Evidence of meeting #19 for Subcommittee on International Human Rights in the 40th Parliament, 3rd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was case.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Ligia Bolivar Osuna  Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

12:55 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

From a procedural point of view, apparently not, but it's frankly a question that we can resolve out of session, because the rules are going to be the same whether I get them right in describing them to you now or not.

We're going to have to arrange to set aside some time for this at a future meeting. Because we have witnesses in the next little while, this is going to require some planning on my part. I'm going to ask the clerk to find additional time outside our normal meeting time where we can essentially continue this discussion. I hope that's fine with everybody.

All right. Let's suspend. We're effectively adjourning this meeting and starting a new meeting, although that's not what we're formally doing. We're suspending so that our witness can be brought in.

Thanks very much.

1:05 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), we are continuing our study of human rights in Venezuela.

Today our witness is Ligia Bolivar. She is the co-founder and a board member of the Venezuelan Program for Education--Action in Human Rights. We are very glad she could join us. She has come no small distance to be here. Let's give her our attention as we allow her to make her presentation. Thank you very much.

Please begin at your convenience.

June 3rd, 2010 / 1:05 p.m.

Ligia Bolivar Osuna Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Mr. Chair, ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon to all of the committee members.

Thank you very much for the opportunity to address this committee on international human rights.

In the summer of 1999, Venezuela approved a new constitution that contains one of the most comprehensive catalogues on human rights, but at the same time it has a rather weak institutional framework to ensure respect and realization of those rights. This design has been skilfully used by the government to progressively control almost all institutions. The lack of independence of the legislative, judicial, electoral, and so-called citizens' power from the executive branch does not only come from the appointment of members clearly associated with the ruling party, but also from direct interference with their functions.

Probably one of the most shocking examples was a statement made by the President of the Supreme Court in December 2009, when she expressed, “We cannot continue thinking of a revision of powers because that is a principle that weakens the state.”

Although human rights might be, and are, violated everywhere, a key element to redress victims in a democratic society is the presence of checks and balances. The division of powers does not exist in Venezuela, and that puts victims in a helpless position.

On the right to freedom of expression, the Venezuelan government would feel even more comfortable if it could control all our informal powers, such as the media. That explains the government's continuous attempts to reduce the influence of independent journalism. Some of the patterns in this area are: closure of media critical of the government; confiscation of equipment; withdrawal of broadcasting permissions to radio stations; short-term detention of journalism photographers with confiscation and destruction of materials.

There has also been penal prosecution of at least one journalist, who spent eight and a half months in prison and was sentenced to three and a half years in jail for alleged corruption charges in a case condemned by the inter-American system, as well as international NGOs.

Official pressure has been put on advertising companies to withdraw publicity from media critical to the government. In this case it is worth noting that the only case we have registered with proven evidence written on paper is a Canadian company. There have been disciplinary, administrative, and criminal procedures against media, media owners, and journalists. There have been attacks with fire weapons and explosives on the headquarters of media and the houses of journalists by civilian groups close to the government.

The right to freedom of expression also includes the right to seek information. However, journalists and media critical of the government are often not invited, or are prohibited access, to press briefings by public entities. Government spokespeople refuse to give statements to the media, and it is difficult to have access to information and statistics on public issues such as health, education, employment, and housing.

On the right to property, according to 0bservatorio de la Propiedad, there have been 762 expropriations between 2005 and 2009. This includes a wide range of areas such as farms/land, urban land, buildings/housing, universities, cultural centres, industry/factories, media, telecommunications, commerce, shopping centres, hotels, tourism, warehouses, wholesalers, and banks.

According to the law, expropriations can only be declared by courts, and compensation should be determined. However, in a large number of cases, expropriations have been declared by an administrative act, and compensation is unilaterally decided, and paid with extreme delay, if ever. Only expropriations involving multinational corporations have received compensation. There are no cases of expropriation against national owners. A recent trend shows that expropriation has been used as a sanction against alleged violations to administrative or economic regulations, in some cases based on political motivations.

On peaceful protest, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has noted that articles 357 and 360 of the penal code limit peaceful demonstration and constrain the right to strike in connection with labour demands.

Likewise, article 56 of the Organic Law on National Security provides for a prison sentence of 5 to 10 years for those deemed to promote conflict in the workplace of basic state industries.

