

 

UN human rights council condemns Venezuela and extends two years the mandate of investigators

Wednesday, October 7th 2020 - 09:35 UTC
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“We continue to see new cases of arbitrary killings, torture and other serious violations of human rights in that country,” said Silvia Elena Alfaro Espinosa, Peru's ambassador to the UN in Geneva “We continue to see new cases of arbitrary killings, torture and other serious violations of human rights in that country,” said Silvia Elena Alfaro Espinosa, Peru's ambassador to the UN in Geneva
The resolution was adopted with 22 countries in favor, three against (including Venezuela) and 22 abstentions (including Mexico). The resolution was adopted with 22 countries in favor, three against (including Venezuela) and 22 abstentions (including Mexico).

The United Nations Human Rights Council on Tuesday extended by two years the mandate of investigators who have documented executions, disappearances, and torture in Venezuela that they say may amount to crimes against humanity.

It condemned “widespread targeted repression and persecution” by security forces and called on the government of President Nicolas Maduro to cooperate with a preliminary examination opened by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

“We continue to see new cases of arbitrary killings, torture and other serious violations of human rights in that country,” said Silvia Elena Alfaro Espinosa, Peru's ambassador to the UN in Geneva, as she presented the resolution.

Venezuela's ambassador Jorge Valero rejected the text, which was also backed by the European Union, as “a clear display of manipulation and politicization of this Council”.

“President Maduro would like to ask the European Union are you going to continue with the battered, beaten, and failed script of Donald Trump against Venezuela?,” Valero asked.

The resolution was adopted with 22 countries in favor, three against (including Venezuela) and 22 abstentions (including Mexico).

UN investigators, in a report in September, said that the Maduro government had committed systematic human rights violations.

“The gravity of human rights violations, the erosion of rule of law and the dismantlement of democratic institutions in the country continue to merit the scrutiny of this Council,” Germany's Ambassador Michael Freiherr von Ungern-Sternberg, speaking on behalf of the EU, told the Council.

Brazil's Ambassador Maria Nazareth Farani Azevedo, belonging to the Mercosur group said that the UN findings had “renewed the hope for justice” among Venezuelans.

“Of particular alarm is that many of these violations were planned, made widespread and systematic under the command of individuals at the highest levels. The goal being to hang onto power at all cost,” she said.

Earlier, the forum adopted a separate resolution brought by Iran and Syria on continuing UN technical cooperation with Venezuela on human rights.

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