The United Nations Human Rights Office has published a scathing report allege human rights violations committed in Nicaragua in the wake of a wave of anti-government protests.
Hundreds of people have been killed and thousands injured since April.
"Repression and retaliation against demonstrators continue as the world looks away," UN human rights chief Zeid Raad Al Hussein said.
The report covers the period from 18 April, when protests first kicked off against now suspended plans to change the social security system, to 18 August. But they soon turned into wider calls for the resignation of President Daniel Ortega.
The UN report says that in the first phase of the crisis there was "a repressive response to the protests by the police and pro-government armed elements". During the second 'clean-up' stage, from mid-June to mid-July, police, pro-government armed elements, including those known as 'shock forces' (fuerzas de choque), and mobs (turbas) forcibly dismantled roadblocks and barricades. Information it has obtained "strongly indicates that these armed elements acted with the acquiescence of high-level state authorities and the national police, often in a joint and coordinated manner". During the third and current stage of the crisis, government opponents have been "persecuted and criminalised", the report states.
"Civil servants, including teachers and doctors, have been sacked, and people seen to be critical of the government have been harassed, intimidated and even attacked. The authorities, including at the highest-level, have increasingly stigmatised and discredited protesters and human rights defenders, describing them as 'terrorists', 'coup-mongers' or 'plagues'."
The report also gives details of attacks on members of the governing Sandinista party, government officials and members of the security forces. It says that 22 police officers were killed between 19 April and 25 July out of a total of about 300 reported deaths.
It also notes that "the level of brutality in some of these episodes, including burning, amputations and desecration of corpses illustrates the serious degeneration of the crisis". It also states that the roadblocks erected by protesters "gave occasionally rise to criminal practices, such as kidnappings, harassment, robbery and collection of illegal tolls". But the report states that they "do not legitimise in any way a response by the state that is not in line with international human rights law".
The UN Human Rights Office says that it has received numerous accounts alleging acts of torture and ill-treatment of detainees carried out by police or prison authorities. Female detainees alleged that they were raped and that threats of sexual abuse were "common". Male detainees reported being raped with rifles and other objects, the report says.
No comments:
Post a Comment