
New Report Accuses Nicolás Maduro Regime of Post-Election Abuses, Including Killings, Kidnappings
Nine months after Nicolás Maduro was declared the winner of Venezuela's 2024 presidential election by allegedly securing 51% of the votes, a human rights group released a report accusing his regime of widespread abuses against protesters and opposition members, including up to 25 killings and more than 2,000 political imprisonments.
According to the 104-page report titled "Punished for Seeking Change: Killings, Enforced Disappearances, and Arbitrary Detention Following Venezuela's 2024 Election," security forces and government-aligned paramilitary groups known as "colectivos" were accused of committing grave human right violations after the July 28 election.
As reported by the Miami Herald , the document, published by Human Rights Watch, presents evidence of extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, arbitrary arrests, and widespread torture and mistreatment of detainees.
The findings are based on more than 100 interviews with victims, eyewitnesses and members of human rights organizations, as well as the analysis of more than 90 videos and photographs documenting alleged abuses.
Human Rights Watch said it received "credible reports" of at least 25 killings during protests that erupted across Venezuela after the July 28 election, in which Maduro was declared the winner amid allegations of electoral fraud.
The document says most of the killings took place between July 29-30, with most of the victims being under the age of 40 and from low-income backgrounds. The evidence points to the involvement of Venezuelan security forces in some of the deaths, while others are attributed to the "colectivos."
According to the findings, these armed groups played a key role in repressing protests across the country—often intimidating or physically attacking demonstrators when security forces failed to disperse crowds with tear gas.
"The Venezuelan government has killed, tortured, detained and forcibly disappeared people seeking democratic change," said Juanita Goebertus, Americas director at Human Rights Watch, in a statement.
In the 104-page document, the human-rights watchdog revealed that more than 2,000 people have been detained for participating in demonstrations in support of the opposition. According to the Herald, those arrested were charged under vague national security laws such as "incitement to hatred" and "terrorism."
Some detainees are reportedly being held in facilities with inhumane conditions. The Venezuelan non-governmental group Observatorio Venezolano de Prisiones (OVP) reported that children have also been detained since last July and held in such centers.
At one of the detention centers known as Zona 7, detainees described how the walls "cry" from humidity and overcrowding and some said they did not have access to a bathroom and that and cells were contaminated with human waste.
Zona 7 was also the home to more than 20 children, who were held there between July and early August 2024, according to the OVP.
According to Foro Penal, a Venezuelan human rights organization, at least 176 minors between the ages of 14 and 17 were arrested between July 28 and Dec. 21. As of April 30, five remained in detention.
Although considered children under international law, some of the detainees have been charged with terrorism and other serious crimes carrying long prison sentences, the report said.
"My son asked me what it meant to be a terrorist, because that's what the guards kept shouting at him in prison," one parent told Human Rights Watch.
Originally published on Latin Times

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Int'l Business Times
2 days ago
- Int'l Business Times
ICE Detained Dozens at Alleged Tren de Aragua Meeting. It Was Actually a Child's Birthday Party
Federal immigration agents raided what they believed to be a criminal gang meeting in Texas , only to later discover the event had been a child's birthday party. The early morning raid in March resulted in the detention of 47 people, including nine children, according to the New Republic . The operation, carried out by ICE agents and Texas law enforcement, allegedly involved the use of flash grenades and left families terrified and confused. One attendee recalled repeatedly yelling that babies were present, but agents allegedly still deployed the devices inside the rented house believing the gathering to be a Tren de Aragua meeting. The raid was initially justified by the Trump administration as part of a crackdown on Venezuela's Tren de Aragua gang. However, weeks later, none of the detainees had any verified gang affiliations or even criminal records. One man told the Texas Tribune he had been celebrating his son's fifth birthday alongside a friend's 28th, and that ICE agents targeted him over tattoos they falsely linked to gang membership. He said the tattoos were simply stars he liked and had gotten as a teenager entering the workforce. ICE has not publicly released the names of those detained, but the Tribune identified 35 of them—mostly Venezuelan immigrants, many of whom spent weeks in detention and were released only after being fitted with ankle monitors. One of the children allegedly missed so many school days while in custody that they were removed from their public school. No criminal charges were filed against anyone involved. Originally published on Latin Times


DW
6 days ago
- DW
Middle East: Israeli airstrikes hit Beirut suburb – DW – 06/06/2025
06/06/2025 June 6, 2025 US imposes sanctions on International Criminal Court judges The United States has announced sanctions on four International Criminal Court (ICC) judges over the arrest warrant issued for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuand former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. The four judges will be barred from entering the US, and any property they hold in the country will be frozen. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US will "take whatever actions we deem necessary to protect our sovereignty, that of Israel, and any other U.S. ally from illegitimate actions by the ICC." The ICC described the sanctions as a "clear attempt" to undermine its independence. Human Rights Watch condemned the move, saying the sanctions "aim to deter the ICC" from pursuing accountability for suspected war crimes committed during the Israeli campaign in Gaza, also highlighting "US complicity."


