... CONTINUATION (revised)
C. Petitions and cases before the
Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights
1. Precautionary measures granted by the IACHR
during
2005
9.
The mechanism of
precautionary measures is provided for by Article 25 of the Rules of
Procedure of IACHR. This provision establishes that, in severe and
urgent cases, and whenever necessary according to available information,
the IACHR may, on its own initiative or at the request of a party,
petition that the State concerned adopt precautionary measures to
prevent irreparable harm to persons. If the Commission is not in
session, the Chair, or in his or her absence, one of the Vice-Chairs,
shall consult with the other members, through the Secretariat, regarding
the application of this rule. If it is not possible to consult the
members within reasonable time-limits under the circumstances, the Chair
shall take the decision on behalf of the Commission and shall so inform
its members immediately. In conformity with the established procedure,
the IACHR may request information from the interested parties on any
matter related to the adoption and observance of the precautionary
measures. In any case, the granting of such measures by the IACHR does
not constitute prejudgment on the merits of the case.
10. The
IACHR is presenting below a summary of the precautionary measures
granted in 2004 involving the member States. It should be clarified
that the number of precautionary measures that are granted does not
reflect the number of persons protected by their adoption, since many of
the precautionary measures granted by the IACHR, as can be observed
below, extend protection to more than one person and, in certain cases,
to groups of persons such as communities or indigenous peoples.
ARGENTINA
11. On
January 18, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
María Leontina Millacura Llaipen and her family, Gerardo Colin, Patricio
Oliva, Tamara Bolívar, Walter Mansilla, Silvia de los Santos, Verónica
Heredia, and the family of Iván Eladio Torres. The IACHR’s decision was
based on information indicating that Mr. David Alberto Hayes, then
serving a prison sentence at the town hall of the city of Comodoro
Rivadavia, had suffered threats and attacks against his physical
integrity, presumably because he was a witness in the trial being
conducted into the disappearance of 26-year-old Iván Eladio Torres on
October 2, 2003. On January 17, 2005, Mr. David Alberto Hayes died in
unclear circumstances. Similarly, other witnesses and family members had
suffered intimidation and attacks, also presumably in connection with
the search for justice in the disappearance of Iván Torres. In light of
this situation, the IACHR asked the Argentine State to adopt the
measures necessary to ensure the lives and personal integrity of the
beneficiaries. On January 21, 2005, the IACHR amplified the
precautionary measures in favor of Juan Pablo Caba and Miguel Ángel
Sánchez, and on January 25, 2005, further amplified the measures in
favor of the members of the Hayes family, in both instances at the
petitioners’ request. The Commission continues to monitor the situation
of the protected individuals, whose representatives have met with the
State on several occasions to examine issues relating to the
precautionary measures.
BOLIVIA
12. On
March 11, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of the
Tacana indigenous community of Miraflores (Riberalta), a group
comprising 53 families (270 people) settled on Multiethnic Indigenous
Territory II (“TIM II”) in Gonzalo Moreno municipality of Madre de Dios
province, Pando department, in the Northern Amazon region of Bolivia,
and on behalf of members of the Center for Juridical Studies and Social
Investigation (CEJIS). The information available indicates that on
December 17, 2004, armed individuals attacked and violently evicted 50
members of the Miraflores indigenous community, set fire to their homes,
made threats against them, and occupied a part of the community’s land.
Subsequently, on January 5, 2006, thirty armed individuals with ties to
the Riberalta Agroforestry Association (ASAGRI) forcibly entered the
offices of the CEJIS, made death threats, and ransacked and destroyed
office equipment and documents that proved the existence of a large
estate in the Northern Amazon region. During this incident the armed
individuals gave the CEJIS a deadline of “48 hours to get out of
Riberalta” and threatened to harm Cliver Rocha, the person responsible
for the office, if he ever returned to the municipality. In light of the
risks facing the beneficiaries, the IACHR asked the Bolivian State to
adopt the measures necessary to ensure the lives and personal integrity
of the Tacana and Cavineño indigenous community of Miraflores (Riberalta)
and to guarantee the physical integrity of CEJIS members Carlos Gustavo
Romero Bonifaz, Leonardo Tamburini, Ignacio Franco Semo, Mónica Lijerón
Aponte, Mabel Herrera Montaño, Leslie Peñarrieta Justiniano, Juan Carlos
Mérida Romero, and Margot Céspedes, including the installation of a
police guard post for the indigenous community during the nut harvest
and a permanent police guard post at the offices of CEJIS in the
municipalities of Riberalta (Beni department) and Cobija (Pando
department). The Commission also asked the State to conduct an
exhaustive investigation of the reported acts of intimidation and
threats. On May 11, 2005, the IACHR requested that the precautionary
measures be amplified in favor of Cesar Blanco Álvarez and Oscar Vargas
Herrera, two lawyers connected with the CEJIS office in Santa Cruz de la
Sierra. The Commission continues to monitor the situation of the
beneficiaries.
