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Political prisoners in Venezuela

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Political prisoners in Venezuela
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File:La_Rotunda._Preso_político_con_grillete_y_perno.jpg|thumb|Prisoner at La RotundaLa RotundaThroughout its history, many people have been arrested and imprisoned in Venezuela for political reasons, mainly during the dictatorship of Juan Vicente Gómez and that of Marcos Pérez Jiménez in the 20th century and during the Bolivarian Revolution in the 21st century.WEB, Venezuela: Silencio a la fuerza: Detenciones Arbitrarias por Motivos Políticos en Venezuela.,www.amnesty.org/es/documents/amr53/6014/2017/es/, 2022-08-01, Amnistía Internacional, es,

Definition

The Venezuelan non-governmental organization Foro Penal, which keeps track of political prisoners in the country, has elaborated a definition for political prisoners during the Bolivarian Revolution:WEB, Presos Políticos,foropenal.com/presos-politicos/, 2023-09-03, Foro Penal,
  • For political causes: Those persons persecuted or arbitrarily detained who are accused of crimes or infractions traditionally characterized as “political”, including “rebellion”, “plot” or “treason”, among others (as long as no violence has been used), with a political objective, which in turn can be divided into one or more categories.
  • For political purposes: Those persons arbitrarily persecuted or detained to fulfill a political objective.
  • Supervening: Those persons who are not arbitrarily or illegally persecuted or detained, but are afterwards subjected by the authorities to conditions of persecution, prosecution or imprisonment that flagrantly violate their human rights for a political objective, whether formally declared or not, of the authorities.
Foro Penal also divides into six different categories the objectives or purposes that determine whether a persecution or repressive action is political or not:WEB, Presos Políticos,foropenal.com/presos-politicos/, 2023-09-03, Foro Penal,
  • Exclusion: Political persecution for individually representing a political threat to the government for being political or social leaders. The objective of persecution is the exclusion of the individual from the political sphere, his neutralization as a factor of political or social mobilization, and his isolation from the rest of the population.
  • Intimidation: Political persecuted who are part of a social group, rather than representing an individual political threat to power. The objective of the persecution is the intimidation of the group or sector to which they belong, including students, activists, journalists, judges, military officers and among others.
  • Propaganda: Political targets who, without being considered an individual or collective political threat, are used to support an official narrative or discourse related to a national situation with the aim of evading responsibility for the failure of public policies or measures.
  • Extraction: Politically persecuted persons, generally deprived of their liberty, with the objective of obtaining information that will allow the location of other politically persecuted persons. This category includes cases of detention of family members or friends of the person sought, and in several cases the extraction of information is carried out under torture.
  • Revenge: Political persecuted whose rights are violated as expressions of abuse of power, personal and direct, by authorities who use their political influence and positions in repressive structures to defend personal or individual interests. The political objective is not collective but personal.
  • Hostages: Persons detained or persecuted to obtain influence in negotiations with countries or international organizations in accordance with the Venezuelan government’s foreign policy needs.

History

Antonio Guzmán Blanco dictatorship

During the government of Antonio Guzmán Blanco, political repression was constant and overwhelming. Many people were silenced for fear of reprisals. It is estimated that thousands of people were persecuted, imprisoned and exiled, some of which never returned to the country. This also had a negative impact on Venezuelan society, which hindered the development of democracy and freedom of expression in Venezuela.WEB, Briceño Iragorry, Mario, 1965, El Progreso y la Represión: Venezuela durante el Guzmán Blanco, Monte Ávila Editores Latinoamericana,

Juan Vicente Gómez dictatorship

(File:La_Rotunda._Cárcel_de_Caracas.jpg|thumb|La Rotunda, one of the main prisons during the dictatorship of Juan Vicente Gómez)Initially, Juan Vicente Gómez began his government by granting freedom to political prisoners and reestablishing freedom of the press, but he refuses to dissolve the National Congress and call for a constituent assembly, a petition that was quite popular at the time.WEB, Gómez, Juan Vicente,bibliofep.fundacionempresaspolar.org/dhv/entradas/g/gomez-juan-vicente/, 2024-02-15, Fundación Empresas Polar, Despite of the facade of liberties promoted by Gómez, there were early cases of repression of the press and certain political sectors. From 1913 onwards, repression was exacerbated, the year in which Gómez decided to remain in power.WEB, Pino Iturrieta, Elías, Elías Pino Iturrieta, 2017-12-11, Dictador desde el principio,prodavinci.com/dictador-desde-el-principio/, 2021-09-01, Prodavinci, During the dictatorship of Juan Vicente Gómez, people who were imprisoned were shackled with shackles and steel bolts on their feet and were victims of numerous tortures. The shackles held the prisoners’ ankles, immobilizing and injuring them. Poison was often put in the food of prisoners under assassination orders, and crushed glass in their drinks to cause greater suffering at the time of death. Opponents to the Gómez regime were killed, imprisoned or disappeared. Torture methods ranged from the most conventional to the death penalty.NEWS, 13 May 2015, Las cámaras de tortura más escalofriantes de las dictaduras latinoamericanas,breinguash.com/2015/05/las-camaras-de-tortura-mas-escalofriantes-de-las-dictaduras-latinoamericanas/, 14 September 2018, Breinguash, WEB, Fundación Polar, La Rotunda,bibliofep.fundacionempresaspolar.org/dhv/entradas/l/la-rotunda/, Diccionario de Historia de Venezuela, Many of political prisoners were sent to forced labor, the most famous of which was the construction of the Transandean Highway in the Venezuelan Andes. One of the cruelest torturers in La Rotunda was a common prisoner named Nereo Pacheco who, by orders of Gómez, was used by the guards as an element of punishment against the political prisoners.Pocaterra, José Rafael: Memorias de un venezolano de la decadencia, Monte Ávila Editores Latinoamericana, C.A.,Caracas, Venezuela, 1997

