| The State
Department's 2005 Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices
(Informe anual sobre Prácticas de Derechos
Humanos)
Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices - 2005
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights,
and Labor
March 8, 2006
http://www.state.gov
March 9, 2006 / 9
de Marzo de 2006
The Country Reports on Human Rights Practices are
submitted annually by the U.S. Department of State
to the U.S. Congress. The reports cover internationally
recognized individual, civil, political, and worker
rights, as set forth in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights.
»
Preface
All men and women desire and deserve to live in dignity
and liberty. As President Bush said: "The advance
of freedom is the great story of our time." Promoting
human rights and democracy is a worldwide phenomenon
and there is a growing global discussion of democracy
and the universal values protected by democratic governance.
The increasing demand for democratic governance reflects
recognition that the best guarantor of human rights
is a thriving democracy with representative, accountable
institutions of government, equal rights under the
rule of law, a robust civil society, political pluralism,
and independent media.
The United States and other free nations have a duty
to defend human rights and help spread democracy’s
blessings. We must help countries develop the democratic
institutions that will ensure human rights are respected
over the long term. We must help fragile democracies
deliver a better life for their citizens. We must
call countries to account when they retreat from their
international human rights commitments. And we must
always stand in solidarity with the courageous men
and women across the globe who live in fear yet dream
of freedom.
By defending and advancing human rights and democratic
principles, we keep faith with our country’s
most cherished values and lay the foundation for lasting
peace. Fulfilling the promise of the United Nations
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and building
vibrant democracies worldwide will take generations,
but it is work of the utmost urgency that cannot be
delayed.
With these thoughts in mind, I am pleased to transmit
the Department of State’s Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices for 2005 to the United States
Congress.
Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
»
EE.UU. publica informe anual sobre prácticas
de derechos humanos
Secretaria Rice dice EE.UU. defenderá
esos derechos en el mundo
Washington -- Los países en los que el poder
está concentrado en manos de gobernantes a
los que no se les puede responsabilizar por sus actos
figuran entre los más citados por tener los
peores antecedentes en materia de derechos humanos
en el Informe Anual por Países sobre Prácticas
de Derechos Humanos preparado por el Departamento
de Estado y publicado el ocho de marzo.
Esos regímenes, que incluyen a los de la República
Democrática Popular de Corea del Norte (RDPC),
Birmania, Irán, Zimbabwe, Cuba, China y Belarús,
restringen gravemente los derechos humanos consagrados
en la Declaración Universal de los Derechos
Humanos, entre ellos la libertad de expresión,
de asamblea, de asociación, de religión
y de movimiento, dice el Departamento de Estado en
la introducción del informe.
Los informes de 2005 analizan la situación
de los derechos humanos en 196 países, y tienen
el objetivo de evaluar las condiciones de los derechos
humanos en el mundo. La introducción dice que
los informes demuestran que Estados Unidos está
comprometido "a trabajar con otras democracias
y con hombres y mujeres de buena voluntad de todo
el mundo para alcanzar una histórica meta de
largo plazo: el fin de la tiranía en nuestro
mundo".
La introducción resume la mejora de los derechos
humanos en los Balcanes, Colombia y la región
de los Grandes Lagos en África central, que
incluye a la República Democrática del
Congo, Ruanda, Burundi y Uganda.
En 2005, Iraq, Afganistán, Ucrania, Indonesia,
Líbano y Liberia hicieron importantes progresos
hacia la democracia, los derechos democráticos
y la libertad. Sin embargo, una cantidad preocupante
de países del mundo aprobaron o aplicaron leyes
contra los medios de prensa y las organizaciones no
gubernamentales, entre ellos Camboya, China, Zimbabwe,
Venezuela y Belarús.
En la introducción se indica que aunque en
los países democráticos ocurren violaciones
de los derechos humanos y errores judiciales, "los
países con sistemas democráticos ofrecen
muchas más protecciones contra las violaciones
de los derechos humanos que los estados no democráticos"
Es más, los derechos humanos y la democracia
están estrechamente vinculados, y ambos son
esenciales para la estabilidad y la seguridad a largo
plazo.
El propósito de los informes no es solamente
destacar los logros y violaciones en materia de derechos
humanos, sino que también resaltar las tareas
y el potencial de una mayor cooperación en
el impulso de las aspiraciones de la Declaración
Universal de los Derechos Humanos.
En el prefacio del informe, la secretaria de Estado
Condoleezza Rice dice que la promoción de los
derechos humanos y la democracia es un fenómeno
mundial, y que existe debate mundial cada vez mayor
sobre la democracia y los valores universales protegidos
por un gobierno democrático.
"La creciente demanda de gobernabilidad democrática
refleja el reconocimiento de que el mejor garante
de los derechos humanos es una democracia floreciente,
con instituciones de gobierno representativas y que
rindan cuentas, igualdad de derechos ante la ley,
una sociedad civil robusta, pluralismo político
y medios de prensa independientes", dice Rice.
Estados Unidos, dice la secretaria, junto con otras
naciones libres "tienen el deber de defender
los derechos humanos y ayudar a ampliar las bendiciones
de la democracia. Debemos ayudar a los países
a desarrollar instituciones democráticas que
garanticen que los derechos humanos se respeten a
largo plazo".
"Debemos ayudar a las democracias frágiles
a proveer una vida mejor para sus ciudadanos. Tenemos
que pedir cuentas a los países, cuando se retraen
de sus compromisos internacionales de derechos humanos.
Y siempre tenemos que estar en solidaridad con los
valientes hombres y mujeres de todo el mundo que viven
bajo el temor pero sueñan con la libertad",
agrega.
"La defensa y promoción de los derechos
humanos y los principios democráticos concuerda
con los valores más apreciados de nuestro país
y establece los cimientos para una paz mundial duradera",
concluye Rice.
El texto completo, en inglés,
del Informe Anual por Países sobre Prácticas
de Derechos Humanos 2005, está disponible en
el sitio electrónico del Departamento de Estado.
»
Report in English / Informe en Inglés
Venezuela
Venezuela is a constitutional democracy with a population
of approximately 25 million. In 2000 voters elected
President Hugo Chavez of the Fifth Republic Movement
(MVR) in generally free and fair elections. While
civilian authorities generally maintained control
of the security forces, there were instances in which
elements of the security forces acted independently
of government authority.
Politicization of the judiciary, restrictions on the
media, and harassment of the political opposition
continued to characterize the human rights situation
during the year. The government used the justice system
selectively against the political opposition and implementation
of a 2004 media law threatened to limit press freedom.
