Kuwait Times

Venezuela Supreme Court has staged effective coup

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GENEVA: Venezuela’s Supreme Court has progressiv­ely dismantled the rule of law, becoming an instrument of President Nicolas Maduro’s government in what amounts to a coup against the constituti­onal order, an internatio­nal human rights group said yesterday. The collapse of the judiciary has left victims of torture, killings and disappeara­nces and their families without recourse to justice after months of violent street protests, the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists (ICJ) said. It called on the UN Human Rights Council to take action.

“We have seen a judiciary that has essentiall­y lost its independen­ce and become a tool of a very authoritar­ian executive branch,” Sam Zarifi, ICJ Secretary-General, told a news briefing. “This breakdown of the rule of law has also severely obstructed accountabi­lity (and) essentiall­y made it impossible to bring to justice those responsibl­e for gross violations of human rights,” he said. The Venezuelan government did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment. Foreign minister Jorge Arreaza on Monday rejected as “baseless” a UN report that found excessive use of force by its security forces and other violations.

Four months of demonstrat­ions in which at least 125 people were killed have all but stopped due to fatigue among protesters and disillusio­nment at seeing the ruling Socialist Party cement vast powers despite the concerted opposition push. The ICJ said the top court had undermined human rights and infringed the Constituti­on through a series of rulings since December 2015. In two rulings in March 2017, the Supreme Court of Justice “effectivel­y claimed legislativ­e powers for itself, depriving the National Assembly of its Constituti­onal powers and granting sweeping arbitrary powers to the executive,” it said.

“These decisions amount to a coup d’Ètat against the Constituti­onal order and have ushered in a new reign of arbitrary rule,” Zarifi said. Judges on the Supreme Court are mainly from the Socialist Party or former officials of the government of Maduro or both, the Geneva-based jurists’ group said. “Judges who have demonstrat­ed independen­ce and ruled against the executive branch have faced retaliatio­n and punishment,” Zarifi said. —Reuters

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