According to information received by the commission, this article was invoked a minimum of 70 times during 2008. According to Provea and Espacio Publico, peaceful protest has almost doubled between 2006 and 2009 and so has repression. As of November 2009, Provea registered 2,240 persons who face criminal charges for participating in demonstrations. The majority are workers, trade union leaders, students, and social leaders. Emblematic cases include: 1,507 peasants under presentation to courts; steel workers from SIDOR under presentation to courts since 2006, even when the maximum length of time they have to be there is only two years; and workers of the metropolitan mayor's office.

It's also interesting to note that half of the workers and trade union leaders facing criminal charges for demonstrations are “Chavistas”, that is, sympathizers or supporters of President Chávez. Six persons have been killed in demonstrations in one year. Workers' rights, social services, and rights to education are the most common demands of demonstrators.

With regard to political persecution, some 40 people remain in prison on political grounds, and many others are facing trial or have been sentenced. Although government spokespersons state there are no political prisoners, but politicians in prison, almost all cases present similar patterns: the length of trials is extremely long; most appeals and other recourses are systematically rejected; criminal charges are inflated as a way to keep the prosecuted in prison; corruption charges are often manipulated for political purposes; and evidence favouring defendants is frequently disregarded. In sum, the right to a fair trial is seriously threatened.

In addition, there is a mechanism used in recent years to limit the opportunities of opposition candidates to run for public office, which is the restriction through administrative resolutions. According to the law, such restrictions, inhabilitaciones, as they are called, can only be applied as an accessory penalty in criminal trials after final sentence has been decided.

Some 400 people had their political rights restricted by administrative measures prior to regional elections in November 2008. In the last two weeks, at least eight--it was seven when I sent this paper, but it was eight last night--candidates to the national assembly were subject to such restrictions for congressional elections due to take place in September 2010.

With regard to human rights defenders, they are frequently subject to harassment, disqualification, threats, and criminalization, either in public statements by governmental spokespersons or through direct action. At least five defenders or groups of defenders have been granted protection measures by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights or the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

In an attempt to restrict international support to local NGOs, including human rights organizations, a draft law has been introduced in the national assembly to regulate international cooperation. The language of the draft is extremely vague, opening the door for discretionary interpretation. Although the law has not been passed yet, some of its provisions have already been applied to human rights organizations.

As part of investigations around the coup attempt of April 2002, a document issued by the national assembly mentioned a number of entities allegedly cooperating “with the objectives of the Empire”. These include the Inter-American Press Association, Human Rights Watch, right-wing parties in the European Parliament and the Mercosur Parliament, the U.S. Treasury Department, the Christian Democrat International and Christian Democratic Organization of America, the so-called anti-drug czar of the United States, the FBI, the CIA, Mossad and their agents in various intelligence organizations around the world, the Rendon Group, the television networks CNN, ABC News, Televisa, Univision, FOX, CBS, TV Azteca, TV Globo, the PRISA Group, and print media controlled by the elite in countries subordinate to United States interests, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and the International Republican Institute.

Human rights, as described above, face serious obstacles due to the lack of independence among powers. The stability of judges has always been an issue in Venezuela, as noted in Provea's first annual report in 1989. For some years, there was a trend toward increasing the number of career judges. This trend reverted seriously after 1999 when the constitutional assembly decided to declare a judicial emergency. Since then, the number of career judges has dropped to 10%. Lack of stability, together with discretionary hirings of lawyers to become part of the judicial system, has become a key factor in understanding the problems affecting the administration of justice.

A recent study shows that the jurisdiction in charge of ruling on cases against the administration—the Contencioso administrativo—avoids making decisions on the substance of the matter. Its rulings tend to be limited to formalities. It is worth mentioning that in October 2003, three of the five magistrates of the First Court of Administrative Disputes were dismissed for alleged inexcusable miscarriage of justice in a case against the central administration.

It is easy to understand why incoming magistrates avoid dealing with the substantive aspects of controversies against the administration, because these three magistrates were dismissed without any administrative or disciplinary procedure. The case was presented by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights before the Inter-American Court, which ruled in favour of the magistrates. However, the Supreme Court decided that the Inter-American Court ruling was unenforceable. This was the first case where the Supreme Court openly disregarded an Inter-American sentence.