The following human rights problems were reported:
· unlawful killings of criminal suspects
· torture and abuse of detainees
· harsh prison conditions including violence
and severe overcrowding
· arbitrary arrests and detentions
· corrupt, inefficient, and highly politicized
judicial system characterized by trial delays, impunity,
and violations of due process
· dismissal or forced retirements of judges
for political reasons
· unlawful taking of private property, including
failure to make property restitution in such cases
· illegal wiretapping and searches of private
homes and businesses
· official intimidation and attacks on the
independent media, the political opposition, labor
unions, courts, the Catholic Church, missionary groups,
and human rights groups
· widespread corruption at all levels of government
· violence and discrimination against women,
abuse of children, discrimination against persons
with disabilities, and inadequate protection of the
rights of indigenous people
· trafficking in persons
· restrictions on the right of association
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person,
Including
Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
The government or its agents were not accused of committing
any politically motivated killings. Security forces
committed unlawful killings, including summary executions
of criminal suspects, and mistreated persons in custody
resulting in deaths.
In August the attorney general's office released statistics
implicating security forces in approximately six thousand
killings during the last five years. The survey included
all security force-related deaths, whether or not
misconduct was alleged. The human rights nongovernmental
organization (NGO) Venezuelan Program of Action and
Education in Human Rights (PROVEA) documented 162
unlawful killings from October 2004 through September.
The human rights NGO Committee for the Families of
the Victims of February 1989 (COFAVIC) noted the expansion
of police death squad activity linked to police participation
in crime.
In January Amnesty International reported that two
Aragua State police officers allegedly shot and killed
Rigoberto Barrios in Guanayen, Aragua State. Rigoberto
Barrios was the third member of the Barrios family
allegedly killed by police, despite a 2004 Inter-American
Court of Human Rights resolution ordering police protection
for the family.
In June security forces killed students Leonardo Gonzalez,
Erick Montenegro, and Edgar Quintero and injured three
others near a Caracas police checkpoint. Autopsy results
showed that two of the students were shot multiple
times and that all had shots to the head. The minister
of interior told the press he had proof that a patrol
was ordered to plant guns where the bodies of the
students had fallen. The attorney general's office
implicated approximately 30 officers in connection
with the killings, and the case was under investigation
at year's end.
In December a Caracas judge convicted three former
police officers as the material authors of the 2004
killing of prosecutor Danilo Anderson (see section
1.e.).
There were no significant developments in the following
cases reported in 2004: the January killings of nine
men, allegedly by Lara State police officers; and
the March killing of Juan Carlos Zembrano in Lagunillas,
Zulia State, allegedly by soldiers.
On August 12, a judge convicted 11 Portuguesa State
police officers for murders stemming from their participation
in the death squad "Exterminio." Exterminio
had been accused of up to 100 killings during 2000-01
in Portuguesa State. Human rights NGOs criticized
the decision, which absolved the officers of responsibility
in 4 of 7 cases, noting that 17 witnesses were killed
during the approximately 5-year trial delay.
Unlike in previous years, there were no reports that
security forces killed prisoners; however, deaths
in prison resulted from other causes (see section
1.c.).
The case of four National Guard officers charged with
killing seven prisoners at the Vista Hermosa prison
in 2003 had not gone to trial by year's end.
Unlike in the previous year, no deaths resulted from
security force intervention in antigovernment demonstrations.
There was one high-profile case of mistreatment of
soldiers resulting in death. On March 7, a fire in
a "punishment cell" in Cumana, Sucre State
injured two soldiers who later died from burns. Authorities
detained one soldier and a civilian court was given
jurisdiction of the case. The case was pending trial
at year's end.
There were no significant developments in the March
2004 death of army Private Roberto Aguilar, who died
on a military installation in Zulia State. The deaths
in March 2004 of two soldiers allegedly burned in
a punishment cell fire in Fuerte Mara, Zulia State
remained under investigation and the prosecution postponed
the release its final report. In April prosecutors
charged an additional soldier with setting the fire.
Prosecutors rarely brought cases against perpetrators
of unlawful killings. When prosecutors investigated,
they alleged that unsecured crime scenes, poor investigative
techniques, and constantly changing or inexperienced
personnel ensured that political and human rights
abuse cases were delayed indefinitely or had a preordained
result. In August the attorney general's office reported
that of the more than 6 thousand police officers implicated
in killings during the last 5 years, only 88 were
convicted. Sentences frequently were light, and convictions
often were overturned on appeal. Members of the security
forces charged with or convicted of crimes rarely
were imprisoned.
Colombian guerillas or other illegal armed groups
reportedly killed four ranchers (see section 1.b.).
The press reported several cases of lynching and attempted
lynching of suspected criminals. According to public
opinion polls, a significant portion of the population
tacitly supported vigilante activity to control crime.b.
Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances.
Human rights groups noted that police officers sometimes
disposed of their victims' bodies to avoid investigations.
PROVEA recorded 17 reports of disappearances allegedly
involving security forces from October 2004 to September.
The NGO Red de Apoyo received six reports of disappearances
between January and June and noted that this figure
exceeded the total number of disappearance reports
it had received in 2004. On July 1, human rights NGOs
issued a joint statement expressing concern over the
increase in disappearances.
In January the press reported that retired Air Force
Colonel Silvino Bustillos, a leader of the Plaza Francia
military dissidents, requested political asylum in
Colombia. Bustillos was reported missing in October
2004 after allegedly being followed by agents of the
General Directorate for Military Intelligence (DIM).
There were no significant developments in the case
of the Investigative and Criminal Police Corps (CICPC)
officers investigated for possibly kidnapping three
persons in Tachira State in May 2004.
In June the government
acknowledged its responsibility for the forced disappearances
of Oscar Blanco Romero, Roberto Hernandez Paz, and
Jose Rivas Fernandez following the Vargas floods in
1999. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights accepted
the acknowledgement and, in November ruled that the
country had violated international conventions on
torture and forced disappearance. The court ordered
the country to pay reparations and open judicial proceedings
on the case. Domestic courts had not convicted any
of the security forces allegedly involved in the disappearances
by year's end.
The Center of
Ranching Studies reported that kidnappers targeting
ranchers, farmers, and their families claimed at least
30 victims during the year. Kidnappers killed four
of these victims, and unidentified assassins killed
at least two more farmers (see section 1.a.). The
National Cattle Ranchers Federation and press reports
attributed the attacks to criminal gangs, Colombian
guerrillas, and other illegal armed groups, such as
the Bolivarian Liberation Forces. The National Guard's
antiextortion and kidnapping unit rescued at least
one victim during the year, but many ranchers paid
protection money to illegal armed groups rather than
rely on government authorities.
c. Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
Although the law prohibits such practices, NGOs, media,
and opposition groups accused security forces of continuing
to torture and abuse detainees. Abuse most commonly
consisted of beatings during arrest or interrogation,
but there also were incidents in which the security
forces used near-suffocation and other forms of torture.
PROVEA reported
that between October 2004 and September, it received
31 complaints of torture and 503 complaints regarding
cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. From January
to June, Red de Apoyo received 10 complaints from
alleged torture victims. There were no arrests associated
with these cases.
