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IAPA protests free speech violations in Venezuela

27 de marzo de 2002 - 19:00
MIAMI, Florida (March 28, 2002)-The Inter American Press Association (IAPA) has adopted a resolution on Venezuela repudiating violations of free speech and press freedom there and calling on President Hugo Chávez and the legislative and judicial branches of his government to respect the peoples fundamental rights.

The resolution was sent to Chávez, Supreme Court Chief Justice Iván Rincón Urdaneta, Legislative Assembly President William Rafael Lara and Attorney General Isaías Rodríguez. Copies were sent to Organization of American States Secretary General César Gaviria, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Executive Secretary Santiago Cantón and the Commissions Office of the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression.

It recognizes and encourages "the bravery and commitment to service with freedom of expression of journalists and other media workers in Venezuela" who are carrying out their work of reporting the news despite reprisals and violence directed at them.

Following is the full text of the resolution, which was adopted during the IAPAs Midyear Meeting in La Romana, Dominican Republic, March 15-19.

VENEZUELA

WHEREAS

there is a deliberate government policy of restricting freedom of expression and the right to information in Venezuela

WHEREAS

the well-known Decision 1013 by the Constitutional Division of the Supreme Court, the Telecommunications Act, the petition by the National Assembly asking the media to draft a Code of Ethics, the open administrative investigations of several media outlets to punish them for alleged violations of truthful reporting, the governments announcement that it will have a Content Law approved, and, recently the use of the government news agency Venpres to practice state terrorism and military threats to investigate journalists who stray from the official line or report corruption in government are indisputable demonstrations of the marked official policy leading to censorship and vanquishing media that do not support the current government

WHEREAS

the presidents repeated attacks on the press in general on his weekly radio and television programs have moved on to a phase of street violence that has victimized some newspapers and television stations as well as numerous journalists at the hands of the so-called Bolivarian circles-gangs organized by the government.

WHEREAS

in recent days so-called Popular Courts have surfaced that have conducted trials by activists of the presidents party against journalists, print media and television stations, calling them "targets" and, later, "targets of war"

WHEREAS

the Inter-American Human Rights Commission felt the need, in recent days, to adopt measures to protect various Venezuelan media outlets and journalists from such government-encouraged violence, but the government did not comply with them

WHEREAS

the Declaration of Chapultepec establishes within its basic principles Principle 1, saying that "no people or society can be free without freedom of expression and of the press. The exercise of this freedom is not something authorities grant, it is an inalienable right of the people"

WHEREAS

Principle 4 stipulates that "freedom of expression and of the press are severely limited by murder, terrorism, kidnapping, pressure, intimidation, the unjust imprisonment of journalists, the destruction of facilities, violence of any kind and impunity for perpetrators. Such acts must be investigated promptly and punished harshly."

WHEREAS

Principle 5 of the same declaration says, "prior censorship, restrictions on the circulation of the media or dissemination of their reports, forced publication of information, the imposition of obstacles to the free flow of news, and restrictions on the activities and movements of journalists directly contradict freedom of the press"

WHEREAS

Principle 10 establishes that "no news medium nor journalist may be punished for publishing the truth or criticizing or denouncing the government"


THE MIDYEAR MEETING OF THE IAPA RESOLVES

to condemn the actions mentioned above and express its serious concern over the current state of the freedom of speech in Venezuela and the implications of its curtailment for the future of representative democracy and the rule of law

to urge legislative, judicial and administrative authorities to comply with the principles in the Declaration of Chapultepec and the American Convention on Human Rights which, in general, are being systematically violated

to recognize and encourage the bravery and commitment to service with freedom of expression of journalists and other media workers in Venezuela

to contact the general secretary of the OAS, the Inter-American Human Rights Commission and the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression to inform them about the details of this resolution.

FUENTE: nota.texto7

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