BRASIL
On November 11,
2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of more than
1,000 men deprived of freedom in the cells located in the basement
of POLINTER Police District, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The
available information indicates that the beneficiaries were
submitted to inhuman and degrading conditions of detention in those
cells, which only had capacity for holding 250 people. Due to the
situation of critical overcrowding and inhuman conditions of
detention, the IACHR asked the State to immediately suspend further
admission of detainees to POLINTER, and to transfer a substantial
number of detainees in order to reduce overcrowding and protect the
life and integrity of the beneficiaries, among other measures.
In compliance with
the precautionary measures, the State informed the Commission that
the cells of POLINTER were completely deactivated on January 31,
2006, and all beneficiaries were transferred to state penitentiaries
in order to improve their conditions of detention.
COLOMBIA
13. On
January 18, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
the journalists Ricardo Gálvez, Aníbal Ortiz and Germán Galviz (or
Galvis). The available information indicates that these journalists host
a program on Radio Lemas in the city of Cúcuta that addresses issues of
law and order and hosts debates on matters of corruption and insecurity
in the department of Santander, and that as a consequence they have
received death threats and other forms of harassment. It is alleged that
on January 11, 2005, the journalist Julio Humberto Palacios was murdered
while traveling to the radio station. Given the risks facing the
beneficiaries, the Commission asked the Colombian Government to adopt
the measures necessary to protect the lives and personal integrity of
the journalists Ricardo Gálvez, Aníbal Ortiz, and Germán Galviz (or
Galvis), and to inform the Commission of the steps taken to investigate
the incidents that led to the adoption of precautionary measures. The
Commission continues to monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
14. On
February 4, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
the members of the Wiwa indigenous people of the Sierra Nevada of Santa
Marta. The information available indicates that during the past two
years, these indigenous people have suffered a series of violent acts by
paramilitaries, including the murder of approximately 50 indigenous
leaders, the forced displacement of more than 800 individuals, and a
deteriorating humanitarian situation in the communities of La Laguna, El
Limón, Marokazo, Dudka, Linda, and Potrerito. It is reported that on
January 19, 2005, Angel Milciades Loperena Díaz, the General Treasurer
of the Wiwa Yugumaiun Bukuanarúa Tayrona Organization, was murdered,
along with his brother Darío Loperena, a community schoolteacher, in San
Juan del Cesar (La Guajira department). Responsibility for the killings
was attributed to the Northern Bloc of the United Self-Defense Forces of
Colombia under the command of “Jorge 40.” Given the risks facing the
beneficiaries, the Commission asked the Colombian State to adopt the
measures necessary to protect the lives and personal integrity of the
members of the Wiwa People of the Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta,
respecting their cultural identity and protecting the special
relationship they enjoy with their lands, in accordance with the
obligations entered into by the State. The Commission also asked the
State to provide humanitarian assistance to the victims of the
displacements and food crises, in particular the indigenous people’s
minor children, to agree on collective protection measures, including
the presence of a community defender, with the beneficiaries through
their representative organizations Wiwa Yugumaiun Bukuanarúa Tayrona
OBYBT, the Gonabindua Tayrona Organization, and the petitioners, and to
take the steps necessary to end the acts of violence and threats carried
out against the beneficiary community. The Commission continues to
monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
15. On
May 5, 2005, the Commission granted precautionary measures to protect
the offices of the Macizo Integration Committee (CIMA) in the
municipality of Popayán, in order to ensure the safety of workers
employed on those premises. The information available indicates that the
CIMA’s members have been singled out and threatened due to their work in
support of rural communities. Particular emphasis was placed on the
security situation of one of the members, Mr. Miguel Fernández, who
received death threats on several occasions during March and April 2005
at the CIMA’s offices in Popayán, and to whom the State provided a
personal security system. Given the risks facing the beneficiaries, the
Commission asked the Colombian Government to adopt the measures
necessary to ensure the safety of the CIMA’s facilities in Popayán and
to inform the Commission of the steps taken to investigate the incidents
that led to the adoption of the precautionary measures. The Commission
continues to monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
16. On
October 31, 2005, the Commission granted precautionary measures in favor
of Arquimedes Vitonás, Ezequiel Vitonás, Gilberto Muñoz Coronado,
Gabriel Pavi, Nelson Lemus, Plinio Trochez, Miliciades Musice, Oscar
Cuchillo, and Alciades Escué, all of whom are leaders of the North Cauca
Association of Municipal Councils. The information provided indicates
that the Nasa people of the north of the Department of Cauca, and in
particular their leaders, have been targeted by acts of violence and
threats from belligerents in the armed conflict taking place in that
area and have been singled out by the Colombian army. Given the risks
facing the beneficiaries, the Commission asked the Colombian Government
to adopt the measures necessary to protect the lives and personal
integrity of Arquimedes Vitonás, Ezequiel Vitonás, Gilberto Muñoz
Coronado, Gabriel Pavi, Nelson Lemus, Plinio Trochez, Miliciades Musice,
Oscar Cuchillo, and Alciades Escué, and to inform the Commission of the
steps taken to investigate the incidents that led to the adoption of the
precautionary measures. The Commission continues to monitor the
situation of the beneficiaries.
