OEA/Ser.L/V/II.98
doc. 6 rev.
13 April 1998
Original: Spanish
REPORT
Nº 49/97
CASE 11.520
MEXICO
February 18, 1998
I.
EVENTS DENOUNCED
1. According to the complaint filed
before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (hereinafter "the
Commission") by the Democratic Revolution Party on July 17, 1995, on June
28, 1995, several members of the Organizacion Campesina de la Sierra del Sur (OCSS)
[Rural Organization of the Southern Sierra] departed in two trucks for the city
of Atoyac de Alvares. As they arrived at the Vado de Aguas Blancas, one of
the trucks was stopped by agents of the Judicial Police of Guerrero. The
policemen forced more than 60 rural people to get out of the truck and to lie on
the ground. Ten minutes later, a second truck arrived at the same place,
the passengers aboard the second truck were also forced to get out but, as they
were getting off the truck, the police began to shot them
indiscriminately. In all, 17 died and several others received severe
wounds. When the shooting spree was over, the policemen told the survivors
to go back to their towns. The policemen then placed weapons in the hands
of the dead persons to lay the foundation for their version of the story, that
is, that there had been a confrontation.
II. PROCESSING BEFORE THE COMMISSION
2. On July 17, 1995, the Commission
received a petition denouncing the state of Mexico for its responsibility in the
presumed violation of the human rights embodied in articles 4, 5, 8, 25 and 1.1
of the American Convention on Human Rights (hereinafter "the American
Convention").
3. On July 26 of the same year,
pursuant to Article 34 if its regulations, the Commission transmitted to the
State of Mexico the pertinent parts of the complaint. It also requested
the government to provide information on the events denounced and any other
information that would help to determine whether all domestic remedies had been
exhausted in this case. To do this, the Commission gave the government a
term of 90 days.
4. On October 19, 1995, the
government requested a 30-day extension to gather the documents needed for an
adequate reply. The Commission granted this extension on October 28 of the
same year.
5. On November 23, 1995, the
government requested a second 30-day extension to give its reply. The
Commission granted that request on November 28 of the same year.
6. On January 17, 1996, the
Commission repeated its request to the State of Mexico to furnish information
that it considered pertinent within a term of 30 days with respect to the case
in question.
7. On January 24, 1996, the
Commission requested the State of Mexico to take whatever precautionary measures
were necessary to protect the life and physical integrity of all the witnesses
to the Aguas Blancas massacre, particularly Mrs. Virgilia Galeana Garcia, as
well as the family members of the victims.
8. On February 19, 1996, the
Commission received the reply from the State of Mexico in connection with this
case.
9. On February 21, 1996, a hearing on
admissibility and merits of the case was held during the 91st regular session of
the Commission.
10. The Commission received on March 7, 1996,
additional information from the State of Mexico which provided subsequent
elements involved in this case.
11. The petitioners sent additional information
to the Commission on April 11, 1996, in addition to its observations on the
State's reply.
12. On April 18, 1996, the Commission sent to the
State of Mexico the petitioners' observations regarding its reply.
13. The Commission received additional
information from the petitioners on May 9, 1996.
14. On May 31, 1996, the State sent its final
observations to the Commission, along with additional information.
15. The petitioners presented additional
information to the Commission on June 20, 1996, along with several pieces of
evidence relating to the case.
16. On June 26, 1996, the Commission transmitted
to the State the pertinent parts of the communication forwarded by the
petitioners. At the same time, it sent to the petitioners the pertinent
parts of the additional information presented by the State on May 31, 1996.
17. On January 15, 1997, the petitioners
requested the Commission to issue its report pursuant to the terms of Article 50
of the Convention, and ruled out any type of friendly settlement of the case.
18. On January 16, 1997, the Commission
transmitted to the State of Mexico the information provided by the petitioners
on the preceding day.
III. POSITION OF THE PARTIES
A. Position of the Petitioners
19. The petitioners stated that the domestic
remedies had been ineffective since there was no desire to conduct a serious
investigation into the events denounced. Since there was no willingness to
conduct such a serious investigation of the events, to punish those responsible
for them or to repair the damages these persons had done to the rights of others
they had violated, it cannot be argued that domestic remedies have not been
exhausted since demanding compliance with such a requirement under these
circumstances is meaningless and constitutes a mere formality.
20. The petitioners likewise contend that the
investigation has taken a very long time and serious irregularities have
occurred. In addition, there have been government statements disputing the
events, and in short, reflecting the State's unwillingness to clarify
them. In this sense, the petitioners say that on the same day as the
events, in the city of Chilpancingo, Governor Ruben Figueroa Alcocer denounced
"the violent attitude of the leaders of the OCSS, who have fooled the rural
people for their own ends, and one of the leaders, Benigno Guzman Martinez, has
certain matters pending with the justice system, and there are nine arrest
orders issued for him." In addition, the governor mentioned as
evidence of their violent intent that "the truck driver involved in the
occurrence of the events charged that he was actually acting as he was because
he being kidnapped by the OCSS." According to the petitioners, the
truck driver, who was also the owner of the truck, denied this statement in an
interview that appeared in the La Jornada magazine.
21. The petitioners state that even though a
large number of policemen, commanders and government officials have been
arrested, the State continues denying that high government officials were
involved in it. One of these high officials was the governor
himself. This is so even though several eyewitnesses to the events stated
that they saw them, and in the case of the governor, that he gave the order the
day before the slaughter.
22. They add that the CNDH has issued a report
describing many irregularities that were found in the prior inquiry No.
TAB/3208/95, which was started because of the events that occurred at Aguas
Blancas. This inquiry, they say, has denied, destroyed or falsified a
number of pieces of evidence that has made it impossible to arrive at the truth
regarding the events.
23. The petitioners maintain that even though a
special prosecutor was appointed for this case, the investigation has continued
experiencing irregularities. One of these was on February 25, 1996, when
an unedited tape showing the operation at Aguas Blancas was shown on a
television program. This tape clearly revealed the criminal nature of the
operation, including all the aggravating factors of the applicable criminal law
involving premeditation, treachery, gain and treason.
