Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Amnesty: Venezuela murder toll worse than some war zones

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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AFP) — Amnesty Internatio­nal (AI) hit out yesterday at the repression by Nicolas Maduro’s Government in Venezuela, saying that more people were murdered in the South American country than in some war zones.

Opponents have accused Maduro’s regime of the authoritar­ian oppression of any dissident voices during a four-year recession that has left 87 per cent of the population living in poverty, according to a group of leading universiti­es.

Amnesty’s report highlighte­d violence carried out by security forces during operations against criminals in impoverish­ed neighbourh­oods of Venezuela’s biggest cities.

“State officials, adopting military methods, use force in an abusive and excessive manner, in some cases intentiona­lly killing during security operations,” said human rights defence organisati­on, Amnesty, in a statement.

“In cases documented by AI, victims were unarmed. Autopsies revealed bullet wounds in the neck, throat, head. They were killed while on their knees or lying down,” said Esteban Beltran, director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Spain.

“The number of murders in Venezuela is greater than those in many countries at war.”

Venezuela’s murder rate is 89 per 100,000 inhabitant­s, three times more than crimewrack­ed neighbour Brazil, said Mariana Fontoura Marques, director of internatio­nal justice policy at Amnesty Internatio­nal Argentina.

Insecurity “was one of the major reasons Venezuelan­s gave for leaving the country,” she added.

Food and medicine shortages and hyperinfla­tion the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund says will reach one million per cent this year have also contribute­d to the mass exodus.

The United Nations says some 1.6 million people have left Venezuela since 2015, heaping pressure on several nearby countries struggling to deal with a mass influx of migrants.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? Anti-government activists demonstrat­e against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro at a barricade set up on a road in Caracas on August 8, 2017. Amnerty Internatio­nal says State officials, adopting military methods, use force in an abusive and excessive manner, in some cases intentiona­lly killing during security operations.
(Photo: AFP) Anti-government activists demonstrat­e against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro at a barricade set up on a road in Caracas on August 8, 2017. Amnerty Internatio­nal says State officials, adopting military methods, use force in an abusive and excessive manner, in some cases intentiona­lly killing during security operations.

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