The government
did not authorize independent investigation of torture
complaints. Human rights groups continued to question
the attorney general's ability to oversee neutral
investigations as an active member of the president's
political party and a former vice president in the
government. Groups also asserted that the Institute
of Forensic Medicine, part of the CICPC, was unlikely
to be impartial in the examinations of cases that
involved torture by CICPC members. Few cases of torture
resulted in convictions.
Reports of beatings
and other humiliating treatment of suspects during
arrests were common and involved various law enforcement
agencies.
In February the
family of General Felipe Rodriguez, who was arrested
and held at Military Intelligence Headquarters, alleged
that he was subjected to sensory deprivation and psychological
torture. In March authorities transferred Rodriguez
to a civilian prison despite a court order that he
be transferred to the military prison Ramo Verde.
Rodriguez was awaiting trial at year's end.
In June family
members of Intelligence and Prevention Services (DISIP)
officers being investigated for the escape of an alleged
narcotics trafficker claimed that prison authorities
beat and tortured the officers in an attempt to secure
a confession.
In December a
Caracas judge convicted three former police officers
allegedly tortured by police in 2004 after the three
were detained for killing prosecutor Danilo Anderson.
The three received prison sentences ranging from 27
to 30 years.
Prison and Detention
Center Conditions
Prison conditions were harsh due to scarce resources,
poorly trained and corrupt prison staff, and violence
by guards and inmates. The prison monitoring NGO Venezuelan
Prison Observatory (OVP) estimated that existing prisons
could hold approximately 60 percent of the estimated
19 thousand prisoners. Severe overcrowding in some
prisons and food and water shortages remained problems.
Inmates often
had to pay guards and other inmates to obtain necessities
such as space in a cell, a bed, and food. Most prisoners
obtained food from their families, by paying prison
guards, or in barter with other prisoners. Many inmates
also profited from exploiting and abusing others,
particularly since convicted murderers and rapists
often were held with pretrial detainees or first-time
petty offenders. Trafficking in arms and drugs fueled
gang-related violence and extortion. Prison officials
often illegally demanded payment from prisoners for
transportation to judicial proceedings (see sections
1.d. and 1.e.).
The government
failed to provide adequate prison security. The National
Guard and the Ministry of Interior and Justice have
responsibility for exterior and interior security,
respectively. The OVP estimated that the interior
guard force was 10 percent of the required strength.
Violence between prison gangs, including shootouts
and riots, was common. From January through September,
OVP recorded 304 deaths and 517 injuries in the prisons.
Most inmate deaths resulted from prisoner-on-prisoner
violence, riots, fires, and from generally unsanitary
and unsafe conditions. Prisoners also died as a consequence
of poor diet and inadequate medical care.
In January more
than 10 thousand prisoners held a national hunger
strike to protest prison conditions and the lack of
action on their cases.
Security forces
and law enforcement authorities often imprisoned minors
together with adults, even though separate facilities
existed for juveniles. Because reform institutions
were filled to capacity, hundreds of children accused
of infractions were confined in juvenile detention
centers where they were crowded into small, filthy
cells, fed only once a day, and forced to sleep on
bare concrete floors. Pretrial detainees were held
with convicted prisoners.
The government
permitted prison visits by independent human rights
observers, and such visits took place during the year.
d. Arbitrary
Arrest or Detention
While the law prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention,
security forces continued to arrest and detain citizens
arbitrarily.
Role of the Police
and Security Apparatus
The National Guard, a branch of the military, is largely
responsible for maintaining public order, guarding
the exterior of key government installations and prisons,
conducting counter narcotics operations, monitoring
borders, and providing law enforcement in remote areas.
The Ministry of Interior and Justice controls the
CICPC, which conducts most criminal investigations,
and the DISIP, which collects intelligence and is
responsible for investigating cases of corruption,
subversion, and arms trafficking. Mayors and governors
oversee local and state police forces. Corruption
was a major problem among all police forces, whose
members were poorly paid and trained. Impunity for
corruption, brutality, and other acts of violence
were major problems. Some local police forces offered
human rights training for their personnel.
Arrest and Detention
Persons were not always apprehended openly with warrants
from judicial authorities. Detainees must be brought
before a prosecutor within 12 hours and before a judge
within 48 hours to determine the legality of the detention.
A person accused of a crime may not be detained for
longer than the possible minimum sentence for that
crime, nor for longer than two years, except in certain
circumstances, as when the defendant is responsible
for the delay in the proceedings.
There was a functioning
system of bail, but March penal code reforms eliminated
bail for certain crimes (see section 2.a.). Bail also
may be denied if the person was apprehended in the
act of committing a crime or a judge determines that
there is a danger that the accused may flee or impede
the investigation. Detainees were provided access
to counsel and family members.
PROVEA documented
2,731 arbitrary detentions between October 2004 and
September and criticized the security forces for a
systematic practice of illegal arrests to combat crime.
OVP reported
that as of September, 9,653 persons (51 percent of
prisoners) were in pretrial detention. Trials were
delayed due to many factors, including the limited
power of judges to compel authorities to transport
prisoners to court.
e. Denial of
Fair Public Trial
While the law provides for an independent judiciary,
it was increasingly less so. The judiciary also was
highly inefficient, sometimes corrupt, and subject
to political influence, particularly from the attorney
general's office, which in turn was pressured by the
executive branch.
The judicial
sector consists of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice
and lower courts, the attorney general's office, and
the Ministry of Interior and Justice. The Supreme
Tribunal of Justice is the country's highest court
and directly administers the lower courts through
the Executive Directorate of the Judiciary.
According to
government statistics, provisional and temporary judges
constituted an estimated 50 percent of the approximately
1,900 judges. The Supreme Tribunal of Justice's Judicial
Committee may hire and fire temporary judges without
cause and without explanation, and it did so. Provisional
judges legally have the same rights as permanent judges.
In May the Supreme Tribunal of Justice's Judicial
Committee removed approximately 50 judges (some tenured
and some provisional) in several states and Caracas,
accusing them of complicity with drug traffickers
and other irregularities. In May the Supreme Tribunal
of Justice began administering competitive exams to
provisional judges as a basis for granting tenure.
As of December approximately 480 judges had been granted
tenure.
The law provides
that the Moral Council (attorney general, human rights
ombudsman, and comptroller general) may suspend judges
and allows the National Assembly to revoke the appointment
of supreme tribunal of justice judges by a simple
majority vote. Human Rights Watch (HRW) noted that
the law threatens the independence of the judiciary
by subjecting it to political control.
Lower court judges
oversee pretrial motions, including prosecution and
defense motions, prior to criminal cases going to
trial judges. Executive judges oversee the application
of sentences. Appeals courts, consisting of three-judge
panels, review lower court decisions. The attorney
general oversees the prosecutors who investigate crimes
and bring charges against criminal suspects.
Corruption and
susceptibility to political pressure were widespread,
particularly from the attorney general's office, which
in turn was responding to pressure from the executive
branch. In February the Supreme Tribunal of Justice
suspended three judges for lifting travel restrictions
prohibiting persons investigated for involvement in
the attempted removal of President Chavez in 2002.