24. They also point out that on February 27 of
1996, the special prosecutor presented a conclusive report of the investigation
to the Permanent Commission of the Guerrero State Congress in which he
maintained, "this Office of Special Prosecutor reached the conclusion that
attorney Antonio Alcocer Salazar, the former Attorney General of the State, and
Mr. Gustavo Olea Godoy, the former director of the State Judicial Police Force,
have no criminal responsibility. In addition, we agree with the National
Human Rights Commission that Messrs. Ruben Robles Catalan, the former secretary
general of government, and Ruben Figueroa Alcocer, the elected governor of the
state, had no involvement or criminal responsibility in the regrettable events
of June 28, 1995. Based on the foregoing, the Office of the Special
Prosecutor decided to not file any criminal proceedings against these persons
and approved this decision." In addition, on February 28, the CNDH
publicly disavowed the statement of the special prosecutor by saying that its
recommendation never exonerated the governor or his secretary general from
responsibility.
25. The petitioners say that on March 4, 1996,
the secretary of government released a petition from the President of the
Republic calling upon the Supreme Court of Justice to exercise its
constitutional powers, as ombudsman, "solely to determine the occurrence of
any event or events that would constitute a serious violation of some personal
freedom." They also say that on April 23 of the same year, the court,
in plenary session, handed down its decision which, in addition to other
matters, concluded that "there was a serious violation of the personal
guarantees of the governed in the events of June twenty-eight of one thousand
nine hundred and ninety-five at the Vado de Aguas Blancas, in the municipal
district of Coyuca, Guerrero state, and in later events associated with the
former," and that "the persons responsible for that violation are
attorney Ruben Figueroa Alcocer, the governor, on indefinite leave of absence;
Jose Ruben Robles Catalan, the former secretary general of government; Antonio
Alcocer Salazar, the former attorney general of justice; Rodolfo Sotomayor
Espino, the former assistant secretary general of justice; Gustavo Olea Godoy,
the former director of the judicial police; Rosendo Armijo de los Santos, former
assistant secretary of protection and transit; Adrian Vega Cornejo, former
special prosecutor; and Esteban Mendoza Ramos, the former director general of
government, all of whom are from the state of Guerrero.
26. The petitioners state that on April 30, 1996,
they expanded their complaint to the Attorney General of the Republic, and filed
their petition to have the case taken up on the basis of subsequent evidence
from the investigation conducted by the Supreme Court of Justice and the express
statement by the attorney general of Guerrero that he lacked competence in the
case. They say that on May 6, Attorney General Lozano stated that he
lacked competence in a press bulletin, and remitted the documents to the
attorney general of Guerrero who had already declared himself lacking competence
to investigate the events.
27. They add that on May 2, 1996, the Democratic
Revolution Party issued a wide demand for impeachment proceedings, presented on
July 25, 1995, in the Chamber of Deputies, based on the court's investigation
and other presumed evidence regarding the responsibilities of Governor
Figueroa. On May 30, the majority of the government party exonerated the
government in advance of any court proceeding and prevented the filing of any
court proceeding. They also state that on June 13, 1996, the same PRI
majority in the Guerrero Congress exonerated the governor in a state legal
proceeding and that the state office of attorney general maintained, one day
later, that the court exonerated Figueroa and his cabinet level collaborators,
thereby ratifying the exoneration.
28. Finally, they point out that the lack of
government willingness to clarify the events pertaining to the massacre at Aguas
Blancas is shown by the failure to adopt the recommendations made by the Supreme
Court of Justice in connection with the investigation of the government
officials presumably responsible for the events.
B. The Position of the State
29. The State states that domestic remedies have
not been exhausted in this case and there is no exception to their prior
exhaustion under the terms of Article 37.2 of the Regulations of the
Commission. The State also points out that the statements made by the
petitioners indicate that they are currently exercising their adequate domestic
remedies and thus it is absurd for them to contend the opposite.
30. The State adds that in furtherance of
recommendation 104/95, handed down by the CNDH on August 14, 1995, attorney
Alejandro Varela Vidales, a person of recognized capacity, was appointed on
November 9 of that year as the special prosecutor for the Aguas Blancas case.
31. The state of Mexico also expressed that it
has shown its willingness to arrive at the truth in the Aguas Blancas
case. It has brought more than 50 former officials to justice, and the
President of the Republic made a request appeal on March 4, 1996, to the
Judicial Branch of State, a measure that had not been used for more than 50
years. The outcome of this was a court opinion whose conclusion was that
the state governor, Ruben Figueroa Alcocer, had incurred responsibility by
taking an attitude of deceit, machination and cover-up of the truth in
connection with the serious events that occurred at the Vado de Aguas Blancas.
This created an artificial version of the events that was intended to make
people believe that the resulting massacre of civilians came about because
members of the OCSS boldly attacked the police force as they were being halted
even though the police had merely stopped them to make an inspection. The
Mexican reply adds that the conclusions and the investigation order and the file
were handed over to the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic, the
Office of the Secretary of State, the Office of the Secretary General of Justice
for Guerrero and the Congress of Guerrero so that they could undertake criminal
proceedings against those responsible and could strip the governor, Ruben
Figueroa Alcocer, of his rights and could likely impeach him.
32. The reply states that Article 8 of the
Convention requires, among others, that criminal disputes or others "must
be resolved by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal," and that
Article 25 of the same Convention requires that the recourses be effective even
though the violation "may have been committed by persons acting in the
course of their official duties." Even in this case, the State
contends, the local judges who took up the matter acted effectively,
independently and impartially, so that the persons charged could not escape
justice and rigorous application of the law.
33. The reply also points out that the
petitioners' statement reveals that adequate domestic remedies are being
exercised, and since these remedies are being exercised, it therefore cannot be
charged that the remedies have been exhausted. In fact, to the contrary,
these remedies have proven to be effective and suitable to remedy the situation
in question.
