Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Chavez and human rights

A little over two months ago, a pair of researchers for Human Rights Watch released a report on Hugo Chavez's Venezuela and its human rights violations. That night they were expelled. Read their account here: including the helping hand offered by Venezuelen officials who broke into the researchers' room to pre-pack their bags.

Key passage:

In the more than twenty years that Human Rights Watch has worked in Latin America, no government has ever expelled our representatives for our work, not even the right-wing dictatorships guilty of far more egregious abuses than those committed by Chávez. Presumably they knew better. After all, Chávez's decision to expel us merely served to confirm the central message of our report and ensure that it received extensive coverage around the globe.

Why did Chávez do it? One Brazilian on the plane on which we were forced to leave Venezuela offered a view that is increasingly widespread throughout Latin America: "Chávez is crazy." But the human rights defenders we work with in Venezuela have drawn a far more sobering conclusion. Chávez, in their view, was sending a deliberate message to his fellow countrymen: he will not allow human rights guarantees to get in his way, no matter what the rest of the world may think.

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