viernes, 19 de septiembre de 2008

Venezuela: Human Rights Watch Delegation Expelled


(Sao Paulo, September 19, 2008) – The Venezuelan governments expulsion of two Human Rights Watch staff underscores the Chávez administration’ s increasing intolerance of dissenting views, Human Rights Watch said today. The government expelled José Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch, and Americas deputy director Daniel Wilkinson on September 18, 2008, hours after they held a news conference in Caracas to present a report that describes how the government of President Hugo Chávez has weakened democratic institutions and human rights guarantees in Venezuela. The 230-page report, “A Decade Under Chávez: Political Intolerance and Lost Opportunities for Advancing Human Rights in Venezuela” (http://www.hrw/), examines the impact of the Chávez presidency on the courts, the media, organized labor, and civil society. The report documents how the extraordinary opportunity to shore up the rule of law, and strengthen the protection of human rights presented by the enactment of a new constitution in 1999, has since been largely squandered. Among other things, the report found that the government had undermined freedom of expression, expanding penalties for speech offenses, and intimidating critics. “Chávez’s expulsion of Human Rights Watch’s team is further evidence of Venezuela’s descent into intolerance,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “Chávez may have kicked out the messenger, but he has only re-enforced the message – civil liberties in Venezuela are under attack.” Vivanco and Wilkinson were intercepted on the night of September 18 at their hotel in Caracas and handed a letter accusing them of anti-state activities. Their cell phones were confiscated and their requests to be allowed to contact their embassies were denied. They were put into cars, taken to the airport and put on a plane to Sao Paulo, Brazil, where they landed this morning. Human Rights Watch is an independent, non governmental organization and does not accept any government funds, directly or indirectly. To read the Human Rights Watch report, “A Decade Under Chávez: Political Intolerance and Lost Opportunities for Advancing Human Rights in Venezuela,” please visit: http://hrw.org/reports/2008/venezuela0908/

2 comentarios:

  1. See what happens when post-modernists like H. Chavez start changing the rules to the industrialized nations' game midswing. They want to rely on the plausibility of phenomena, and not the truths that are grounded in reality. These nut jobs are trying to pull the chess table from underneath the chess game, and turing reality on its head. Screw post-modernists like him and Amedenejad.

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  2. Thank you Dan. Y think that the rules are not inflexible. It is necessary to change them to adapt to the events and the new times. The problem appears when they are changed does not stop to improve but to seize of the power to the detriment of the citizens. Nobody is owner of the absolute truth and the rules can be inflexible neither can be handled according to interests of a single country nor of a single person.
    Excuse my English but it is not my language.
    Thanks for your comment.
    Magda

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