34. The State also states that with respect to
the supposed unlawful, dependent and partisan performance of the special
prosecutor, that allegation has still not been proven in that the prior inquiry
DGAP/077/96, against the former special prosecutor, Alejandro Oscar Varela
Vidales, is still in process in the office of the attorney general for the state
of Guerrero, for the likely commission of the crimes of improper performance and
abandonment of public service, cover-up and conflict of duties by a public
servant. The State also contends that the petitioners have had court
remedies available to them to object to the failure to file criminal proceedings
against the responsible parties.
35. Finally, the state points out that adequate
measures have been taken internally to remedy the situation in conformity with
the American Convention, both as pertains to the identification and punishment
of the presumed responsible parties and with respect to reparation of
damages. The reply states that family members of the victims as well as
the wounded persons have received compensation already and since compensation is
a normal means of reparation when it is not possible to restore the pre-existing
situation, the petitioners cannot argue any lack of willingness in this
regard. The reply also indicates that, as concerns moral damages, the
Civil Code for the Federal District in common matters, and for the Republic of
Mexico as a whole in federal matters, establishes in Article 1916 that the form
of reparation is "the publication of an extract of the judgment that
reflects adequately the nature and scope of the ruling through the
communications media that are considered advisable." In this sense,
it concludes that since points and conclusions of the report issued on February
27, 1996, by the then special prosecutor for the case was amply disseminated to
the public, it is clear that in this case there has also been reparation of a
moral type.
IV. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
A. Considerations with Respect to the
Competence of the Commission
36. The Commission is competent to hear this
case, as required by Article 44 of the American Convention to which Mexico has
been a party since April 3, 1982, since it involves allegations regarding rights
recognized in the same: Article 1.1, pertaining to the obligation to
respect rights; Article 4, the right to life; Article 5, the right to humane
treatment; Article 8, the right to a fair trial; and Article 25, the right to
judicial protection.
B. Considerations with Respect to the
Formal Requirements of Admissibility
37. This petition meets the formal requirements
of admissibility as set out in Article 46.1 of the American Convention and
articles 32, 37, 38 and 39 of the Regulations of the Commission. In
effect, the petition contains the data of the petitioners, a description of the
events that presumably violate human rights protected by the American Convention
and identification of the state considered the responsible party for the
presumed violation. In addition, the claim was filed within the term
established; it is not pending in any other international settlement proceedings
and is not a reproduction of a petition already examined by the Commission.
38. With regard to the requirement of prior
exhaustion of remedies under internal jurisdiction, the petitioners have stated
that even though a large number of policemen, commanders and public officials of
the State of Guerrero have been arrested, the State continues denying that high
government officials were involved, the state governor among them. The
petition also says that despite the resolution issued on April 23, 1996, in
which the Supreme Court of Justice, in plenary, concluded that several high
government officials of the State of Guerrero --including the governor on leave
of absence, Ruben Figueroa Alcocer-- are responsible for that violation, to this
time the corresponding criminal proceedings have not been filed.
39. In this sense, the State of Mexico pointed
out that the petitioners have been free to turn to the courts to file their
objections regarding the failure to take criminal action against the presumed
responsible persons. They could have objected to this failure through the
proceeding for relief provided for in Article 21 of the Political Constitution
of Mexico.
40. With respect to this point, the Commission
has already said the following:
the point made by the Mexican government addressing the application of
Article 21 of the Federal Constitution of Mexico is not in order because the
available remedy must have the characteristics of being simple, prompt and
effective under the terms of Article 25 of the American Convention. The
reason is that even though an interpretation allowing exercise of the indirect
relief has been used in some cases, this has not been accepted unquestionably
and in a widespread manner in Mexican courts and furthermore, as the State of
Mexico has pointed out, there is another totally opposite interpretation
regarding this matter, according to which the remedy to which Article 21 of the
Constitution refers must be the object of legal regulation.[1]
41. The Commission has also stated that:
in cases where the Public Ministry refrains from filing criminal
proceedings, the Inter-American Commission has been able to verify a situation
of legal uncertainty regarding the use of Article 21 of the Constitution to
exercise a jurisdictional remedy that is capable of controlling such
inaction. To establish effective responsibilities, it is essential for
there to be clarity regarding the scope of Article 21 of the Constitution and it
must be possible to effectively apply it in practice.[2]
42. The petitioners have also stated that the
domestic remedies that have been exhausted have been ineffective since there has
not been a willingness to conduct a serious investigation into the events
denounced, to punish those responsible for them and to repair the damages that
these persons caused to the rights that were violated.
43. For its part, the State has expressed that in
this case, domestic remedies have not been exhausted and there are no
exceptions, as required by Article 37.2 of the Commission's regulations.
The State adds that more than 50 former officials have been brought to criminal
justice and a request appeal has been exercised by the President of the
Republic, to the Judicial Branch of State, a remedy that has not been exercised
for more than 50 years.
44. With respect to this matter, the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights has stated, "Article 46.1 of the
Convention speaks to the principles of generally accepted international
law. These principles do not refer only to the formal existence of such
recourses but that they also be adequate and effective, as seen through the
exceptions provided for in Article 46.2."[3]
45. That the remedies must be adequate means that
the function of these remedies, under the system of internal law, must be
suitable to protect the juridical situation infringed upon.[4]
46. That they must be effective means capable of
producing the results for which they were conceived.[5]
47. It can be concluded from the analysis made in
the preceding paragraphs and from the narration of the events by both parties
that even though significant progress has been made for the purpose of
investigation and judging those responsible for the so-called massacre of Aguas
Blancas, the progress has not been sufficient to this time regarding high
government authorities from the state government of Guerrero, whose
responsibility is the subject of clear presumptions. This was pointed out
by the Supreme Court of Justice in its decision of April 23, 1996. This
Commission must recognize the initiative taken by the President of the Republic
for having exercised the very extraordinary remedy, that has been so little used
in contemporary Mexican history, but, it is regretted that the nature of the
resolution issued only has moral force and thus the requirements of adequate and
effective remedy cannot be achieved through true jurisdictional remedies.
