Mon | Apr 27, 2026

Venezuela orders UN human rights office to close, accusing it of anti-government activity

Published:Thursday | February 15, 2024 | 7:29 PM
The building that houses the Technical Advisory Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Caracas, Venezuela. - AP photo

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuela's government today ordered the local United Nations office on human rights to suspend operations and gave its staff 72 hours to leave, accusing it of assisting coup plotters and terrorist groups.

Foreign Affairs Minister Yván Gil announced the decision at a news conference in Caracas, which came amid heightened concerns that the government is repressing real or perceived opponents in an election year.

Nearly a week ago, Venezuela detained a prominent human rights attorney and members of her family, setting off a wave of criticism inside and outside the country.

Gil said the local technical advisory office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, authorized in 2019, was supposed "to improve, to optimize," human rights. Instead, he said, it had become an "international sounding board to maintain a discourse against the Bolivarian government and against the Venezuelan people."

The office had "become the private law firm of coup plotters and terrorist groups that permanently conspire against the country," Gil said, though he did not show any evidence or point to a specific example of that alleged activity.

Ravina Shamdasani, spokesperson for the UN rights office of the high commissioner, based in Geneva, Switzerland, said the agency regretted the decision and is evaluating next steps.

"We continue to engage with the authorities and other stakeholders," Shamdasani said. "Our guiding principle has been and remains the promotion and protection of the human rights of the people of Venezuela."

Gil told reporters that President Nicolás Maduro agreed to cooperate with the high commissioner in September 2019 to establish the local technical advisory office in Caracas to "show the world the advances in human rights in Venezuela".

He said the office had 13 staff members as of today.

Months before Maduro's 2019 decision, the high commissioner at the time, Michelle Bachelet, had published a scathing report detailing widespread human rights abuses at the hands of Venezuelan government security forces.

The UN Human Rights Council had also voted to set up an independent fact-finding mission to look into allegations of killings, disappearances, arbitrary detention and torture in Venezuela.

The fact-finding mission has never been allowed to visit the country. But its investigations have documented, among other things, that the government intensified efforts to curtail democratic freedoms ahead of this year's coming presidential election. The mission accused the government of using threats, surveillance and harassment against politicians, labor leaders, journalists, human rights defenders and other real or perceived opponents.

Human Rights Watch condemned the government's decision to suspend the activities of the UN office, describing its presence in Venezuela as "crucial".

"Amid a new wave of repression, governments in the region should call for its reestablishment," Juanita Goebertus, Americas director for Human Rights Watch, tweeted.

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