The magistrates who assumed the duties of the suspended
judges subsequently reversed the decision to lift
the ban. In March the Constitutional Chamber of the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice annulled a 2002 supreme
tribunal of justice ruling that the events of April
2002 constituted a power vacuum and not a coup. The
2002 ruling had previously prevented the prosecution
of four high-ranking military officers accused of
military rebellion.
Human rights
NGOs and judicial observers criticized the attorney
general's office for corruption and the politicization
of prosecutors. In June judicial NGO Foro Penal reported
that a small group of prosecutors was given the lead
on nearly all high-profile prosecutions. In July the
Andean Commission of Jurists criticized the attorney
general's use of his office to investigate and prosecute
opposition figures on political grounds.
On April 14,
the Penal Chamber of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice
revoked the October 2004 ruling throwing out all criminal
charges against National Guard General Carlos Alfonzo
Martinez and ordered the case reheard. On July 12,
an appeals court upheld the original August 2004 conviction
of General Martinez to five years probation for violating
security zones. The court found Martinez not guilty
of instigating rebellion or abandoning his command.
In May the Penal
Chamber of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice revoked
the October 2004 appeals court ruling dismissing the
case against Baruta mayor Henrique Capriles Radonski
on charges relating to a violent demonstration in
front of the Cuban Embassy in 2002 and ordered the
case reherrad
In November the
attorney general's office issued arrest warrants for
four alleged "intellectual authors" of the
November 2004 killing of prosecutor Danilo Anderson.
Businessman Nelson Mezerhane and 2 others were held
for 46 days in DISIP custody for allegedly masterminding
the killing based on the testimony of an alleged former
Colombian paramilitary member whose credibility was
questioned by various press reports. In December a
Caracas judge convicted three former police officers
as the material authors of the killing.
In May a judge
ruled that General Felipe Rodriguez must stand trial
on charges of rebellion and conspiracy for his alleged
role in the 2003 bombings of the Spanish and Colombian
consulates in Caracas and for his role in a military
protest at Altamira (see section 1.c.).
On March 14,
prosecutors accused former Miranda State governor
and Democratic Coordinating Committee leader Enrique
Mendoza of conspiracy and rebellion for his alleged
involvement in the closure of a television station
in 2002. Mendoza was not subject to any court-ordered
restrictions, and the court had yet to rule whether
he would stand trial by year's end.
In April prosecutors
opened an investigation into Carlos Ayala Corao, President
of the Andean Commission of Jurists and former president
of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,
for conspiracy related to his alleged participation
in the 2002 coup. Human rights groups criticized the
charge as an example of political prosecution without
legal foundation. In October the prosecution did not
cite Ayala as one of those formally charged in the
case, thereby discontinuing the investigation.
In November the
controller general suspended from political activity
Leopoldo Lopez, an opposition party mayor of a Caracas
municipality, for a period of six years after he leaves
office in 2008. The controller alleged that Lopez
mishandled municipal funds in 2002. Lopez claimed
the move was unconstitutional and part of a strategy
by the Chavez government to eliminate the political
opposition.
Trial Procedures
The law provides for provides for open, public, and
fair trials with oral proceedings. Defendants are
innocent until proven guilty. Public defenders are
provided for indigent defendants, but there continued
to be a shortage of public defenders. Defendants and
plaintiffs have the right of appeal.
Trial delays
were common. A professional judge and two "lay
judges" try serious cases; a single judge may
hear serious cases if requested by the defendant or
victim, or if attempts to appoint lay judges have
failed. Difficulty in finding persons willing to serve
as lay judges also resulted in delays.
The law provides
that trials for military personnel charged with human
rights abuses be held in civilian rather than military
courts; the provision does not apply to cases that
predate the 1999 constitution. Executive courts in
the military justice system mirrored the civilian
courts.
Human rights
NGOs continued to express concern that the supreme
tribunal of justice's selection of military judges
from a list of candidates provided by the minister
of defense linked the careers of military judges to
the high command.
Political Prisoners
Retired Army General Francisco Uson remained imprisoned
at the Ramo Verde military prison for "defaming"
the army, despite being retired and not subject to
military jurisdiction. In January the military court
upheld on appeal the October 2004 decision which found
Uson guilty of insulting the army and sentenced him
to five and one half years in prison. In July the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice declared Uson's attempt
to annul the decision inadmissible.
Property Restitution
On September 29, Supreme Tribunal of Justice President
Omar Mora stated that land could be occupied by the
state before a judicial review of ownership claims.
The government installed state cooperatives on properties
still under dispute and on properties whose owners
had won court decisions. The Supreme Tribunal of Justice
ordered squatters to leave properties, but the government
did not enforce its decisions.
f. Arbitrary
Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
Although the law prohibits such actions, security
forces continued to infringe on citizens' privacy
rights by searching homes without warrants, for example
during anticrime sweeps in poor neighborhoods. There
were reports of illegal wiretapping and invasion of
privacy by the security forces.
Throughout the
country, witnesses to abuses by security forces reported
instances in which their family members later were
harassed, threatened, or killed (see section 1.a.).
In April President
Chavez called on government officials to stop using
the "Tascon List," names and national identification
numbers of all persons who had signed the recall petitions
which MVR Deputy Luis Tascon had placed on his Web
page; however, the Tascon List reportedly was incorporated
into a computer program dubbed "Maisanta,"
which also included information about whether voters
benefited from the government's missions. The information
was used to identify for retaliation those who signed
the recall petition; some of those identified lost
their government jobs, were denied government services,
such as passports and identity cards, or were denied
access to employment.
Section 2 Respect
for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The law provides for freedom of speech and of the
press; however, the combination of new laws governing
libel and broadcast media content, legal harassment,
and physical intimidation resulted in limitations
on these freedoms and a climate of self-censorship.
Amendments to
the penal code in March make insulting the president
punishable by 6 to 30 months in prison, with lesser
penalties for insulting lower ranking officials. The
defamation law was strengthened such that comments
exposing another person to public contempt or hatred
are subject to a one- to three-year prison sentence
and a fine. Inaccurate reporting which disturbs the
public peace is punishable with a prison sentence
of two to five years. The requirement that media disseminate
only "true" information was undefined and
open to politically motivated interpretation.
International
organizations, such as the Inter-American Press Association
(IAPA) and the International Association of Broadcasting
(IAB), and domestic journalists charged the government
with creating a climate of self-censorship; in March
the IAB denounced to the Inter-American Human Rights
Commission the "intimidation, pressure, limitations,
and restrictions" placed on the media.
Although print
and electronic media were independent, President Chavez
repeatedly singled out media owners and editors, charging
that the media provoked political unrest and accusing
them of treason. The country remained on the International
Press Institute's watch list of countries with a growing
tendency toward suppression or restriction of press
freedom. Reporters without Borders noted similar concerns.