Consequently, the decision of the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic
considering itself not competent to hear the case, and of the attorney general
for the state of Guerrero, to not file criminal proceedings, cannot be contested
in court since, as has already been expressed, the remedy stipulated in Article
21 of the Constitution does not currently meet the requisites of being simple,
prompt and effective.
48. In addition, the petitioners have pointed out
that the irregularities that exist in this case, as well as the lack of
willingness to clarify them, have brought about an unjustified delay in the
case. In connection with this point, the Commission considers that since
almost two years have gone by since the events occurred at the Vado de Aguas
Blancas and there has still been no investigation of the circumstances that gave
rise to those events, nor any clarification of all the persons responsible for
the tragedy, this itself constitutes unjustifiable delay in the execution of the
investigation. However, the point will be examined more fully in the
analysis of the fundamental issues in this case.
49. Based on the arguments set out above, the
Commission concludes that the exceptions to the exhaustion of internal remedies
set out in Article 46.2.a and c of the American Convention are applicable
to this case and therefore, the petitioners are released from the need to comply
with this requirement for admissibility.
V. CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING THE BASIC
ISSUES
50. The Commission goes on record about its new
practice of initially deciding, in principle, on the admissibility of the cases
that are processed in it, as long as one of the states opposes some of the
exceptions of inadmissibility that are enshrined in the Convention or in the
Regulations of the Commission. The Commission has deemed advisable to adopt this
practice, because it thinks that it produces more clarity and legal security in
its procedures and clears the ways to bring the parties together in a process of
friendly settlement. Nevertheless, it must be underscored that this practice can
not be absolute since the specific circumstances of each case must be analyzed
and especially the advantages that might derive from that decision.
51. In this sense, in the case under analysis,
although the State repeatedly opposed the exception on the lack of exhaustion of
domestic remedies, the petitioners expressly communicated their non-willingness
of exhausting the friendly settlement course. Therefore, under the
circumstances, an exclusive report on admissibility would not have the practical
effect of bringing the parties closer to solve the case. Moreover, the
Commission deems that the basic issue of the case was sufficiently debated,
argued and proved by the parties before the Commission, and in the documents
there are sufficient elements so as to render a decision on the merits of the
case. This was also complemented with information obtained during the visit to
Mexico in July 1996. This is the reason why this Commission now goes on to
analyze aspects related to basic issues of the complaint.
52. From the statements made by the parties, it
has been shown that both parties agree that the events that occurred at the Vado
de Aguas Blancas on June 28, 1996, were perpetrated by agents of the
motorized police force of the state of Guerrero. This is also made clear
by the videotape provided by the petitioners. This tape, shown in Mexico
on a well known television channel, shows how the police agents killed 17
persons and wounded more than 20. Furthermore, and in the knowledge that
the material acts of the events narrated are not subject to question and are
thus viewed by the Commission as recognized facts, the Commission had the
opportunity during its on-site visit to Mexico in July of 1996 to visit the
place where the massacre occurred and to speak with family members, eyewitnesses
and victims of the events at Aguas Blancas. These persons described their
experiences during the unfolding of the events and afterward, and agreed with
the description given by the petitioners in their complaint, and with the video
images of the massacre. Furthermore, it has been shown that the events
were started by the actions of the police officers. Further evidence of
this comes from the words of the Supreme Court of Justice which pointed out in
its decision on the case, "One thing is very clear and manifest: two
police officers received minor wounds, caused by cutting weapons which were
identified as machetes; all the dead and wounded, on the other hand, were
passengers and were hurt by firearms. All the eyewitnesses we interviewed
are in agreement in pointing out that the policemen acted compulsively, coldly
and heedlessly, without thinking in the least logical of terms, since there is
no record that they were responding to an attack against them with
firearms."[6]
As a consequence of the points made above, this Commission expresses that it has
no doubt about the connection of the agents of the Guerrero state police force
as the material perpetrators of the aforementioned massacre, nor about the
excessive and compulsive manner in which they acted in the events.
53. With respect to the diligence with which the
state of Mexico has acted in the investigation of other persons responsible for
the events, there appear to be some discrepancies between the parties. In
this sense, the petitioners have pointed out that even though a large number of
policemen, commanders and state officials of the State of Guerrero were
arrested, the State continues denying that high government officials, the state
governor included, participated. They add that on February 27, 1995, the
special prosecutor designated for the case filed a conclusive report on the
investigation with the Permanent Commission of the Guerrero State Congress in
which it is contended that the State governor, as well as other officials of the
Guerrero State government, were not responsible for the events at Aguas Blancas.
They also point out that the decision released on April 23, 1996, by the plenary
meeting of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation at the request of the
President of the Republic mentions among the persons responsible the governor on
leave of absence, Ruben Figueroa Alcocer, and other state government
officials. Because this decision was not binding, it was not followed by
either the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic nor by the Office of
the Attorney General for the state of Guerrero.
54. For its part, the State has said the
diligence with which the State of Mexico has acted to conduct a serious
investigation can be seen in the request appeal filed by the President of the
Republic on March 4, 1996, with the Judicial Branch of State. The result
of that request was a court opinion whose conclusion was that Governor Ruben
Figueroa Alcocer was responsible. The State adds that if it is true that
the corresponding criminal proceedings have not been exercised, it is the
consequence of decisions made by the competent organs which have not been turned
to by the petitioners in accordance with Article 21 of the Constitution.
55. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has
pointed out in this connection the following:
The action of investigating is, like the action of preventing, an
intermediary obligation or a behavior which does not fall short of compliance
by the mere fact that the investigation does not produce a satisfactory
result. However, it must be undertaken with a serious attitude and not
as mere formality that is condemned in advance to be fruitless. It
should have a meaning and should be undertaken by the state as a proper
juridical duty and not as a simple gesture of private interest which depends
on the procedural initiative of the victim or his family members or the
private contribution of elements of evidence, without the public authority
attempting effectively to find the truth.[7]
56. In connection with this, the Commission
considers that while the Executive of the State of Guerrero complied
"partially" with the recommendations made by the National Human Rights
Commission in its report of August 14, 1995, one of whose points was the
appointment of a special prosecutor to continue processing the prior inquiry
started as a result of the events at Aguas Blancas, the conclusive report of
that investigation was not shared in its entirety by the local people of
Guerrero. This same concern was shown by the federal executive when he
exercised the request appeal provided in Article 97 of the Political
Constitution of Mexico. In effect, the federal executive points out in the
petition submitted to the Supreme Court of Justice, "despite the
intervention of several authorities competent to take up the matter under the
terms of their powers and the results that have been reached to date, there
remains among the national community a feeling of concern for full clarification
of the events and determination of its consequences in accordance with the
law."[8] On
this matter, the Supreme Court commented, "from the description of events,
and especially the latest assessment made by the federal executive, one reaches
the conviction that all ordinary means have been attempted to determine the
criminal responsibility of the perpetrators of the aforementioned events, but
there has been no satisfactory finding for society, and to this time it has not
been established whether such events do or do not constitute serious violations
of individual rights and who might have been responsible for them."[9]
From the foregoing it is clear that the federal government itself recognized to
the Supreme Court of Justice that the investigations conducted to that time had
not been sufficiently clear to determine all the persons truly responsible for
the events at Aguas Blancas.
57. The Commission also believes that while it is
true the federal executive filed the request appeal with the Supreme Court of
Justice, the function of the court, pursuant to Article 97 of the Constitution,
is merely declarative and is not binding. This gives the decision only a
moral impact. However, the Supreme Court, for the purposes of attempting
to utilize the result of its investigation, points out in the fourth point of
its decision:
FOURTH - As the President of
the Republic requests, through the Secretary of Government, in the second
petitory point of the letter dated March four of the present year, this
Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation suggests that the measures and actions
be taken by the competent authorities that follow from the necessary measures
which are reviewed below:
A - Notify the President of
the Republic, through the Secretary of Government, of these agreements, and
attach a certified copy of them so that the president is able to reach all
determinations that motivated his request for intervention by this Supreme
Court of Justice, under the terms ordered by Article 97 of the Constitution.
B - A certified copy of this
resolution should be sent to the Congress of the Union, for its information
and attendant effects.
C - Also send a copy to the
Attorney General of the Republic, for the purposes of his representation.
D - The Acting Governor of
the state of Guerrero, the Congress and Superior Court of Justice of that
entity should also take note of this resolution, through copies of it.
58. However, the case is that after all these
authorities were notified, in particular, the Attorney General of the Republic,
who, based on the opinion of the Supreme Court, appeared to be competent to take
up the case, declared himself not competent and remitted the documents to the
Office of the Attorney General of Justice for the state of Guerrero, which had
already declared itself not competent to take up the case. In addition, on
May 30, 1996, the Congress of the Federation exonerated the governor prior to
any legal proceeding, and this prevented the holding of any impeachment
proceeding. The same occurred in the local legislature on June 13 of that
same year. As a consequence of its examination, this Commission considers
that the investigations conducted by the state of Mexico for the purposes of
judging and sanction those responsible for the "Aguas Blancas
massacre" have not been undertaken with the necessary seriousness in the
terms established by the Inter-American Court.
59. With respect to the remedy provided by
Article 21 of the Constitution, the Commission has already stated in advance its
interpretation of this matter. For this reason, it will not develop this
point any more to avoid any needless repetition.
60. Regarding the eventual responsibility of the
governor on indefinite leave of absence, and of other high officials of the
Guerrero State government, this Commission considers itself not competent to
give an opinion of that type in this case. However, it wishes to express
its concern over the manifest irregularities and the serious contradictions that
have been observed over the length of these proceedings. This situation
has made it impossible to this point to determine in some court the
responsibility of former Governor Figueroa Alcocer and of other high officials
of his government. In effect, from the written documents it is clear that
there are serious signs of the eventual responsibility of the former governor
and other high officials of his government. This can be verified more
exactly following the decision published by the Supreme Court of Justice of the
Nation. Quite clearly, the doubts that these unfortunate events at Aguas
Blancas have cast on public opinion and the government itself should be cleared
up, once and for all, if the decision to file criminal proceedings against all
the government officials of the state of Guerrero who might be implicated in the
events were made. This includes the former governor himself. This
would put into the hands of a competent, independent and impartial judge, under
the terms of Article 8 of the Convention, the determination of those responsible
in this case.
61. The petitioners have requested the Commission
to rule that in this case the state of Mexico has violated the human rights
embodied in articles 4, 5, 8, 25 and 1.1 of the Convention. In this sense,
the Commission must rule on whether they were violated:
A. Right to a Fair Trial and to Judicial
Protection
62. Article 8.1 of the Convention establishes the
right that every person has to a hearing, with due guarantees and within a
reasonable time, by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal.
63. With respect to the reasonable time
requirement, there are precedents in the jurisprudence of international organs
according to which consideration has been given, in the light of a particular
circumstances of each case, to the following criteria: complexity of the
litigation; the behavior of the plaintiffs and the court authorities; and the
manner in which the investigation stage of the proceeding has been processed.[10]
64. In connection with the complexity of the
litigation, this Commission should point out that even though the investigations
and the several criminal proceedings that have been filed against a large number
of public officials presumably linked to the events in question might be
difficult, there exists a body of clear, precise and mutually agreeable signs
that lead to the presumption that other officials who worked in the office of
the executive of the state of Guerrero on the date when the events occurred have
some level of responsibility for them. For this reason, it is thought that
the competent authorities have had to open the corresponding criminal
proceedings. This is further corroborated by the decision reached by the
Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation which pointed to the former governor and
other officials of his government as the persons responsible to some extent for
the events. No matter how complicated this case might be, the information
exists to reach a decision on undertaking criminal proceedings against those
officials and to leave in the hands of a competent, independent and impartial
judge the decision on their responsibilities. Such a decision has not been
taken and there are no signs that lead the Commission to believe that it will be
immediately taken.
