Thank you very much.
Good afternoon.
Chairman Reid, distinguished members of the Subcommittee on International Human Rights, ladies, and gentlemen, my name is Lilian Tintori. I am delighted to be here today. Leopoldo, my husband, is a politician. I am not. I am here as a wife, as a mother, as a single mother since Leopoldo, a devoted husband, father, and politician, was wrongly imprisoned by Venezuelan authorities on February 19, 2014. Because Leopoldo has been temporarily silenced, I have no choice but to speak out on his behalf.
Some of you may be familiar with the situation in Venezuela, which I will discuss. What you may not know, as I testify here in the Canadian Parliament today, is that my husband has strong Canadian roots. His great-grandfather was from Fredericton, New Brunswick, and moved to Caracas after the turn of the 20th century to open a local office of the Royal Bank of Canada. He was always a proud Canadian despite having lived most of his life in Caracas.
The most important thing for me to discuss with you today is the current situation facing Venezuela as a country as well as the specific situation of my husband, Leopoldo. Since President Hugo Chavez was elected in 1999, my country has been transformed from a robust democracy into a dictatorship. In the last 15 years things in Venezuela have never been as bad as they are now. Chavez's presidency was marked by violence, inflation, scarcity of goods, a lack of judicial independence, and increasing persecution of journalists and political opponents.
Currently, Venezuela's inflation rate is 65%, the highest in Latin America. Today, I and other Venezuelans face a daily battle to find staples such as toilet paper, rice, coffee, meat, diapers, and milk for our babies. We are forced to wait in line for hours to purchase food and other essential goods for our families.
On top of this, the security situation in my country is truly disturbing. Venezuela's murder rate is 25,000 per year, which is a Venezuelan is killed every 20 minutes. Yet despite this depressing reality on the ground, my country has a wonderful constitution with strong human rights protections. Sadly, the government violates these protections daily with impunity.
My husband, Leopoldo, has spent nine months in prison since he voluntarily turned himself in on February 18, 2014. Leopoldo is currently 43 years old. He spent his 43rd birthday this year behind bars and without his family as we were not allowed to visit him on that day and for few days in prison.
Leopoldo has been a politician since age 29. A member of the political opposition, my husband was elected mayor of Chacao municipality in 2000, the central business district of Caracas. He served as the mayor until 2008 when a wrongful disqualification from running for office went into effect.
If not for the ban, Leopoldo had planned to run for mayor of Greater Caracas in 2008, a race in which he was up in the polls by 30 percentage points. A poll at the time suggested that in the hypothetical present election, Leopoldo would have received a greater percentage of the vote than Hugo Chavez.
The Venezuelan government is clearly the first goal of my husband, and it has great reason to be. Chavez has not delivered and Maduro has not delivered on their promises. They have systematically dismantled our fundamental freedoms: our free speech, freedom of association, freedom of the press, and freedom to vote for candidates of our choosing.
Yet my husband has not been deterred. In 2009 Leopoldo, with other young committed opposition leaders, founded the political party Voluntad Popular, based on building grassroots support for social change. With violence up and the economy in major decline, Leopoldo called for a resolution of our current crisis through no violence and constitutional means. Specifically, he called for President Maduro to resign. If that didn't work, my husband called for a national referendum to recall Maduro as president. If that didn't work, he wanted to hold a constitutional convention to re-examine how human rights could be more effectively protected.
All three of these ideas are drawn directly from the Venezuelan constitution. Accordingly, Leopoldo received widespread support for these proposals, which were jointly embraced by all political opposition leaders as well as the Venezuelan student movement.
On February 12, 2014, Youth Day in Venezuela, some 500,000 people turned out in the streets of Caracas to listen to my husband and other opposition political, student, and community leaders talk about how to change our country. After listening to speeches, the crowd marched to the headquarters of the public prosecutor to submit a letter demanding the release of student leaders who had been arbitrarily arrested previously.
After waiting for two hours, it became clear that the prosecutor's office would not accept the letter, so my husband ordered all the protesters to return home. However, a small group of protesters stayed, and the situation quickly turned deadly when three protesters—two anti-government protesters and one government supporter—were shot following the largely peaceful march.