The law requires
that practicing journalists have journalism degrees
and be members of the National College of Journalists
and prescribes three- to six-month jail terms for
those who practice journalism illegally. These requirements
were waived for foreigners and for opinion columnists.
Assaults against
the media declined compared with 2004. From June through
August, the National Union of Press Workers recorded
11 physical and verbal attacks against the press.
The National Guard, the DIM, the DISIP, and local
police also harassed and attacked journalists. Government
sympathizers attacked and threatened private media.
On January 14,
a mob attacked Punta de Mata radio host Daniel Ortiz
Milan and threatened him with revolutionary justice
after Ortiz commented in his program on a local election
dispute. Police rescued Ortiz from the mob.
On June 13, masked
assailants attacked and firebombed the newspaper Frontera
in Merida, in retaliation for a report on the death
of a student during disturbances between pro and antigovernment
students at the University of the Andes. The Committee
to Protect Journalists reported that the newspaper's
management did not file a police complaint for fear
that a government investigation would blame Frontera's
report for provoking the attack.
On June 29, four
men believed to be DIM agents beat and briefly detained
a photographer for the newspaper El Nuevo Pais after
he attempted to take photographs of a traffic accident
involving the head of the government's land reform
office. The photographer reported that authorities
seized his camera and removed its memory disc.
On September
19, National Guard officers ransacked the offices
of Caracas daily Ultimas Noticias and seized photographs.
On November 5,
the attorney general's office accused journalist Patricia
Poleo of helping to mastermind the November 2004 killing
of prosecutor Danilo Anderson. IAPA expressed concern
over the accusation and questioned whether the prosecution
had targeted Poleo because her reports often investigated
government corruption. In January security forces
searched her residence, allegedly looking for evidence
in the Anderson case; Poleo accused the attorney general
of attempting to hide the truth of Anderson's killing.
The 2004 assassination
of radio personality, opinion columnist, and activist
Mauro Marcano Rames in Maturin remained unsolved.
The president
preempted broadcasting on the nation's airwaves to
present government programs. Independent media observers
criticized the state media for extreme progovernment
politicization.
While the law
permits the president to suspend telecommunications
broadcasts, it was not invoked during the year.
Media analysts,
journalists, and other observers alleged that the
government used criminal defamation and libel laws
to intimidate or harass the media. The attorney general's
office charged El Universal with criminal defamation
for a July 25 editorial concerning the judicial branch.
National and international press organizations denounced
the charge, and the Supreme Tribunal of Justice dismissed
the case.
In September
National Guard officers searched without a warrant
the offices of TV Guyana looking for a videotape of
a speech by a labor leader supporting recent labor
actions in Ciudad Guyana. The station owner ordered
his staff not to turn over the tape until a legal
order had been presented.
In November police
raided the offices of the newspaper La Razon searching
for the name and address of a columnist published
in the paper under a pseudonym.
The civil case
continued against newspaper El Impulso editor Jose
Ocanto, charged with libel for accusing a military
officer of corruption in 2004.
Some commercial
radio stations complained that broadcasting frequencies
for community radios were not allocated in accordance
with broadcast regulations. According to the National
Venezuelan Radio Broadcasting Chamber, most of these
community radio stations neither received broadcasting
licenses nor followed regulations and interfered with
the broadcasts of licensed stations. The government
reportedly funded the community stations, whose broadcasting
was progovernment.
The law permits
the government to order national broadcasts cadenas
requiring all broadcast media to preempt scheduled
programming and transmit the government's entire message.
Domestic and international observers to the December
national assembly elections questioned the government's
use of this provision during the election. According
to private media sources, there were approximately
171 cadenas from January through September.
In October the
National Integrated Service of Customs and Tax Administration
of Venezuela (SENIAT) temporarily closed several newspaper
and radio stations in the states of Bolivar and Lara.
Domestic journalists criticized the move as an attempt
to restrict press freedom. On October 12, the press
reported that the newspapers La Nueva Prensa and El
Expreso were closed, along with radio stations Radio
Alegria and Radio Bolivariana, and then allowed to
reopen a few days after the shutdown. On October 25,
the proopposition newspaper El Impulso was closed
for 24 hours and fined. El Impulso linked the action
to its recent comments to the IAPA criticizing government
moves against press freedom. The government responded
that SENIAT had intervened for tax enforcement reasons.
The government
denied private media equal access to many official
events, and, in cases when private media had access
to government facilities, they often did not have
access to officials and information. For example,
only the government radio and television stations
were authorized to have reporters at the presidential
palace. State-controlled television and radio stations
and many foreign news reporters continued to have
full access to official events.
There were no
government restrictions on the Internet or academic
freedom.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
Freedom of Assembly
The law provides for freedom of assembly, and the
government generally respected this right in practice.
PROVEA noted that at least 49 injuries resulted from
security force interventions in peaceful demonstrations,
which marked a significant decrease from the previous
year.
Human rights
groups criticized the March penal code revision for
the strict penalties it imposes on some forms of peaceful
demonstration. The new law outlaws pot-banging protests
often identified with opponents of the government
and punishes street closures with up to eight-year
prison terms. In June human rights NGOs submitted
a motion to declare the revision unconstitutional,
but the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Tribunal
of Justice had not made a decision by year's end.
In November the attorney general's office submitted
a separate motion to declare the penal code revision
unconstitutional.
Government supporters
sometimes disrupted marches and rallies. Supporters
and opponents of the government demonstrated in the
capital and other cities during the year, and several
demonstrations resulted in injuries after the government
failed to protect peaceful demonstrators.
On July 12, government
supporters repeatedly accosted demonstrators protesting
the June 27 police killing of three students (see
section 1.a.). Security forces failed to provide protection,
and by the time the march reached the National Assembly,
fewer than half the original demonstrators remained.
On August 27,
government supporters confronted an opposition march,
throwing rocks, bottles and other objects at marchers
as they made their way to the National Assembly. The
metropolitan fire chief reported six injuries, including
one hospitalization. Security forces failed to intervene
effectively to protect demonstrators.
The case against
a National Guard officer arrested in November 2004
for his role in the violent confrontation between
opposition demonstrators and National Guard troops
in February 2004 had not gone to trial by year's end.
In December a court sentenced 3 gunmen accused of
killing a demonstrator in August 2004 to 11 years
in prison.
Freedom of Association
While the law provides for freedom of association,
the government only partially respected this right.
While professional and academic associations indicated
they generally operated without interference, they
complained that the National Electoral Council (CNE)
repeatedly interfered with their attempts to hold
internal elections. A 2000 Supreme Tribunal of Justice
ruling declared that groups belonging to civil society
could not receive money from foreign governments or
groups influenced by foreign governments, engage in
political activism, or be run by members of the military
or religious groups. The government brought charges
of conspiracy against the NGO SUMATE based in part
on the fact that the organization received financing
from abroad (see section 4).
c. Freedom of
Religion
The law provides for freedom of religion, on the condition
that its practice does not violate public morality,
decency, or the public order, and the government generally
respected this right in practice. There were efforts
by the government to limit the influence of churches
in certain social and political areas.