65. As to the behavior of the plaintiffs and the
court authorities, as well as the manner in which the inquiry stage of the
proceedings has been conducted, the Commission must express that even though the
court authorities are currently processing the public officials against whom the
Public Ministry filed criminal proceedings, it would appears that these have
experienced no type of delay. However, the problem arises in connection
with the other cases in which serious signs of responsibility have been found
and for them the Public Ministry has not opened the corresponding criminal
proceedings despite the repeated claims made by the petitioners and the many
remedies that they have pursued. In these cases, the Commission believes
that these proceedings cannot used as the foundation for this examination since
they are not before a court body. Consequently, the fact that almost two
years have passed without any filing of criminal proceedings against former
Governor Ruben Figueroa Alcocer and other high officials of his government, and
that there exist no signs that this might occur, lead the Commission to the
conclusion that the state of Mexico has not complied with the reasonable time
requirement stipulated in Article 8 of the Convention.
66. Article 25 of the Convention provides that
every person has the right to simple and prompt recourse or any other effective
recourse to a competent court or tribunal for protection against acts that
violate his fundamental rights.
67. In the case in question, it has been shown
that the state public ministry has not been willing to file the respective
criminal proceedings against former Governor Ruben Figueroa Alcocer, the former
secretary general of government, Ruben Robles Catalan, the former attorney
general of justice of the state, Antonio Alcocer Salazar, and the former
director of the judicial police of the state, Gustavo Olea Godoy. It has
also been shown that the federal public ministry has not been willing to
exercise its authority to take up the case in the jurisdiction since, as it has
been shown, not only were local crimes committed in this case, but federal
regulations were broken as well. All of this goes into the body of signals
that indicate that these former officials of the government of the state of
Guerrero have some presumed responsibility for the events that occurred at the
Vado de Aguas Blancas on June 28, 1995. In this case, the Commission
believes that because of the exclusive and sole monopoly that the public
ministry has in Mexico's juridical system for the exercise of criminal
proceedings, the rights of individual persons should be assured adequately and
effectively so that this competence is not exercised arbitrarily, but in a
serious and professional manner to guarantee the right to judicial protection
established in Article 25 of the Convention. In this connection, the
Commission has already pointed out that "the monopoly on the exercise of
criminal proceedings that is conferred to the public ministry in Mexico requires
the establishment of an independent and autonomous, professional, efficient and
impartial institution."[11]
68. The Commission believes that such an
important competence as investigating and opening the pertinent criminal
proceedings may not be assigned to just one organ unless there are other
adequate and effective remedies to control its decisions. The Commission
has already repeated on many occasions the need to regulate law to challenge the
resolutions of the public ministry on the failure to open or to halt a criminal
proceeding, which is embodied in Article 21 of the Mexican Constitution.
69. Likewise, the Commission believes that in
this case the necessary political will has been absent to punish the responsible
persons. In this sense, it can be said that despite the existing evidence,
the resolution by the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation and the sentiments
of concern in both the government and Mexican society at large for the unfolding
of these investigations,[12]
both the federal and state legislative bodies have failed to meet the demand for
impeachment proceedings presented by the Democratic Revolution Party against
former Governor Figueroa Alcocer.
70. In consideration of all that has been said
above, this Commission concludes that in this case the rights to a fair trial
and judicial protection stipulated in articles 8 and 25 of the Convention have
been violated, and that the obligation to adopt measures of domestic law,
pursuant to Article 2 of the Convention, has not been complied with.
B. The Right to Life
71. Article 4 of the Convention establishes that
no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.
72. The examination of the events given above has
brought out that members of the motorized police force of the state of Guerrero
massacred compulsively and excessively on June 28, 1995, at the Vado de Aguas
Blancas, Messrs. Tomas Porfirio Rondin, Amado Sanchez Gil, Fabian Gallardo
Garcia, Francisco Gervacio Rogel, Heliodoro Lopez Vargas, Plaz Hernandez
Gonzalez, Daniel Lopez Castaneda, Victorio Flores Balanzar, Climaco Martinez
Reza, Mario Pineda Infante, Anacleto Ahueteco Coyote, Jose Rebolledo Gallardo,
Gregorio Analco Tabares, Efrain Vargas, Florente Rafael Ventura, Simplicio
Martinez Reza and Francisco Blanco Munoz.
73. Consequently, the Commission concludes that
the Mexican state has violated the right to life of the 17 persons mentioned
above. This right is embodied in the aforementioned Article 4 of the
American Convention.
C. The Right to Humane Treatment
74. Article 5 of the American Convention
establishes that every person has the right to have his physical, mental and
moral integrity respected.
75. In this connection, it has already been
examined and shown that members of the motorized police force of the state of
Guerrero wounded, for no reason whatsoever, Messrs. Carmelo Bernal Flores,
Antonio Garcia, Juan Pastrana, Santos Galeana, Felipe Sanchez, Marcos Carranza,
Anibal Pastrana, Venicio Godinez, Andres Bernal, Luciano Salmeron, Pedro
Jimenez, Heliodoro Refugio, Andres Sanchez, Apolonio Romero, Apolinar Ojendis,
Bernardo Carbajal, Eustosia Mayo, Rodolfo Carranza and Antonio Abarca.
This action, considering the provisions of the American Convention, is a clear
violation of the right to humane treatment of these persons.
76. In connection with possible violations of the
mental and moral integrity of the wounded persons and their family members, the
Commission believes that the fact that these persons were present at the murder
of 17 persons and experienced, for minutes, the possibility that they might die
as these events unfolded, produces serious mental and moral damages to their
persons, since none of those present at the Vado de Aguas Blancas on June 28,
1995, will ever forget those moments. With respect to the family members
of the dead, the Commission considers that the murder of a loved one is always
cause for serious moral damage, but this is even more the case when the
survivors find out how the events occurred through a videotape.
