Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I thank you for your testimony, Professor Armony.
I have some information here that I'd like to bring to your attention, and then I'd like to get your response to it.
A few days ago, we heard from a group named Hands Off Venezuela. They made some remarkable claims about the state of affairs in Venezuela. I want to contrast their testimony a little bit with your perspective on it, because they said some things that I found a little surprising.
I'm going to be quoting to you from the U.S. State Department 2008 human rights report on Venezuela.
You mentioned PROVEA, the Venezuelan Program of Education-Action in Human Rights, and you stated that the organization had a great deal of credibility.
According to PROVEA, as noted in this U.S. State Department report, there were 205 deaths due to security forces in the past 12 months, just prior to September. Over half of them were characterized as executions, and 5% were the result of torture. Other NGOs have reported as many as 57 political prisoners in the country at the present time. This same report states that while the constitution does declare a right to freedom of expression, there are practical limits that create a “climate of self-censorship”, such as a law punishing individuals with six to 30 months in prison without bail for insulting the president, and lesser penalties for lower-ranking officials. The government continues to suppress the organization of labour by restricting the composition of union leadership and by refusing to negotiate collective bargaining.
We know, based on his public statements, that Chavez strongly supports Ahmadinejad in the Iranian regime, a regime whose human rights violations we have spent the last year documenting.
This is what we know, based on a fairly reliable source. You made some reference to some of the atrocities--or some of the “activities”, if you want to use a less volatile term--happening there. But then you suggested, at the very end of your testimony, that it should be taken in context.
Actually, you said two things. You said that relativizing human rights is not a good idea. A violation is a violation, regardless of historical context...and then I added your “regional” context. Subsequent to that, you said that Canada should play the honest broker role and not interfere.
How do you juxtapose, or how do you justify, acknowledging some of these atrocities and recognizing that they can't be taken in context, historical or regional, and then state that we shouldn't really get too involved because we might taint our own reputation?