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Venezuela expects ‘most brutal’ repression after Nicolás Maduro’s apparent election victory, UN experts say

Geneva — Independent U.N. human rights experts said in a new report released Tuesday that their findings show the Venezuelan government has intensified its use of the “harshest and most brutal” tools of repression after contested presidential elections in JulyThe official results of the July 28 vote have been widely criticized as undemocratic, unclear and primarily aimed at keeping President Nicolás Maduro in power.

In its report, the fact-finding mission on Venezuela, commissioned by the UN-backed Human Rights Council, condemned rights violations, including arbitrary detention, torture and sexual and gender-based violence by the country’s security forces, which “taken together constitute a crime against humanity of persecution on political grounds”.

“During the period covered by this report, and especially after the presidential elections of July 28, 2024, the state reactivated and tightened the harshest and most brutal mechanisms of its repressive apparatus,” the experts said in the report, which covered the one-year period to August 31.

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Demonstrators clash with police during a protest against the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in Puerto La Cruz, Anzoategui state, Venezuela, July 29, 2024, the day after Venezuela’s presidential election.

CARLOS LANDAETA/AFP/Getty


The results reflect concerns expressed by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Human Rights Watch and others about Venezuela and its democracy, including repression before and after the long-awaited vote and the subsequent the flight into exile of the Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez.

Marta Valiñas, head of the team of experts, said that between July 29 and August 6, Venezuelan authorities admitted to having arrested more than 2,200 people.

“Of these, we have confirmed the arrest of at least 158 ​​children — some with disabilities,” Valiñas told reporters at a news conference in Geneva on Tuesday, noting that some of them had been accused of serious crimes such as terrorism.

“This is a new and extremely disturbing phenomenon,” she said. “We are facing a systematic, coordinated and deliberate repression by the Venezuelan government, which is responding to a deliberate plan to silence all forms of dissent.”

Among them three US citizens were recently arrestedThe government said on September 14 that two Spaniards and a Czech citizen had been charged with conspiring to destabilize Venezuela through “violent actions,” adding that hundreds of weapons had allegedly been confiscated.

One of the Americans is a sailor in the US Navy. arrested earlier this month while visiting the country on a private trip, U.S. officials confirmed to CBS News. The sailor is a petty officer first class and former Navy SEAL who was assigned to a team on the West Coast, U.S. officials said.

Venezuela’s National Electoral Council, which includes many Maduro supporters, said he won the election with 52 percent of the vote. But opposition supporters collected ballots from 80 percent of the country’s electronic voting machines and said they showed González won — with twice as many votes as Maduro.

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro delivers a speech while holding a replica of liberator Simon Bolivar’s sword during a rally in Caracas, August 28, 2024.

PEDRO RANCES MATTEY/AFP/Getty


Global condemnation of the lack of transparency prompted Maduro to ask Venezuela’s Supreme Court of Justice, whose members align with the ruling party, to conduct an audit of the results. The Supreme Court confirmed his victory.

The independent experts, who do not represent the United Nations, are a fact-finding mission established in 2019. They have been reporting for years on rights abuses — including alleged crimes against humanity — in Venezuela under Maduro. This report, the fifth of its kind, condemns the government’s efforts to suppress peaceful opposition to his rule.

The justice system – headed by the Supreme Court – “is clearly subordinated” to the interests of Maduro and his close allies and has been “a key tool in the plan to suppress all forms of political and social opposition,” they wrote.

In the hours after Maduro was declared victorious, thousands of people took to the streets across Venezuela. The protests were mostly peaceful, but demonstrators also toppled statues of Maduro’s predecessor, the late Hugo Chávez, threw rocks at law enforcement officers and buildings, and burned police motorcycles and government propaganda.

The Maduro government has responded to the demonstrations with force, carrying out arbitrary detentions, launching criminal proceedings, and running a campaign encouraging people to report relatives, neighbors, or other acquaintances who participated in the protests or challenged their results.

Patricia Tappatá Valdez, a member of the team of experts, said at least 143 arrests had been confirmed as involving members of seven opposition parties, including 66 leaders of political movements.

“The politically motivated persecution is clear,” she said. “These numbers represent a level of repression we haven’t seen since 2019.”

The independent experts said they based their report on interviews with 383 people and a review of court records and other documents, but acknowledged that information-gathering capabilities were limited in the period after the election.

The experts said their requests for information to Venezuelan authorities had been “ignored”, despite appeals for cooperation from the human rights council, which is made up of rotating members from 47 UN member states.