77. As a consequence of the foregoing
explanation, the Commission concludes that the state of Mexico has violated the
right to physical, mental and moral integrity of the aforementioned persons, as
protected in Article 5 of the American Convention.
D. Obligation to Respect Rights
78. The conducts described in points A, B and C
of this chapter constitute a failure to comply by the Mexican state with the
commitment undertaken in Article 1.1 of the Convention to respect the rights and
freedoms recognized in the Convention and to ensure to all persons subject to
its jurisdiction the free and full exercise of those rights and freedoms.
E. Compensation for Damages and
Losses
79. Although the State has stated that both the
family members of the victims as well as the wounded persons have already been
compensated, it has also stated that with respect to moral damages, the Civil
Code for the Federal District in common matters, and for the republic in federal
matters, in Article 1916, establishes that the form of reparation is
"the publication of an extract of the judgment adequately reflecting the
nature and the scope of the judgment in the communications media that are
considered advisable." In this sense, the State concludes that
because of the wide publicity given to the points and the conclusions of the
report issued on February 27, 1996, by the then special prosecutor for this
case, it is clear that in this case there has been a reparation of a moral type.
80. In this sense, the Commission expresses that
from the explanation and the review of this case, it has been possible to refute
clearly the report presented on February 27, 1996, by the then special
prosecutor for the case of Aguas Blancas, attorney Alejandro Oscar Varela
Vidales. In this sense, the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, in its
report issued on April 23 of the same year, decided against considering worthy
of blame the activities of the police members, as attorney Varela included in
his report. The attorney leaned toward the existence of criminal action in
the operation conducted by the motorized police force of the state of Guerrero
on June 28, 1996, at the Vado de Aguas Blancas. The court also concluded
in its report that, among others, "the resulting responsible parties are
Ruben Figueroa Alcocer, governor on indefinite leave of absence; Jose Ruben
Robles Catalan, the former secretary general of government; Antonio Alcocer
Salazar, the former attorney general of justice;...Gustavo Olea Godoy, the
former director of the judicial police force..." who are the persons that
the special prosecutor exonerated in his report from all responsibility.
81. It can be concluded from the foregoing that
the publication of that report cannot serve in any way as a reparation of a
moral type for the family members of the victims and the persons wounded during
the events at Aguas Blancas. The report does not contain a clear
examination of the events that occurred nor any indication of the persons
responsible for them. It must also be noted that the article in question
refers to an "extract from the sentence," which is the result of a
definitive and firm decision handed down by the Judicial Branch, not just a
simple report that could have been written by one of the inspectors from the
Attorney General's office, which is part of the State's Executive Branch.
Furthermore, Article 1916 of the Civil Code for the federal district expresses:
When some unlawful event or
omission produces a moral damage, the person responsible for it shall have the
obligation to give reparation for it by indemnity in money, no matter
whether any material damage has been caused, both under contractual
responsibility as well as extra-contractual responsibility. A similar
obligation to make reparation for moral damage will be run by any person who
incurs objective responsibility, according to Article 1913, as well as the
state and its officials in accordance with Article 1928, both provisions of
this code.
The amount of the indemnity
shall be determined by the judge, taking into account the rights violated, the
degree of responsibility, the economic situation of the person responsible,
the economic situation of the victim, as well as all other circumstances in
the case.
When the moral damage has
affected the victim in terms of his decorum, honor, reputation or
consideration, the judge shall order, at the request of the victim and
chargeable to the responsible person, the publication of an extract of the
judgment that adequately reflects the nature and the scope of the judgment
through the communications media that are considered advisable. In cases
where the damage derives from an act that has been publicized in the
communications media, the judge shall order the communications media to
publicize the extract of the judgment in a comparable manner to that which was
given to the original publication. (underlined by the Commission)
82. Judging by the words of the aforementioned
article it is deduced that Mexican legislators have established that the
publication of an extract of the judgment for specific cases, as an additional
requirement to indemnity in money, and as a result at no time would this
suffice, as the Mexican government says, as the only form of indemnity for moral
damage.
83. Likewise, the Commission expresses its
profound concern over the several denunciations received from family members and
the wounded during its visit to the area. According to these, several of
the persons wounded in the events occurred in the Vado de Aguas Blancas have not
received proper medical attention from time to time to deal with the physical
problems that have resulted from their wounds. Moreover, according to the
testimonies received, the amount of the pensions received by the relatives of
the victims is ludicrous, according to minimum accepted national and
international standards.
84. For the aforementioned considerations, the
Commission concludes that the State must adequately compensate the relatives of
the victims and the wounded for damages, as a consequence of the violation of
their human rights and to give appropriate medical attention to surviving
victims that require it as a result of the wounds received in the events in
Aguas Blancas.
VI. REFLECTIONS ON THE STATE’S
OBSERVATIONS
85. On March 11, 1997, pursuant to Article 50 of
the Convention, the Commission sent the State of Mexico preliminary report No.
8/97 on the present case and granting it a period of two months to apprise the
Commission of its compliance with the recommendations contained in that
report. After requesting a 30-day extension for presenting the data
requested, the State presented its observations concerning the Commission's
report on June 23, 1997, which included the comments summarized below.
86. The State has indicated that it does not
agree that a prior declaration of admissibility is unnecessary, first, because
in a number of cases currently before the Commission, the Commission has
proposed steps toward amicable resolution without first resolving the issue of
admissibility, and second, because basing the prior decision on admissibility on
the expectation that the claimant will accept the amicable resolution procedure
also fails to contribute to giving legal form and standing to the system for the
protection of human rights, nor does it strengthen the perception of the
Commission as acting with full independence from other entities.