At this point, my husband and the other opposition leaders had long departed from the scene. The Venezuelan government claims, to the contrary, that Leopoldo incited violence. Photographs and videos on YouTube show the security forces opening fire on unarmed demonstrators.
After the violence on February 12 an arrest warrant for Leopoldo was issued by the prosecutor's office, later that evening. On the evening of February 16 my husband declared on YouTube that he would turn himself in and called for a peaceful demonstration on February 18. Around noon on February 18, I stood beside Leopoldo as he gave a speech to hundreds of thousands of supporters; then my husband peacefully turned himself in to the military authorities.
Subsequently he was indicted for a number of criminal charges that my lawyer, Jared Genser, will speak about in more detail.
Amazingly, while the government admired that Leopoldo advocated change through non-violent and constitutional means, it actually claimed in writing that my husband used subliminal messages to engage enactment of violence. If my husband had such superhero powers, surely he would have easily persuaded President Maduro to resign or his jailers to let him go.
I will now talk about what's been happening to my family and me in Venezuela since my husband's arrest. Since February 19, 2014, Leopoldo has been wrongfully imprisoned in Venezuela. My husband has been detained in solitary confinement for nine months. Of that time, he has been in 24/7 lockdown for six months on and off as an arbitrary punishment.
They punish him without a reason. The last time was when Leopoldo, through his window that is three metres up, so you'd need to be inside his cell to get to the window, put a sign in the window saying, UN = Freedom For Political Prisoners because the UN had asked for the release of Leopoldo López and political prisoners of Venezuela. The Government of Venezuela closed the court for one month and didn't answer anything. Then after one month it opened its office and rejected the UN decision.
But while President Maduro can imprison my husband's body, he can't imprison his mind. Even though Leopoldo is suffering through the cruelty of extended solitary confinement, he is getting stronger. He reads, writes, exercises, and prays in his cell. Every moment he spends in prison only strengthens his resolve.
We will all survive. I hope so, but to be honest, it is very difficult for me and for my children. It is hard being a single parent. It is a challenge, fearing for my and my children's safety in my own country. I don't feel safe; I live in fear. It breaks my heart having to explain to Manuela, my daughter, after every visit why her daddy can't come home and how in Venezuela sometimes the heroes are in prison.
Let me conclude with two brief stories that illustrate the desperation of the Venezuelan government treating my husband.
First, on 27 October at about 1 a.m. the guards at the military prison where Leopoldo was being held threw three bags of human urine and feces against the bars of his prison window. Pee and poo were inside. They threw it in the windows of Leopoldo, Daniel Ceballos, Enzo Scarano, and Salvatore Lucchese, other political prisoners.
There are four political prisoners in that Ramo Verde jail, but right now we have more than 80 political prisoners in Venezuela.
The excrement covered him and the small cell. Prison officials turned off the water and electricity, leaving him to spend 15 hours like that with all the excrement and urine inside his cell and on his body. This is disgusting and it is horrible. We are denouncing this inside our country and outside of our country.
Most recently Leopoldo has twice been given a two-week period of punishment. In addition, the government has decided it will punish me for speaking out in forums around the world just like this one. I was punished for 40 days. I went for 40 days without seeing or talking with Leopoldo, my husband.
During a recent visit with her father, Manuela, our daughter, who is five years old, asked Leopoldo whether he will die in prison. That a five-year-old should have to ask such a question of her father is heartbreaking and brought our entire family to tears.
All of what I have described is in clear violation of Venezuelan and international law. I am here today to plead for your help and support. My husband is in part who he is because of your great country. What he, and all Venezuelans, need is for like-minded governments such as your own to stand in solidarity with the 72 political prisoners left in the country, including Leopoldo.
Thank you very much for your care, concern, and support. As Leopoldo said, all rights for all people. That's our goal. Peace and a better country for all. Strength and faith.
[Witness speaks in Spanish]
And all these words and all my work around the world is for love: the love that I feel for Leopoldo, the love that I feel for my kids, and the big love that I feel for my country, Venezuela.
Thank you very much.