Thank you very much as well for your invitation.
My name is Orlando Viera-Blanco. I am an attorney in Venezuela, a professor of Venezuelan culture, and a political adviser as well.
Maybe some of you recognize me because I came here about six months ago with Maria Corina Machado before this parliamentary committee in order to share with you what was going on in Venezuela during the protests in February 2014.
Right now the situation is getting worse. Here is our constitution. It is a constitution with 350 articles. It is maybe one of the best constitutions on the continent and very well consulted in Venezuela in 1998. But I can tell you responsibly that most of the articles in this constitution have been violated by the government.
Let's take a little journey on an article I would like to share with you. For example, it talks about the inviolable right to life in article 43. About 250,000 people have died in Venezuela for criminal situations, but this is not a criminal situation. Maybe it is a cause for the deterioration of democracy. When you have a government that just fired about 65,000 police from the municipal and state police because they are against the government, that is creating a situation that cannot provide security. So 250,000 people died.
We are also talking about 97% of such crimes having impunity. No one was responsible or guilty. About 95% of the people who died were poor people. They were not middle-class people. They were poor people, mostly related to drug dealers. A lot of violence is in relation, of course, to rape and a lot of criminal phenomenon is in relation to the deterioration in the quality of life in Venezuela.
Why? My question is, why is there not a crime policy in Venezuela? Why not? Is it a state policy? Is it just a way to neutralize the people? We're talking about 2,000 people kidnapped every year. Kidnapping is an industry in Venezuela, which produces a lot of money without any kind of justice. In 97% of such criminal acts, they are not responsible and not guilty.
In Venezuela we have article 68, which prohibits the state from using chemical substances and toxic substances in protests. Right now we have a new resolution in Venezuela, which is resolution 008610, recently promoted by the minister of defence. It allows Venezuela security forces to use weapons against protesters, use chemical and toxic elements to prevent protests. It's a law.
In my thinking, that is a formalization of the criminalization of the process in Venezuela. Article 335 just refers to civil security, the civil police, the security of the citizens to prevent protests. In a law such as resolution 008610, there's no differentiation between peaceful protests and violent protests.
It's curious because they put in some kind of regulation that tried to say it is the way how the security force, the army in Venezuela, is going to act in protest situations: first, persuasion; second, induction of pain; third, use of force; fourth, use of a lethal weapon. What could be the real capacity of a soldier in a tense situation to differentiate between persuasion and the use of the lethal weapon, which is prohibited, by the way, by the constitution? The constitution reserves the use for the national force in the protection of the integrity, of the sovereignty of the country. In terms of making an intervention in internal order, they have to act like some kind of national civil police.
Articles 61 and 57 are about freedom of speech. What's going on in Venezuela right now about freedom of speech? We have 250 radio stations and a television station which have been closed by order of the government—250 radio stations. The only radio station which survived did so because they assume a neutral editorial line, or a favourable position, with respect to the government. A columnist in one of the main newspapers in Venezuela, El Universal.... Recently it was acquired by people who are supposed to be a representation or supposed to be on the side of the government. I can say how the line of the newspaper has changed. What we're talking about is the prevention that with the money of Venezuela, a lot of economic groups that have gained a lot of money, maybe from corruption, have the power to buy the media, the other newspapers, TV stations, etc., which used to have a line against the government.
Talking about, for example, article 46 in relation not to be tortured, I want to quote for you a report of what happened to one of the students in Venezuela:
Daniel Quintero, a 21-year old student from Venezuela, never imagined that he would end up being tortured after going to an anti-government demonstration.... Daniel was arrested by members of Venezuela’s national guard: They kicked and punched [him] in the face and ribs, and hit [him] on the forehead with the butts of their guns. He was forced to strip down to his underwear, handcuffed and forced to spend nine hours doubled up with his hands touching his ankles. If he moved, they beat him. At one point, the commanding officer told Daniel they were going to burn him.
That is about one of the witnesses of the many testimonials of torture. We have sent in already about 45 of them which express clearly what's going on in Venezuela on the subject of the threat of detention, arrest, and torture.
What about the article to make a free election? In Venezuela there are three million people working for the state. When you implement fingerprints in the mechanism for election in order to make some kind of pre-evaluation about who is going to vote, people are afraid. People who work in the government are afraid that something is going on there and the vote is not going to be secret. That is a kind of compulsion and a kind of threat against the people who are working for the government about how, if you don't vote for the government, you will be fired.
On the other hand, it's very typical for what we call patrullas, patrols, which exist in Venezuela and work with the government, to go to people's homes on the day of the election in order to force them to vote in favour of the government. Radio stations, resources, the money of the state, propaganda, etc., are very freely used by the government without any hesitation. That is prohibited in our anti-corruption laws.
Let's talk, for example, about justice. That is a sensitive point for me. In Venezuela, as I told you, 250 people died, and 97% of those crimes were committed with impunity. It's very curious that the attorney general in just a few hours received an order from then president Chavez, now from President Maduro, to put Mr. Leopoldo Lopez in jail. For 97% of homicides, they hold no one responsible.
In Venezuela there are 50,000 people in jail right now, and 40,000 people are not condemned; they have not been sentenced. They are in facilities that allow for just 14,000 people to be there. What's going on with justice?
You already know about Maria Corina Machado. We were asking the president of the assembly at the moment for an investigation, and it was rejected by the assembly within hours.
The justice system is being used for political reasons, and it's clear that it's a tool for the government. That happened with the Venezuelan ombudsman. It happened with the attorney general. Even then, these public servants have been re-elected right now, violating the constitution. The attorney general, the public services of the national electoral branch, les servicios electorales, can be there for just seven years but have been re-elected, and by the way, without the majority that the constitution orders.
That gives you a few examples of how the situation in Venezuela is getting worse. Right now the situation is very sensitive in Venezuela. After $1.8 million, not $1.8 billion, $1.8 million in 50 years, we have no food. I invite you to review what's going on in the Emirates, what's going in Norway, with a similar amount of money. In Saudi Arabia, they have $800 billion in reserve, and Norway exhibits its highest reserve in its history, and we don't have milk, chicken, food to eat in Venezuela in this moment.
It's too much. It's clear that it's not a democracy. It's clear that it's a new model with a design which is very perverse, which penetrates all institutions, and has taken out all of the civil rights of the Venezuelan people, its economy, and the citizenship in our country.
Thank you very much.