Fabiola Sanchez: Students end hunger strike in Venezuela
By Other Sources on 9 Dec, 2009 | Send feedback »
The Associated Press, December 8, 2009
CARACAS, Venezuela
A group of college students ended a hunger strike after 17 days following a meeting Tuesday with Organization of American States representatives to air their concerns about human rights in Venezuela.
Student leader Julio Rivas said the protest achieved its objective and the three OAS officials visiting from Washington agreed to relay their concerns to OAS Secretary-General Jose Miguel Insulza.
A dozen students started the protest Nov. 21 outside the OAS office in Caracas, aiming to press the body to look into their complaints, including allegations that President Hugo Chavez’s government abuses the legal system to persecute opponents.
“Today we have an official OAS commission that came to receive the complaint of human rights violations, of repression and political persecution,” Rivas said.
In a statement, Insulza said OAS officials were relieved the students ended the hunger strike, “because that way talks regarding a possible visit from the Inter-American Human Rights Commission can be taken up.”
Insulza noted such a visit would have to be authorized by Chavez’s government and said he hoped the administraiton would allow him to personally visit Venezuela.
There was no immediate reaction from the government of Chavez, who insists his administration fully respects human rights and denies authorities have been bringing trumped-up criminal charges against his critics. Chavez has said government opponents behind bars are legitimately accused of committing crimes.
Rivas, 22, was among government opponents jailed in September after clashes between police and protesters at a march. He was later released pending trial on charges including inciting civil war and instigating disobedience allegations he says are bogus.
Rivas said that in all, 16 hunger strikers finished the protest, during which they took only water or intravenous fluid.
The OAS officials spoke by phone with Chavez opponent Richard Blanco, said Gonzalo Himiob, a human rights activist. Blanco, city administrator for Caracas’ opposition mayor, has been jailed since August on accusations of injuring a police officer during a protest.
His lawyers say he is innocent, and the opposition has rallied around his case.
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Los derechos humanos son eso, derechos que ha conquistado la raza humana contra la opresión de un monarca y la discriminación por raza, etnia, género, religión o ideologÃa gracias al sacrificio de los héroes que han dado su vida desde tiempos milenarios hasta el presente. Esta semana, en una cárcel
El nuevo cierre de Radio Caracas Televisión Internacional y la recién estrenada normativa para restringir la programación de televisión por cable no sólo son ostensibles violaciones a nuestros derechos fundamentales, sino que demuestran una torpeza polÃtica de tal magnitud que es difÃcil interpretar si el ministro y director de Conatel,
La doctrina de muchos embajadores en Venezuela durante los primeros años de la presidencia de Chávez fue la de recomendarle a sus gobiernos que para no asustarse con el agresivo verbo del frustrado golpista, miraran lo que hacÃa y no se fijaran en lo que decÃa. Según ellos, las polÃticas