Foreign missionaries
require a special visa to enter the country. For several
weeks in August the Directorate of Justice and Religion
froze the issuance of religious visas to missionaries.
In October President Chavez ordered the expulsion
of the missionary group New Tribes Missions based
on government claims of interference and damage to
the indigenous population. There were no expulsions
as of year's end.
Societal Abuses
and Discrimination
In July members of the Catholic Church hierarchy criticized
government actions directed against civil society
and the press. In response the president denounced
a Catholic cardinal as a devil and a hypocrite and
church leaders as "coupsters."
The small Jewish
community was active, and there were few reports of
anti-Semitic incidents. However the government and
its supporters occasionally demonstrated anti-Semitism.
In December the international Jewish rights group,
the Simon Wiesenthal Center, denounced comments made
by President Chavez as anti-Semitic and demanded an
apology.
In October, 219
Mormon missionaries left the country for security
reasons and due to difficulties obtaining religious
visas. There were no developments in the investigation
into explosives detonated outside two Mormon churches
in May 2004.
For a more detailed
discussion, see the
2005 International Religious Freedom Report
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign
Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation.
The law provides for these rights, and the government
generally respected them in practice, although there
were numerous reports that persons were denied passports
and other official documents by government agencies
for having signed the recall referendum. There were
also reports that those whose identification numbers
appeared on a list of petition signers had bribed
to receive their documents.
The law prohibits
forced exile, and it was not used.
Protection of
Refugees
The law provides for the granting of asylum or refugee
status in accordance with the 1951 UN Convention relating
to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 protocol, and
the government established a system for providing
protection to refugees. In practice the government
provided protection against refoulement, the return
of persons to a country where they feared persecution.
The government
cooperated with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in assisting
refugees and asylum seekers.
During 2004 and
the beginning of the year, the government implemented
the Regularization and Naturalization Decree, which
sought to resolve the status of foreigners, primarily
Colombians, regarded as "irregular." Approximately
400 thousand persons were documented, but because
the program was carried out primarily in urban centers,
it did not reach most dispersed populations of UNHCR
concern living in remote border areas. UNHCR assumed
that many Colombians chose to be naturalized rather
than apply for refugee status.
Section 3 Respect
for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change
their Government
The law provides citizens with the right to change
their government peacefully, and citizens exercised
this right through periodic elections held on the
basis of universal suffrage.
Elections and
Political Participation
In 2000 voters elected Hugo Chavez as president in
elections that observers judged to be generally free
and fair. In August 2004 President Chavez defeated
a recall referendum organized by opposition groups.
While irregularities and a progovernment bias characterized
the process leading to the referendum, the Organization
of American States (OAS) and the Carter Center stated
that the official results were compatible with their
own quick count and "reflected the will of the
electorate."
International
observers, including the OAS and EU, noted that CNE
bias and lack of transparency contributed to record-low
voter turnout in the December legislative elections
in which pro-Chavez parties won all 167 National Assembly
seats. All major opposition parties withdrew from
the election before the vote, following the revelation
that it was possible to determine how individuals
voted. The opposition and international observers
criticized the CNE for releasing a limited voter registry
and government abuse of state resources for its campaign.
While the CNE estimated that abstention reached 75
percent, independent pollsters and opposition and
NGO leaders estimated the figure to be as high as
80 percent.
In its preliminary
assessment, European Union (EU) observers noted that
many citizens lacked confidence in electoral authority
independence. The observers' initial conclusions also
highlighted voter fears that the secrecy of their
vote would be violated as a result of the Maisanta
Program. Opposition members noted that the Maisanta
Program and its predecessor, the Tascon List, were
strategies to intimidate voters (see section 1.f.).
There were 34
women in the 165-seat assembly, 3 women in the 21-member
cabinet, and 9 women among the 32 justices on the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice.
Indigenous people
traditionally were not integrated fully into the political
system due to low voter turnout, geographic isolation,
and limited economic and educational opportunities.
The constitution reserves three seats in the National
Assembly for indigenous people, which were filled
in the 2000 election. There were no indigenous members
in the cabinet and none of the national assembly vice
presidents was an indigenous person.
Government Corruption
and Transparency
There was a perception of widespread corruption at
all levels of the government. Journalists reported
several cases of apparent corruption implicating high-level
government officials, but none were investigated.
Officials acknowledged that the National Office of
Identification and Immigration, the agency responsible
for issuing identity cards and passports, was corrupt.
The law provides
for citizens' access to government information and
forbids censoring. Human rights groups reported that
the government routinely ignored this requirement
and did not make information available.
Section 4 Governmental
Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental
Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
A wide variety
of independent domestic and international human rights
groups generally operated without government restriction,
investigating and publishing their findings on human
rights cases. Government officials were somewhat responsive
to their views. Major domestic human rights NGOs that
operated independently from the government included
SUMATE, COFAVIC, PROVEA, Red de Apoyo, and the Venezuelan
Prison Observatory.
In July a Caracas
court ruled that SUMATE leaders Maria Corina Machado,
Alejandro Plaz, Luis Enrique Palacios, and Ricardo
Estevez would stand trial for conspiracy to destroy
the country's republican form of government. The charges
were based on the group's acceptance of funds from
a foreign source. Domestic and international human
rights groups criticized the ruling. The trial start
was delayed until 2006, and the accused were free
pending trial at year's end.
Several human
rights NGOs received threats and intimidation by government
representatives and supporters.
In January Venezuelan
Prison Observatory Director Humberto Prado received
telephone threats after he announced his solidarity
with prisoners engaged in a national hunger strike
(see section 1.c.).
On March 4, the
Metropolitan Police withdrew the IACHR-ordered bodyguards
it had provided for COFAVIC director Liliana Ortega.
The IACHR passed a resolution on June 14 directing
the government to reinstitute Ortega's police protection.
In October police restored Ortega's protection after
she defended the IACHR order before a local court.
During the year
HRW, the Center for Justice and International Law,
and other human rights groups criticized the government's
prosecution of well-known human rights lawyer Carlos
Ayala Corao on charges of conspiracy (see section
1.e.). The government cited the criticisms as evidence
that it was under international attack because of
its case against Ayala.
In August a group
of prominent domestic human rights NGOs issued a joint
statement requesting that the government investigate
the threats against human rights workers and adopt
measures to guarantee their security.
In November the
interior minister responded to criticisms made by
Venezuelan Prison Observatory Director Humberto Prado
with a personal attack on Prado's character. Minister
Chacon told the press that he had concerns about Prado's
alleged mistreatment of inmates during his tenure
as a prison director in the late 1990s. Prado stated
that he was unaware of the complaints and publicly
questioned why he had not been previously informed
of their existence.