Mr. Chairman, I cannot end this presentation without special mention of the case of Maria Lourdes Afiuni, a tenured judge since 2006. On December 10, 2009, after several judges and prosecutors passed on hearing the following case, she conducted a hearing in the case against Eligio Cedeño, who had been in preventive detention without trial for more than two years. During the hearing, the defence reiterated the petition and Judge Afiuni decided to substitute in place of preventive detention of Cedeño a conditional release pending trial, and imposed on him other restrictions.

The judge based her decision on the Venezuelan criminal code and the recommendations made in a report issued by the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention with regard to Cedeño. Less than an hour after Judge Afiuni took her decision, a group of policemen from the Department of Intelligence and Prevention Services arrested Judge Afiuni in her court headquarters without a warrant, as well as two officers of justice.

On December 11, President Chávez accused Judge Afiuni of being a bandit who deserved 30 years in prison. This took place during a simultaneous national TV and radio broadcast. The general prosecutor attended the event. On the same day, the general prosecutor's office presented Judge Afiuni before a criminal tribunal on charges of corruption, abuse of authority, and for evasion and racketeering, and set the place of detention for Judge Afiuni as the National Institute of Feminine Orientation, INOF.

In the INOF prison there are 24 women inmates whom Judge Afiuni has sentenced to prison during her work, including the inmate next door. Since entering the INOF, Afiuni has been subjected to several death threats and attempts to kill her by highly dangerous prisoners, some of whom are condemned for multiple homicides and drug trafficking. Judge Afiuni will complete six months in that prison next June 10. International human rights bodies have made different appeals on her behalf, without success.

The administration of justice has passed from ignoring decisions of international human rights bodies to declaring them unenforceable and finally to putting in jail a judge who dared to enforce a UN decision.

Merci beaucoup.

1:20 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Thank you very much.

We have 40 minutes. The best way of dividing our time is to give 10 minutes each for rounds of questions and answers. As usual, we'll start with the Liberals, then the Bloc Québécois, the New Democrats, and the Conservatives.

Mr. Silva, please feel free to begin.

1:20 p.m.

Liberal

Mario Silva Liberal Davenport, ON

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I want to thank you very much for your presentation. It was extremely comprehensive.

One of the things you noted over and over again is the whole issue of the lack of the separation of powers and how that is what is needed, to have the checks and balances in government, particularly the judiciary, where you quoted from the President of the Supreme Court. And the statement that was quite disturbing was, “We cannot continue thinking of a division of powers because that is a principle that weakens the State.”

I have heard as well, and maybe you can clarify for the committee, that the Supreme Court has been overhauled by Mr. Chávez and expanded to include all his supporters. So there was a change to the Supreme Court, increasing the number of people on the Supreme Court, and only putting people who are true revolutionaries, as he calls them, on the court to make sure his agenda is followed.

Could you tell us a bit of that history and what happened there?

1:25 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

Do you mean in the appointment of new--

1:25 p.m.

Liberal

Mario Silva Liberal Davenport, ON

That's right, yes.

1:25 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

The new Constitution increased the number of members of the Supreme Court. Then there is a provision in the Constitution that all appointments of the magistrates of the Supreme Court, as well as the general prosecutor, the ombudsman, and other key figures for justice should be appointed after there is a process whereby a selection committee studies the curriculum of people who have been presented as candidates.

Don't take the number seriously, but I think there are something like 11 people from society. That's what the Constitution says, 11 people, representatives of society. The problem is that the National Assembly has interpreted that they are representatives of society. So they have taken the majority of these 11 positions on this committee of scrutiny. So the participation of civil society is almost symbolic. And also many of those who are participating from civil society are very close to the president's revolutionary project.

I don't know if that answers your question.

1:25 p.m.

Liberal

Mario Silva Liberal Davenport, ON

Partially, but my understanding was--and that's why I want you to correct me if I'm wrong--that whatever the number of members was on the Supreme Court, that number has been expanded. I remember hearing a statement from Mr. Chávez at one time that he would make sure that all the appointments, I think to use his words, would be “true revolutionaries”. He makes no apologies for the fact that he wants to create a Cuban-like revolution in Venezuela and has appointed people who share that type of view. This is what I had read and also had heard, but I wanted you to clarify that for us in the committee. I also want to make sure I have the facts correct.