DW
30-05-2025
- DW
Between chaos and democracy: Libya at crossroads again – DW – 05/30/2025
Recent violence in western Libya brought back the specter of renewed civil war. But observers say the fighting and ensuing protests may also offer a renewed chance to break the country's political gridlock. It may be comparatively calm this week but Libya's western capital Tripoli remains in turmoil. Earlier in May, violence broke out between armed groups and pro-government forces after Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah issued a decree ordering the dismantling of armed militias, including the influential Stabilization Support Apparatus, or SSA, militia. The head of the SSA was killed. According to the UN, the resulting violence killed eight civilians in Tripoli. Later another 58 bodies were found in a hospital under the SSA's control, "The latest fighting in Tripoli that resulted in civilian casualties is a strong indication of the fragility of the situation," Hanan Salah, Libya researcher and associate director in the Middle East and North Africa division at Human Rights Watch, told DW. "The sheer recklessness of the warfare that Human Rights Watch documented in the middle of civilian neighborhoods shows the blatant disregard these armed groups have for the life and livelihoods of civilians," she said. Country split in half Since 2014, Libya has been split into two, with opposing governments located in the east and west of the country. A United Nations-backed administration known as the Government of National Unity is based in Tripoli in the west and headed by Dbeibah. Its rival, known as the House of Representatives, is based in the east, in Tobruk and headed by Prime Minister Ossama Hammad. He is supported by former warlord-turned-politician Khalifa Haftar. In the east, Haftar has managed to consolidate control over various armed militias under his command, ruling with an iron fist. In the west, Dbeibah has tolerated different militias competing. Observers say the recent fighting in Tripoli indicates that Dbeibah is now trying to do the same as Haftar and consolidate control over militias in the west too. In mid-May, the fighting ended after a few days with an undisclosed agreement between the militias and Dbeibah's administration. It was followed by popular protests. People demanded national elections as well as a return to the drafting of a constitution: Both were halted when a peace process under UN leadership failed in December also called for a Dbeibah's resignation. Dbeibah did not address those calls. In a televised speech he said, "we will welcome all those who choose to stand with the state… and we will sideline those who resort to blackmail and corruption. Our goal is a Libya free of militias and corruption." Observers agree that Dbeibah's key objective is likely to consolidate power and influence. In May, thousands of Libyans called for Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah's resignation Image: Ayman al-Sahili/REUTERS Unsolved problems "In recent years the conflict [in Libya] has been frozen as the spoils have been divided among the various actors," Tim Eaton, a senior research fellow with the Middle East and North Africa programme at London-based think tank Chatham House, said. Over time, "these groups had been competing against one another to grab ever greater parts of the Libyan state," he told DW. In a recent piece for the think tank's website, Eaton wrote that the contest had been exacerbated this May over "a dispute over control of a state institution, the Libyan Post, Telecommunications and Information Technology Company, which operates valuable monopolies in the telecommunications sector." In his view, the current situation is very perilous. "There clearly is a threat of a slide into another bout of civil war," he told DW. But, Eaton and other experts say, there's also some hope. "There is a real shot for the UN to capitalize on this moment to make some political progress," Eaton told DW. "This set of actions also seems to present an opportunity to reinvigorate the political track. When there were other outbreaks of significant conflict in Tripoli in 2014 and 2020, political change did follow," he pointed out. In 2014, fighting in Tripoli ended with the country splitting in half. In 2020, a UN-led political process to appoint a new government was started. "So there is clearly an opportunity for such an occurrence to happen again," Eaton suggested. Libya's western Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah has rejected any calls that he resign Image: Hamza Turkia/Xinhua/imago images New UN roadmap This month's crisis could well "represent a significant opportunity to begin changing the course of events by moving toward holding parliamentary and presidential elections," agrees Mohammed al-Dairi, a former foreign minister for the Tripoli-based government in the east. "The first step in this direction is the formation of a unified government that ends the institutional division currently plaguing our country," he told DW. Meanwhile, the United Nations Support Mission in Libya, or UNSMIL, first launched in 2011 to help facilitate a political process that would lead to democratic elections in Libya, has published a new report that outlines four options which could serve as a roadmap towards ending the country's difficult transitional phase. The options include conducting presidential and legislative elections simultaneously or conducting parliamentary elections first, followed by the adoption of a permanent constitution. They also include adopting a permanent constitution before elections, or alternatively establishing a political dialogue committee to finalize electoral laws and define executive authority and a permanent constitution. "Libya's parties have to come to a consensus," HRW's Salah points out. "The human rights crisis and political divisions in Libya will not be solved overnight," she told DW. "Conducting free and fair elections is elusive today but at the end of the day, what option do the competing Libyan parties really have?"