17. On
November 16, 2005, the Commission granted precautionary measures in
favor of Mrs. Mercedes Ochoa López, an eye-witness to the death of the
minor child Nicolás Neira in an incident that occurred in the city of
Bogotá on May 1, 2005 and involved members of the security forces. The
information available indicates that after giving a statement to the
Office of the Prosecutor General, Mrs. Ochoa López was followed and
harassed on repeated occasions during the months of July and August
2005. On September 13, 2005, the IACHR asked the State to provide
information on Mrs. Ochoa López’s situation and, after receiving its
reply, forwarded it to the requesting petitioners for their comments.
The petitioners reported in their reply of November 9, 2005, that the
acts of harassment against the witness Mercedes Ochoa López were still
occurring. Given the risks facing the beneficiary, the Commission asked
the Colombian Government to adopt the measures necessary to protect the
life and personal integrity of Mrs. Mercedes Ochoa López and to inform
the Commission of the steps taken to investigate the incidents that led
to the adoption of the precautionary measures. The Commission continues
to monitor the situation of the beneficiary.
ECUADOR
18. On
February 24, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures on behalf of
Orlando Pérez Torres, Antonio Ricaurte, Paco Velasco, Patricio Acosta,
Blasco Peñaherrera Solah, Diego Guzmán, and Maria Paula Romo, all of
whom are journalists with Radio La Luna in Ecuador. The information
available indicates that these individuals had suffered death threats,
attacks, and assaults on their lives because of their journalism work.
Given the risks facing the beneficiaries, the Commission asked the
Ecuadorian State to adopt the measures necessary to protect the life and
personal integrity of the journalists Orlando Pérez Torres, Antonio
Ricaurte, Paco Velasco, Patricio Acosta, Blasco Peñaherrera Solah, Diego
Guzmán, and Maria Paula Romo. On May 26, 2005, the Commission asked the
Ecuadorian Government to amplify the precautionary measures in favor of
Luis Ramiro Poso, Patricia Perez Duque, Ataulfo Tobar, Henry Ochoa,
William Perez, Erica Castro, Jonny Pinargote, Mary de Pinargote, and
Argeni Pinargote, all of whom are employees of La Luna, after an
incident in which men armed with sticks and iron bars caused a
disturbance in front of the radio station. The Commission continues to
monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
19. On
March 10, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
Enrique Ayala Mora, a member of the National Congress. The information
available indicates that this congressional deputy has been the object
of reprisals, presumably for his public criticisms of the current
situation in the State. Specifically, on March 5, 2005, Mr. Ayala Mora
was attacked in the street when three gunshots hit his vehicle, wounding
him in the neck, waist and one hand. Given the risks facing the
beneficiary, the Commission asked the Ecuadorian Government to adopt the
measures necessary to protect the life and personal integrity of Enrique
Ayala Mora and to inform the Commission of the steps taken to
investigate the incidents that led to the adoption of the precautionary
measures. The Commission continues to monitor the situation of the
beneficiary.
20. On
December 22, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
the lawyers and human rights defenders Alejandro Ponce Villacís, Ermel
Chávez, Pablo Fajardo, and Luis Yanza. The information available
indicates that the beneficiaries had suffered acts of harassment and
threats, and that their office had been broken into and robbed due to
their professional work on one high-profile case. Given the risks facing
the beneficiaries, the Commission asked the Ecuadorian Government to
adopt the measures necessary to protect the lives and personal integrity
of Alejandro Ponce Villacís, Ermel Chávez, Pablo Fajardo, and Luis Yanza,
and to inform the Commission of the steps taken to investigate the
incidents that gave rise to the adoption of precautionary measures. The
Commission continues to monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
GUATEMALA
21. On
March 17, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
Nancy Nineth Melgar Reyes de González and her family. The information
available indicates that on January 5, 2005, the National Civilian
Police and the Criminological Investigation Service raided the home of
Nancy Nineth Melgar Reyes de González’s parents, Edwin Antonio Orozco
and Elida Argentina Reyes García. It is alleged that this raid was
carried out without the corresponding court order and with violence and
threats, and that during the incident documents relating to the forced
disappearance of César Geovani Guzmán Reyes were confiscated. On
February 4, 2005, Messrs. Edwin Antonio Orozco and Elida Argentina Reyes
García were murdered in their home by unidentified assailants. Members
of the fire brigade found them bound and suffering from gunshot wounds
to their heads. In light of these circumstances, the IACHR asked the
Guatemalan State to adopt the measures necessary to protect the lives
and personal integrity of Mrs. Nancy Nineth Melgar Reyes de González and
her family. The Commission continues to monitor the situation of the
beneficiaries.
