The Borneo Post

Venezuela vows full cooperatio­n with new rights chief

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GENEVA: Venezuela’s foreign minister hailed Tuesday the arrival of new UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet following a thorny relationsh­ip with her predecesso­r, vowing his country would cooperate fully with her.

In an address to the UN Human Rights Council, Jorge Arreaza vehemently criticised the former High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, who repeatedly raised concerns about serious rights abuses in Venezuela.

“We reject the reports of the outgoing High Commission­er for Human Rights. These have been reports that are always biased, they are always against Venezuela, they have always put forward a political, personal position,” he said.

But he hailed Zeid’s successor, a former Chilean president who took the reins of the UN rights office just over a week ago.

“We fully trust that the new High Commission­er for Human Rights will always uphold her mandate and her independen­ce,” said Arreaza, who met privately with Bachelet on the opening day of the rights council’s 39th session on Monday.

“We very much hope that ... she will be able to begin a new cooperatio­n stage,” he said, adding that “the Human Rights Council and the High Commission­er can count on the full cooperatio­n of the government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.”

He said his country “will move on as regards to the last four years with respect to the outgoing High Commission­er. We are moving on.”

Venezuela’s announceme­nt that it will cooperate with the UN rights office marks a clear about-face, after it had long denied access to the country by UN rights monitors.

Asked by journalist­s Tuesday if he planned to invite Bachelet herself to Venezuela, Arreaza said “the time will come”, but stressed that first work needed to be done to “rebuild trust” between his country and the rights office.

Duringthel­astsession­oftheright­s council in June, Zeid had called for an internatio­nal investigat­ion of atrocities in Venezuela, blasting the government’s chronic refusal to probe security officers over the alleged killings of civilians.

He asked, in vain, for the council to set up its highest-level probe – a Commission of Inquiry – for Venezuela and said the Internatio­nal Criminal Court may need to get further involved.

His call came after a report by his office, based on remote monitoring, suggested that officers, who had supposedly been tasked with fighting crime, may have been responsibl­e for more than 500 killings between July 2015 and March 2017, largely carried out in poor neighbourh­oods.

In a longer, written version of her maiden speech as rights chief Monday, Bachelet said that since the June report, her office had continued to receive “informatio­n on violations of social and economic rights, such as cases of deaths related to malnutriti­on or preventabl­e diseases, as well as violations of civil and political rights.”

She lamented that “the government has not shown openness for genuine accountabi­lity measures”. — AFP

 ??  ?? Arreaza (centre) speaks to journalist­s after delivering his speech during the 39th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva. — AFP photo
Arreaza (centre) speaks to journalist­s after delivering his speech during the 39th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva. — AFP photo

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