The government
cooperated with international governmental organizations
and permitted visits by OAS representatives. While
the CNE negotiated with the OAS and EU to provide
observers for the December 4 National Assembly elections,
the government publicly condemned their preliminary
observation reports.
Although the
ombudsman is responsible for ensuring that citizens'
rights are protected in a conflict with the state,
human rights NGOs claimed that the ombudsman's office
was not independent and rarely acted on public interest
cases. PROVEA criticized the ombudsman's office for
remaining silent on the unconstitutionality of the
March penal code reform.
The national
assembly's Sub-Commission on Human Rights played an
insignificant role in the national debate on human
rights.
Section 5 Discrimination,
Societal Abuses, and Trafficking in Persons
Although the law prohibits discrimination based on
race, gender, disability, language, or social status,
discrimination against women, persons with disabilities,
and indigenous people were problems.
Women
The law prohibits domestic violence and violators
faced penalties of 6 to 18 months in prison. Violence
against women continued to be a problem, and women
faced substantial institutional and societal prejudice
with respect to rape and domestic violence. During
the year the Center for Women's Studies reported that
in 2004 there were 3,900 cases of domestic violence
reported, and that 1 woman in Caracas died every 10
days from domestic violence. The law requires police
to report domestic violence and obligates hospital
personnel to notify the authorities when they admit
patients who are victims of domestic abuse. Police
generally were reluctant to intervene to prevent domestic
violence, and the courts rarely prosecuted those accused
of such abuse. Women generally were unaware of legal
remedies and had little access to them. The government
sought to combat domestic violence through a public
awareness campaign and a national victim assistance
hot line.
In December 2004
a judge absolved the alleged torturer of Linda Loaiza,
claiming the public ministry had not provided sufficient
evidence to prove culpability. The decision was under
appeal at year's end.
The law prohibits
rape, including spousal rape, but it remained a problem.
Rape is punishable with prison terms of 8 to 14 years,
although cases often were not reported to the police.
An adult man guilty of raping an adult female acquaintance
may avoid punishment if he marries the victim before
sentencing.
Prostitution
is legal. While there was no government information
on the extent of prostitution, local antitrafficking
NGO Association of Women for Welfare and Mutual Help
noted that prostitution was a serious problem, particularly
in Caracas and domestic tourist destinations.
Sexual harassment
is illegal and punishable with a prison sentence of
6 to 18 months. Sexual harassment was common in the
workplace but rarely reported. There were no reported
cases of sexual harassment during the year.
Women and men
are legally equal in marriage, and the law provides
for gender equality in exercising the right to work.
The law specifies that employers must not discriminate
against women with regard to pay or working conditions.
According to the Ministry of Labor and the CTV, these
regulations were enforced in the formal sector, although
women reportedly earned 30 percent less than men on
average. The National Institute for Women, a government
agency, worked to protect women's rights.
The National
Institute for Women, a government agency, provided
approximately 16,412 loans totaling $8 million (17.2
million bolivars) to women of all ages to establish
businesses. Sixty percent of loan recipients were
heads of households.
Children
The government was committed to children's rights
and welfare. The law provides for universal, compulsory,
and free education up to the university-preparatory
level; however, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) reported
that in 2004 an estimated 45 percent of boys and 35
percent of girls left school before the ninth grade.
Many children of African and indigenous descent had
no access to the education system.
There were numerous
government health care programs provided for boys
and girls on the basis of equal access.
Reports of child
abuse were rare due to a fear of entanglement with
the authorities and ingrained societal attitudes regarding
family privacy. According to UNICEF and NGOs working
with children and women, child abuse, including incest,
often occurred at home. Although the judicial system
acted to remove children from abusive households,
public facilities for such children were inadequate
and had poorly trained staff. The human rights NGO
For the Rights of Children and Adolescents (CECODAP)
reported that the government created a Ministry of
Popular Participation and Social Development to exclusively
manage children's issues.
CECODAP estimated
that approximately 15 thousand children lived on the
street. Authorities in Caracas and several other jurisdictions
imposed curfews on unsupervised minors to cope with
the phenomenon of street children. Because reform
institutions were filled to capacity, hundreds of
children accused of infractions, such as curfew violations,
were confined in inadequate juvenile detention centers
(see section 1.c.).
Trafficking in
Persons
Although the law prohibits trafficking in persons,
there were reports that persons were trafficked to,
from, and within the country. There is no implementing
law specifically for prosecution of trafficking in
persons. Trafficking may be prosecuted under laws
against forced disappearance and kidnapping with penalties
of 2 to 6 years' imprisonment, and under a law to
protect children, which provides for a penalty of
1 to 10 months' income for trafficking in children.
Government efforts
to combat trafficking are the responsibility of the
public prosecutor's Family Protection Directorate,
the National Institutes for Women and Minors, and
the Ministry of Interior and Justice's Crime Prevention
Unit. Enforcement efforts generally were limited.
In June the government arrested one person for trafficking
in persons after the Peruvian Embassy in Caracas informed
the CICPC that two minors and one adolescent had been
lured to the country with false offers of employment.
Authorities placed the two minors in juvenile homes,
where they were awaiting repatriation at year's end.
The whereabouts of the third victim was unknown.
The government
assisted with international investigations of trafficking.
In June, 13 women reportedly were trafficked to Spain
for sexual exploitation. Spanish authorities detained
1 of the 13 women for traveling on false documents
and returned her to Venezuela. The whereabouts of
the other 12 women were unknown at year's end. One
of two suspects in the case was in prison awaiting
trial at year's end.
In July authorities
assisted in the repatriation of three Colombian victims
of trafficking.
There were reports
that the country was a source, destination, and transit
country for trafficked men, women, and children. An
underdeveloped legal framework, corruption among immigration
authorities, and the ease with which fraudulent passports,
identity cards, and birth certificates could be obtained
created favorable conditions for trafficking. No overall
statistics on trafficking were available from government
or NGO sources.
Human rights
NGOs received complaints that women were trafficked
to Europe for purposes of prostitution. Subgroups
particularly at risk included women from poor areas.
Undocumented or fraudulently documented Ecuadorian
and Chinese nationals transited the country and reportedly
were forced to work off the cost of their transportation
in conditions of servitude.
Organized criminal
groups, possibly including Colombian drug traffickers,
Ecuadorian citizens, and Chinese mafia groups, reportedly
were involved in trafficking activities.
In January the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs hosted the OAS and the
International Organization for Migration for antitrafficking
workshops to raise public awareness of the problem.
The government
provided trafficking victims with psychological and
physical examinations. Several NGOs complained that
they lacked government support and cooperation to
assist victims and prevent future cases of human trafficking.
Efforts to prevent
trafficking were inadequate. There were small specially
trained CICPC sections devoted to prostitution and
the protection of women.
Persons with
Disabilities
The law prohibits discrimination against persons with
physical and mental disabilities in education, employment,
health care, and the provision of other state services.