Marcos Pérez Jiménez dictatorship

File:PedroEstrada.jpg|thumb|Pedro Estrada, head of the Dirección de Seguridad NacionalDirección de Seguridad NacionalThe dictatorship of Marcos Pérez Jiménez created a secret police, the Dirección de Seguridad Nacional, that was in charge of arresting, torturing and imprisoning political opponents,BOOK, de Cervantes, Miguel, Don Quijote de la Mancha, Editorial Castalia, 1999, 9788470398131, Sevilla Arroyo, Florencio, Madrid, 729–741, and was characterized by its excessive repression of dissidence and torture of detainees. In the National Security headquarters throughout the country, political prisoners were subjected to different methods of torture, such as the ice chamber, standing up barefoot in a car rims, blows with steel balls, electric bands, batons and other forms of physical mistreatment.{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}}File:Prisioneros_de_la_Isla_Guasina.jpg|thumb|left|Guasina IslandGuasina IslandAt that time, the Colón Square in Los Caobos, Caracas, was the epicenter of student protests. During the celebration of Columbus Day in 1951, several Venezuelans who were protesting against the dictatorship were arrested: José Amín, Miguel Astor Martínez, Antonio Ávila Barrios, Francisco Barrios, Federico Estaba, Gerardo Estaba, Luis José Estaba, Darío Hernández, Manuel Vicente Magallanes, Eloy Martínez Méndez, (:es:Salom Mesa|Salom Meza Espinosa) and Juan Regalado. This group was known as The Twelve Apostles because they were a dozen detainees. The twelve apostles were forced to stand together for three days, deprived of their physiological needs. Each one was tortured in a personalized way.BOOK, Magallanes, Manuel Vicente, Los partidos políticos en la evolución histórica venezolana, Mediterráneo, 1873, Although the Pérez Jiménez regime announced the closure of the labor camp on Guasina Island on 17 December 1952, in Delta Amacuro state, records such as the work Se llamaba SN, by José Vicente Abreu, document the forced labor and subhuman conditions on the island.{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}}On 29 September 1952, in the Turén Municipality of the Portuguesa state, a peasant uprising against the national government began, attacking a National Guard outpost. The movement was strongly repressed, resulting in more than a hundred deaths and several arrests.BOOK,archive.org/details/SeLlamabaSN.JoseVicenteAbreu, Se Llamaba SN. José Vicente Abreu, 2022-12-09,

Bolivarian Revolution

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCHR) denounced that during the 2017 Venezuelan protests “several thousand people have been arbitrarily detained, many of them have been victims of ill-treatment and even torture”.NEWS, 8 August 2017, ONU denuncia el uso de “fuerza excesiva” y “torturas” en Venezuela,www.elheraldo.co/mundo/onu-denuncia-el-uso-de-fuerza-excesiva-y-torturas-en-venezuela-390609, 13 August 2017, El Heraldo, Some of the victims of enforced disappearance have not yet appeared, as is the case of Hugo Marino.WEB, 2022-09-25, Hugo Marino, más de 1.000 días desaparecido y la incertidumbre de no saber si está muerto,www.elnacional.com/venezuela/hugo-marino-mas-de-1-000-dias-desaparecido-y-la-incertidumbre-de-no-saber-si-esta-muerto/, 2022-12-27, El Nacional, es, Since 2015, at least twelve political prisoners have died in custody.WEB, 2023-04-21, Con Leoner Azuaje son 12 presos políticos y por corrupción fallecidos en custodia,elpitazo.net/politica/leoner-azuaje-se-suma-a-los-12-presos-politicos-y-por-corrupcion-fallecidos-en-carceles/, 2023-04-24, El Pitazo, es, According to the NGO PROVEA, between 2013 and 2023, 53,075 people were detained for political reasons or in the context of illegal actions by police and/or military.WEB, 2023-04-17, ONG denuncia que durante gobierno de Maduro 9.465 personas han sido asesinadas por la policía y militares,www.latercera.com/mundo/noticia/ong-denuncia-que-durante-gobierno-de-maduro-9465-personas-han-sido-asesinadas-por-la-policia-y-militares/ZZ2ETX4HTZBMBEE7HX6NBLUOYY/, 2023-08-08, La Tercera, By October 2022, the NGO Foro Penal registered 245 political prisoners in Venezuela. At least 166 had been imprisoned without having been convicted and one is a minor.WEB, Cambero, Luis Daniel, 2022-10-20, â–· 245 presos políticos hay aún en Venezuela, según Foro penal #20Oct,www.elimpulso.com/2022/10/20/245-presos-politicos-hay-aun-en-venezuela-segun-foro-penal-20oct/, 2022-10-28, El Impulso, es,