22. On
July 19, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of Nery
Roberto Barrios de León, the president and legal representative of the
Popular and Trade-Union Action Unit, UASP, Jovial Acevedo Ayala, a
representative of the Union of Education Workers of Guatemala, STEG, and
Walter Robles, an attorney-at-law and legal advisor to the UASP. The
information available indicates that Messrs. Nery Roberto Barrios de
León, Jovial Acevedo Ayala, and Walter Robles had been harassed and had
received a series of threats to their lives and physical integrity.
Additionally, the headquarters of the Union of Education Workers of
Guatemala was raided by unidentified persons between June 25 and 26,
2005. During that raid, information concerning the organized teachers’
movement in Guatemala, which had been stored on computers since 1989,
was removed from the premises. Given the risks facing the beneficiaries,
the IACHR asked the Guatemalan State to adopt the measures necessary to
protect the lives and personal integrity of Nery Roberto Barrios de León,
Jovial Acevedo Ayala, and Walter Robles, and to inform the Commission of
the steps taken to clarify the incident through judicial mechanisms. The
Commission continues to monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
23. On
October 31, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
the members of the Madreselva Collective in Guatemala. The information
available indicates that the members of this group have been slandered,
intimidated, threatened, and attacked on account of their activities in
defending and protecting the environment. Given the risks facing the
beneficiaries, the Commission asked the Guatemalan State to adopt the
measures necessary to protect the lives and personal integrity of the
members of the Madreselva Collective, including the assignment of police
officers to guard their headquarters, and to investigate threats and
harassment reported in the request for precautionary measures. The
Commission continues to monitor the situation of the beneficiaries.
24. On
November 7, 2005, the IACHR granted precautionary measures in favor of
Aura Lolita Chávez Ixcaquic, the representative in El Quiché department
of women’s organizations to the Departmental Development Council, Pedro
Chávez Terrasa, Auxiliary Mayor of Xemamatze village and representative
of the local authorities of Nebaj, José Raymundo Cedillo, a member of
the Heath Commission of Saquil Grande village, Andrés Hermoso De León, a
representative of traders from Santa María Nebaj, Manuela Cedillo Brito,
a member of the women’s organization of Nebaj, Diego Rivera Santiago, a
representative of the “Integral Victims Movement” association in
northern Quiché (municipalities of Nebaj, Cotzal, Chajul), Pedro Brito
Guzaro, an evangelical pastor, Domingo Brito Raymundo, a member of the
Security, Justice, and Human Rights Commission in El Quiché department,
Teresa Santiago De León, a member of the indigenous women’s organization
of Nebaj, Tomás Ceto López, president and legal representative of the
Ixil Civil Association for Community Social Development, and Francisco
Raymundo Hernández, president and legal representative of the Maya
Defense Office. The information available indicates that on September
21, 2005, the eleven beneficiaries were traveling to Guatemala City in
order to discuss the situation in Nebaj municipality with judicial
authorities and the Public Prosecution Service. Subsequently and by
various means, the Mayor of Nebaj municipality began to make a series of
threats, some of which targeted the beneficiaries’ lives and personal
integrity, in order to dissuade them from continuing to publicize a
number of alleged irregularities in the municipal administration. Given
the risks facing the beneficiaries, the Commission asked the Guatemalan
State to adopt the measures necessary to protect the lives and personal
integrity of Aura Lolita Chávez Ixcaquic, Pedro Chávez Terrasa, José
Raymundo Cedillo, Andrés Hermoso de León, Manuela Cedillo Brito, Dieto
Rivera Santiago, Pedro Brito Guzaro, Domingo Brito Raymundo, Teresa
Santiago de León, Tomás Ceto López, and Francisco Raymundo Hernández,
and to investigate the incidents that led to the adoption of the
precautionary measures. The Commission continues to monitor the
situation of the beneficiaries.
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