1:25 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

Your interpretation is the correct one. I wouldn't go as far as to say that it's more than similar to Cuba, although I'm sure he would like to have one. It's not completely similar because there is still some resistance from society, but that resistance is largely symbolic; in practice, it's true. The Constitution makes provision for a larger number of members of the Supreme Court, and in practice those members have been appointed in accordance with Chávez's will, which is, “I want people who are close to the process”. We have seen, for example, at the opening session of the Supreme Court three years ago, which was the official opening of the judicial year, all judges present there screaming and clapping and chanting, "Oo, ah, Chávez will never go”, “O, ah, Chávez no se va.” And those are the members of the judiciary.

1:25 p.m.

Liberal

Mario Silva Liberal Davenport, ON

So you would state that as of now there is no separation between the government, the judiciary, and the prosecution that takes place. It's all one. Would that be your argument to this committee?

1:25 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

Yes, that was one of the points I wanted to raise: the lack of independence and of checks and balances.

1:30 p.m.

Liberal

Mario Silva Liberal Davenport, ON

Okay. Thank you very much.

1:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Are there any further questions? There's still a fair bit of time.

Yes, Mr. Pacetti, please go ahead.

1:30 p.m.

Liberal

Massimo Pacetti Liberal Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel, QC

Thank you for your presentation.

I have a question for my own information. On page 3 of your presentation, you say it's interesting to note that half of the workers and trade union leaders facing criminal charges for demonstrations are Chavistas, yet they're still being put in prison. Isn't that a contradiction?

1:30 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

The point is that whoever is perceived by the authorities to be against the so-called process will be persecuted anyway. There is the emblematic case of Rubén Gonzáles, a steelworkers trade union leader. He is in prison for a strike. The steel industry is considered a key industry for the security of the nation, and therefore strikes are not allowed. The fact is that they were claiming for a basic thing for any worker, which is to come to the end of their trade union contract. Now he is in prison; after that another group of workers went out to the streets to demonstrate against his being in prison for demonstrating, and they went to prison.

1:30 p.m.

Liberal

Massimo Pacetti Liberal Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel, QC

You're saying that nobody's really protected in Venezuela. Whether you're a sympathizer or not, it could turn at any point.

1:30 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

That's the trend now. It was not the trend in the years before, but it is becoming a trend now. Even if you have expressed sympathy with President Chávez's project, if there is any interpretation that what is done can jeopardize his project, then there can be consequences.

1:30 p.m.

Liberal

Massimo Pacetti Liberal Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel, QC

I have a question about the expropriations. When an expropriation is conducted, isn't a contract signed? Is nothing signed? Is it just, “Thanks, see you later”?

1:30 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

It's more or less, “Thanks, see you later”.

As I was saying, according to the law and the Constitution, expropriations can only take place after a judicial procedure, but these are administrative acts. They're more or less, “Thanks, and we will see if we can pay you”. The only cases in which compensation has been paid have been multinational cases, banks and others.

I double-checked this information because I knew I was going to say something that sounded very strong, and it's confirmed. There is not one single national business that has received compensation for expropriation.

1:30 p.m.

Liberal

Massimo Pacetti Liberal Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel, QC

Thank you.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

1:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Scott Reid

Thank you.

Go ahead, Mr. Dorion.

1:30 p.m.

Bloc

Jean Dorion Bloc Longueuil—Pierre-Boucher, QC

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

Recently, a number of prominent figures in Venezuela's government who had been supporters of the Chávez regime resigned. Do you believe there is a connection between these resignations and the issue of human rights?

1:30 p.m.

Co-founder and Board Member, Venezuelan Program for Education - Action in Human Rights

Ligia Bolivar Osuna

Supporting what...? I couldn't get the question.

Which kinds of officers do you have in mind?

1:30 p.m.

Bloc

Jean Dorion Bloc Longueuil—Pierre-Boucher, QC

The media reported that some persons had resigned and that a few weeks or months earlier, these same individuals had been supporters of President Chávez. Do you see a connection between these resignations and the evolving human rights situation in Venezuela?