By year of arrest

The individuals listed below are those whose detentions have taken place in the 21st century and have been qualified as arbitrary by the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, prisoners of conscience according to Amnesty International or classified as political prisoners by the non-governmental organization Foro Penal, among other reasons:
Before 2014
{hide}Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* Francisco Usón (2004) }}
2014
{{Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* {{ill|Daniel Ceballos|es|Daniel Ceballos (político)}} }}
2015


2016
{hide}Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* Braulio Jatar }}
2017
{{Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* {{ill|Alfredo Ramos (politician)|es|Alfredo Ramos|lt=Alfredo Ramos}}
  • {{ill|Ángel Zerpa Aponte|es}}
  • {{ill|Lisbeth Añez|es}}
  • {{ill|Rafael Arreaza|es}}
  • Raúl Isaías Baduel
  • Citgo Six
    • Alirio Zambrano
    • Gustavo Cárdenas
    • Jorge Toledo
    • José Pereira
    • José Zambrano
  • {{ill|Wuilly Arteaga|es}}
}}
2018
{{see also|Detention of Juan Requesens}}{{Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* {{ill|Ángela Expósito|es}} }}
2019
{hide}Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* Antonia Turbay

2020
{hide}Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* Darvinson Rojas
  • {{ill|Gabriel Andrés Medina|es{edih}
  • {{ill|Nicmer Evans|es}}
  • {{ill|Roland Carreño|es}}
}}
2021
{hide}Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* Freddy Guevara
  • {{ill|Javier Tarazona|es{edih}
  • Milagros Mata Gil
  • {{ill|Orlando Moreno|es}}
  • {{ill|Rafael Rattia|es}}
}}
2022
{{Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* {{ill|Alcides Bracho|es}}
  • {{ill|Alonso Meléndez|es}}
  • {{ill|Emilio Negrín|es}}
  • {{ill|Gabriel Blanco|es}}
  • {{ill|Néstor Astudillo|es}}
  • Olga Mata
  • {{ill|Reynaldo Cortés|es}}
}}
2023
{{Columns-list|colwidth=20m|* {{ill|John Álvarez|es}} }}
2024
{{see also|Detention of Rocío San Miguel}}

Current political prisoners

Among the current political prisoners are the following: {| class=“wikitable sortable“!Prisoner!Arrest date!Detention time|Héctor Rovain|19 April 2003
200319}}
|Erasmo José Bolívar|19 April 2003
200319}}
Luis Molina (policeman)>Luis Molina|19 April 2003200319}}
Otoniel Guevara Pérez|es}}|23 November 2004200423}}
Rolando Guevara Pérez|es}}|23 November 2004200423}}
|Juan Caguaripano|6 August 2017
201706}}
Igbert Marín Chaparro|es}}|8 March 2018201808}}
Emirlendris Benítez|es}}|5 August 2018201805}}
Ángela Expósito|es}}|21 September 2018201821}}
Rubén González (unionist)Rubén González|lt=Rubén González}}|30 November 2018201930}}
María Auxiliadora Delgado (Venezuela)María Auxiliadora Delgado (Venezuela)|lt=María Auxiliadora Delgado}}|19 March 2019201919}}
Gilberto Sojo|es}}|25 February 2021202125}}
Javier Tarazona|es}}|2 July 2021202102}}
|Ángel Vivas|10 May 2022
202210}}
Nelson Piñero|es}}|21 November 2023202321}}
|Juan Freites|23 January 2024
202423}}
Luis Camacaro (activist)>Luis Camacaro|23 January 2024202423}}
Guillermo López (activist)>Guillermo López|24 January 2024202424}}
|Rocío San Miguel|9 February 2024
202409}}

See also

References

{{Reflist|2}}

External links

{{Crisis in Venezuela}}

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