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The United Nations' human rights office said Tuesday that Venezuelan
security forces caused many of the 125 deaths demonstrators have suffered
during four months of anti-government street protests, by the "widespread
and systematic use" of excessive force.
The U.N. report was made public Tuesday in Geneva, as foreign ministers
of 15 Western Hemisphere nations met in Peru about the situation in Venezuela.
The political and economic crisis in Caracas and other parts of the country
already is spilling over neighbors' borders, with thousands of Venezuelans
fleeing the chaos.
The U.N. agency said preliminary results of its investigation show that
46 demonstrators died directly at the hands of Venezuelan security forces,
while pro-government armed groups were responsible for 27 deaths; it was not
clear who caused the remaining deaths. The Human Rights Office in Geneva
promised a more comprehensive version of its report by the end of this month.
Many detainees still held
U.N. human rights commissioner Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein said more than
5,000 people have been arbitrarily detained in Venezuela since widespread
unrest broke out in late March, and over 1,000 of those detainees are still in
custody. Another 2,000 protesters have been injured during almost-daily
demonstrations.
A spokeswoman for Zeid, Ravina Shamdasani, said there was abundant
evidence of the use of torture against detainees: "Tactics used included
electric shocks, beatings, including with helmets and sticks while handcuffed,
hanging detainees by their wrists for long periods, suffocation with gas and
threats of killings — and, in some cases, threats of sexual violence — against
the detainees or their families."
Zeid said these were grave violations "amid the breakdown of the
rule of law in Venezuela," and added: "Responsibility for the human
rights violations we are recording lies at the highest levels of government."
U.N. investigators said they conducted 135 interviews between June and
July with victims and their families, witnesses, journalists and others.
Maduro's foes see 'dictatorship'
Venezuela's social and political turmoil worsened last Friday, when
President Nicolas Maduro swore in an unpopular constituent assembly to rewrite
the constitution.
Maduro said the new assembly would restore peace and stability to the
country. His critics maintain that the 545-member assembly — packed with Maduro
supporters, including his wife and son — will try to dissolve the
opposition-led legislature and turn Venezuela into a socialist dictatorship.
The assembly's first major move last week was to dismiss Attorney
General Luisa Ortega, a former Maduro ally turned vociferous opponent. That
brought a swift reaction from the Latin American trade bloc Mercosur, which
suspended Venezuela's membership indefinitely just hours later.
On Tuesday, the constituent assembly threatened to lift parliamentary immunity
for opposition lawmakers. Diosdado Cabello, a prominent politician and member
of the new assembly, said it was reviewing whether to strip immunity from
"those who have called for violence in Venezuela and now want to introduce
themselves to be candidates for governor, as if nothing has happened
here."
The opposition Democratic Unity coalition was to announce Tuesday
whether it would participate in long-delayed regional elections, now set for
December.
Diplomatic consequences for Venezuela?
The foreign ministers who met Tuesday in Lima were mostly from Latin
America. They are considering forming a permanent group to follow up on the
crisis, as the Organization of American States recently proposed,
unsuccessfully. Those meeting in Peru also were reported to be discussing their
possible suspension of diplomatic relations with the Maduro government.
Countries' individual actions could include "withdrawing their
ambassadors, as Peru did," said the host country's foreign minister,
Ricardo Luna. He suggested other nations could consider "rejecting or
expelling" Venezuelan ambassadors in their capitals.
"The future of Venezuela has to be solved by Venezuelans
themselves, but the countries of the region have a role to play in seeking that
solution, even if it is difficult," Chile's foreign minister, Heraldo
Munoz, said in advance of the meeting.
Ministers from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica,
Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay and Saint Lucia
were at the Lima talks, along with Peru's Luna.
The top United States diplomat, Rex Tillerson, is in Asia, but the U.S.
government weighed in Tuesday via a series of tweets by a State Department
spokeswoman, saying it "does not recognize the legitimacy" of
Venezuela's constituent assembly, an "illegitimate product of a flawed
process designed by a dictator."
Spokeswoman Heather Nauert's tweets affirmed U.S. support for
Venezuela's political opposition. She wrote in one, "U.S. will continue to
use appropriate econ/diplomatic tools to address threat to Venezuela democratic
institutions. We stand [with] you."
VOA reporter Lisa Schlein contributed to this story from Geneva.