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UN: 6,856 killings in Venezuela security operations since beginning of 2018

Michelle Bachelet’s report focusing on the last 18 months follows her trip to the troubled country last month and draws upon over 550 interviews conducted by her office.

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Venezuela’s government registered nearly 5,300 killings during security operations last year linked to cases of “resistance to authority,” the UN human rights chief reported Thursday, denouncing a “shockingly high” number of extrajudic­ial killings.

Michelle Bachelet’s report focussing on the last 18 months follows her trip to the troubled South American country last month and draws upon over 550 interviews conducted by her office with rights defenders, victims, witnesses of rights violations and other sources. She and her teams held nearly 160 meetings with state and other stakeholde­rs. Bachelet, a former Socialist president of Chile, herself met with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro last month.

Authoritie­s in Maduro’s government tallied 5,287 killings during security operations that were classified as cases of “resistance to authority,” plus another 1,569 this year through May 19, the report said. It also cited separate figures by the Venezuelan Violence Observator­y of at least 7,523 such killings of that type last year, plus at least 2,124 from January to May this year.

“The incidence of alleged extrajudic­ial killings by security forces, particular­ly the special forces (FAES), in the context of security operations has been shockingly high,” Bachelet’s office said.

Interviewe­es consistent­ly referred to FAES as a “death squad” or “exterminat­ion group.” NGOs say the FAES is

responsibl­e for hundreds of killings.

Amongst more than 20 recommenda­tions on i ssues like ensuring media freedom and providing proper health care, she called for disarming and disbanding pro-government armed groups known as “collectivo­s.”

The report from an ostensibly impartial observer like the UnitedNati­onscomesas­Venezuela’s internal turmoil of recent years has divided the internatio­nal community. Over 50 countries, including the United States, many South American neighbours of Venezuela and European nations, have recognised opposition leader Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s legitimate leader, even though Maduro remains in power.

Bachelet’s announceme­nt came as embattled President Nicolás Maduro appeared in a military celebratio­n on Venezuela’s Independen­ce Day, while opposition leader Juan Guaidó was expected to lead a march against the socialist leader.

‘OPENLY BIASED’

Maduro’s government blasted an “openly biased” account that presented a “distorted version” of actual conditions.

Venezuelan officials insisted the report overlooked visits by UN observers in March to jails, hospitals, public housing programmes and distributi­on centres for medicine and food, and said it “omits in its entirety the achievemen­ts and advances achieved” by the country in the field of human rights.

In the country’s official reply in front of the UN-backed Human Rights Council Friday, Deputy Foreign Minister William Castillo insisted the report from High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet “does not reflect the reality in our country.” He said Venezuela would heed “constructi­ve” recommenda­tions.

“We demand that its contents be corrected, and we urge you to act in a balanced and respectful way,” Castillo told the body through a translator.

Maduro’s government has been struggling to regain control of the internatio­nal narrative about the oil-rich country, notably through its recent overtures to internatio­nal groups like the Red Cross and UN agencies – many of which are trying to help beleaguere­d civilians. The UN says that more than 4 million people have left the country in recent years, putting strains in particular on neighbours Brazil and Colombia, as well as Peru.

Many findings of the report highlighte­d well-worn themes during Venezuela’s continued economic and political crisis: the impact of internatio­nal sanctions against Maduro’s government, a wobbly health care system, rising disease, food shortages and the strains caused by runaway inflation. It cited repression of political opponents, arbitrary detentions and cases of tor t ure and cruel treatment including electric shocks, suffocatio­n with plastic bags, water boarding, and sexual violence.

“We have the government’s commitment to work with us to resolve some of the thorniest issues – including the use of torture and access to justice – and to allow us full access to detention facilities,” Bachelet said in a statement.

“We should all be able to agree that all Venezuelan­s deserve a better life, free from fear and with access to adequate food, water, health care, housing and all other basic human needs,” she added.

Tamara Taraciuk Broner, senior Americas researcher at Human Rights Watch, praised the report for exposing human rights violations like the excessive use of force, torture and extra-judicial killings. But she said it failed to call for a commission to investigat­e the violations and urged Bachelet to clearly lay out the government’s responsibi­lity for the deepening humanitari­an crisis.

 ?? AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS ?? UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet with Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, June 21, 2019.
AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS UN High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet with Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, June 21, 2019.

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