During the year the public defender's office reported
that in 2004 it had received 53 petitions on behalf
of persons with disabilities related to discrimination
in health, social security, education, and workers'
rights. Persons with disabilities had minimal access
to public transportation, and ramps practically were
nonexistent, even in government buildings. The law
requires that all newly constructed or renovated public
parks and buildings provide access and prohibits discrimination
in employment practices and in the provision of public
services; however, the government had not made a significant
effort to implement the law, inform the public of
it, or to combat societal prejudice against persons
with disabilities.
There were no
reports of discrimination against persons with mental
disabilities.
Indigenous People
Although the law prohibits discrimination based on
ethnic origin, members of the country's indigenous
population suffered from inattention to and violation
of their rights. There were approximately 316 thousand
indigenous people in 27 ethnic groups, many of whom
were isolated from modern civilization and lacked
access to basic health and educational facilities.
Their communities suffered from high rates of disease.
The government included indigenous people in its literacy
campaigns, in some cases teaching them to read and
write in their own languages as well as in Spanish.
The law creates
three seats in the National Assembly for indigenous
deputies and also provides for "the protection
of indigenous communities and their progressive incorporation
into the life of the nation." Nonetheless, local
political authorities seldom took account of the interests
of indigenous people when making decisions affecting
their lands, cultures, traditions, or the allocation
of natural resources. Few indigenous people held title
to their land, and many did not want to do so because
most indigenous groups rejected the concept of individual
property. Instead, they called on the government to
recognize lands traditionally inhabited by them as
territories belonging to each respective indigenous
group.
Section 6 Worker
Rights
a. The Right of Association
While the law provides that all private and public
sector workers (except members of the armed forces)
have the right to form and join unions of their choice,
the government continued to violate these rights.
Approximately 10 to 12 percent of the 12 million-person
labor force was unionized.
The CNE has the
authority to administer internal elections of labor
confederations, which contravenes International Labor
Organization (ILO) Conventions 87 and 98. In December
2004 the CNE issued regulations governing internal
elections that many labor leaders claimed violated
freedom of association. Furthermore, the CNE failed
to certify the results of elections held during the
year by some 300 unions and federations under these
new regulations. Labor leaders complained that the
CNE also failed to give permission to hold elections
to hundreds of unions and federations.
In January the
CNE passed a resolution annulling the CTV's 2001 election
results. In addition the government refused to appoint
the CTV secretary general as labor's representative
at the ILO annual meeting. The ILO called upon the
government to recognize the CTV's elected leadership.
The Ministry
of Labor continued to deny registration to UNAPETROL,
a union composed of oil workers who were later fired
for participating in the December 2002 to February
2003 national strike (see section 6.b.).
b. The Right
to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The law provides that all public and private sector
workers have the right to conduct their activities
without interference and protects collective bargaining.
The law stipulates that employers must negotiate a
collective contract with the union that represents
the majority of their workers. The ILO continued to
object to this provision and requested that the government
amend it so that "in cases where no union organization
represents an absolute majority of workers, minority
organizations may jointly negotiate a collective agreement
on behalf of their members."
The government
continued to show preference in collective bargaining
agreements toward sympathetic unions and fostered
the creation of parallel unions. CTV leaders claimed
that the Ministry of Labor routinely rejected collective
bargaining agreements negotiated by CTV affiliates
on administrative grounds. CTV leaders further claimed
that, in those sectors or firms where contracts were
rejected, ministry officials facilitated the rapid
formation of parallel unions, which legally could
force a vote among workers over which union would
represent them. The CTV also complained that the ministry
usually designated the parallel union as the one authorized
to negotiate the contract.
Although the
law recognizes the right of all public and private
sector workers to strike in accordance with conditions
established by labor law, public servants may strike
only if the strike does not cause "irreparable
damage to the population or to institutions."
Replacement workers were not permitted during legal
strikes, and the president may order public or private
sector strikers back to work and submit their disputes
to arbitration if the strike "puts in immediate
danger the lives or security of all or part of the
population."
By June the government
resolved approximately 25 percent of the cases involving
19 thousand PDVSA employees who were fired during
and in the aftermath of the December 2002 to February
2003 national strike. The government continued to
deny the former workers severance and pension benefits
as well as access to company housing, schools, and
medical clinics.
In December authorities
tried and convicted CTV President Carlos Ortega of
civil rebellion and incitement to commit a crime in
connection with his role in the December 2002 to February
2003 national strike, despite a June 2004 ILO ruling
that the strike was legitimate. Ortega, who was arrested
in February after nearly 2 years in exile and hiding,
was sentenced to nearly 16 years in prison. The CTV
and some human rights activists denounced Ortega's
trial for lack of due process and declared Ortega
to be a political prisoner. Ortega was expected to
appeal the sentence to the Supreme Tribunal of Justice.
Labor law and
practice are the same in the sole export processing
zone of Punto Fijo, Falcon State, as in the rest of
the country.
c. Prohibition
of Forced or Compulsory Labor
While the law prohibits forced or compulsory labor,
including by children, there were reports of trafficking
in children for employment purposes (see sections
5 and 6.d.).
d. Prohibition
of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The law protects children from exploitation in the
workplace. The Ministry of Labor and the National
Institute for Minors enforced child labor policies
effectively in the formal sector of the economy but
less so in the informal sector. The Foundation for
Training in the Investigation of Human Resources estimated
in 2004 that there were 1.6 million children working
in various sectors of the labor market, including
206 thousand involved in prostitution, panhandling,
or drug trafficking.
The law permits
children between the ages of 12 and 14 to work only
if the National Institute for Minors or the Ministry
of Labor grants special permission; children between
the ages of 14 and 16 may not work without the permission
of their legal guardians. Those under 16 years of
age may by law work no more than 6 hours per day or
30 hours per week. Minors under the age of 18 may
work only between 6 a.m. and 7 p.m. Minors may not
work in mines or smelting factories; in occupations
that risk life or health or could damage intellectual
or moral development; or in public spectacles. The
law prohibits inducing the prostitution and corruption
of minors. Penalties range from 3 to 18 months in
prison and up to 4 years in prison if the minor is
younger than 12 years old.
The Ministry
of Education, Culture, and Sports ran educational
programs to reincorporate school dropouts and adults
into the educational system; however, there was no
independent accounting of the effectiveness of the
programs. The government also provided free adult
educational and technical training through the Barrio
Adentro Mission program.
e. Acceptable
Conditions of Work
Minimum wage rates are adjusted annually by administrative
decree, which the legislature may suspend or ratify
but may not change. In May the government raised the
monthly minimum wage by 26 percent to $188 (405 thousand
bolivars). The national minimum wage did not provide
a decent standard of living for a worker and family.
The Ministry of Labor enforced minimum wage rates
effectively in the formal sector, but approximately
50 percent of the population worked in the informal
sector where labor laws and protections generally
were not enforced.
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