87. In this matter, the Commission must reiterate
what it has previously and plainly stated in connection with its new practice of
initially pronouncing itself on the admissibility of cases that come before it,
namely, that there can be no absolutes here, since the special circumstances of
each case, as well as the particular advantages flowing from a decision on
admissibility, must be considered. In the present case, the parties had already
argued in depth questions both of procedure and merit before the Commission,
both in writing and in the hearing held at the Commission’s headquarters in
Washington, D.C. on February 21, 1996. Also, the Commission was able to add to
its information on the case during the on-site visit to Mexico in July of 1996.
Further, due to of the features of this case, there were no considerable
practical advantages to doing a report exclusively on the admissibility issue -
first, because an amicable resolution of the case was not achievable since the
express consent of the parties is necessary for this and the petitioners had
rejected that possibility on January 15, 1997; second, because doing a report
dealing only with admissibility requires dealing exclusively with the issue of
fulfillment of admissibility requirements, without getting into the merits of
the case, a procedure which the Commission considered not practicable in this
case, since its nature is such that in pronouncing itself on admissibility the
Commission could find itself expressing opinions on the merits, which would have
a negative impact on the clarity and assurance of legality which this new
practice seeks to enhance.
88. The fact that there are cases before the
Commission in which the Commission has put itself at the disposal of the parties
for the purpose of initiating procedures aimed at amicable resolution without
having resolved the admissibility issues, is a reaffirmation of the notion that
before writing a report of this sort the particular circumstances of each case
must be considered, since, as already indicated, there are cases where prior
issues of admissibility and issues of the merits overlap, making it impossible
to issue a report dealing only with admissibility. This is why, following the
practice which the Commission has adopted of putting itself at the disposal of
the parties for the amicable resolution of cases, it sometimes achieves this
goal before defining all the admissibility aspects of the case. Examples of
this, among others, are reports 38/96, 11/96, and 32/96, published by the
Commission in its 1996 annual report. Without prejudice to what has been said,
Article 45 of the Commission’s Regulations gives it the authority to put
itself at the disposal of the parties at any stage of the investigation of a
petition for the purpose of achieving an amicable resolution of the matter
at hand.
89. Thus, following from what has been said, the
Commission has in no case based its prior decision on admissibility on the
expectation that the claimant will accept the resolution procedure. On the
contrary, it has in the last year developed a consistent practice regarding
admissibility reports and amicable resolutions which gives the parties a greater
guarantee of the legality of the process.
90. In respect to the first recommendation which
the Commission made to the State in its preliminary report - namely, that a
serious, impartial, and effective investigation of the facts described in the
report be carried out - the State expressed that measures representing
compliance with this have been taken, as all the relevant bodies have acted,
resolving the matter pursuant to law. It added that both federal and local
authorities made their determinations in strict accord with the law, so that to
reopen the now completed investigation, as recommended by the Commission, would
do violence to the rule of law.
91. On this matter, the Commission must say that
the complaint in this case was brought before the Commission precisely in
connection with those very investigations carried out by the State, and it is on
the basis of the elements of those investigations that the Commission concluded
that the investigations carried out by the State for the purpose of trying and
punishing those responsible for the so-called “Aguas Blancas massacre” were
not done with the seriousness necessary to comply with the terms of the
requirements laid out by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. In fact, the
Supreme Court of Justice of Mexico handed down a ruling in which it said that
“There was grave violation of the individual rights of the governed in the
events of June 28, 1995 in the Vado de Aguas Blancas, Town of Coyuca, State of
Guerrero, and in the later related events,” and that “Licenciados Rubén
Figueroa Alcocer, Governor on indefinite leave, José Rubén Robles Catalán,
ex-Secretary General of the Interior [de Gobierno], Antonio Alcocer Salazar,
ex-Attorney General of Justice, Rodolfo Sotomayor Espino, ex-First
Under-Attorney General of Justice, Gustavo Olea Godoy, ex-Director of the
Judicial Police, Rosendo Armijo de los Santos, ex-Undersecretary of Protection
and Traffic [Protección y Tránsito], Adrian Vega Cornejo, ex-Special
Prosecutor, and Esteban Mendoza Ramos, ex-General Director of the Interior [Gobernación],
all from the state of Guerrero, were responsible. Consequently, in view of the
fact that the State has taken no measures to complete the investigation, the
Commission considers that it has not complied with the first recommendation.
92. With respect to the second recommendation -
to take appropriate action in the criminal courts to determine the individual
responsibility of these senior officials of the Guerrero state government, who
are named in the Supreme Court decision - the State indicated that it cannot
accept the recommendation, given that it was precisely in implementation of the
first recommendation that they proceeded to bring to justice in the criminal
courts the former senior officials of the state of Guerrero who had been
determined to be legally responsible. By reopening investigations already
brought to a close in order to take criminal action pursuant to the second
recommendation, Mexico would be in violation of legal structures established in
its Constitution.
93. On this issue the Commission considers that
the second recommendation derives from a failure to comply with the first, since
an investigation based on the Supreme Court ruling would have had to be carried
out in order to comply with the first. The second recommendation (criminal
proceedings) must be seen as a second phase, which the government must undertake
as a follow-up to and result of implementing the first recommendation (namely,
completing the investigation).
94. The Commission must also add that the State
has an international obligation to comply in good faith with recommendations
issued by the Commission, with no exemption possible by virtue of the provisions
of national law, --aside from the fact that they were not even put forth or
properly established-- which, in any case, were not laid out.
95. The State also indicated that after the
constitutional reform which added Article 21 to permit challenging the office of
the prosecutor [Ministerio Público] for failing to take, or refraining from
taking, action in the criminal courts, it is incomprehensible that the
Commission should assert that in this case there has been a violation of the
duty to adopt internal legislation relating to Articles 8 and 25 of the
Convention as provided for in Article 2. It adds that the mere fact that some
courts have upheld contradictory arguments does not exempt the claimants from
pursuing the case to the Supreme Court for these contradictions to be clarified
pursuant to the Ley de Amparo.
96. The Commission has repeatedly demonstrated
its satisfaction with the addition of Article 21 to the constitution.
Nonetheless, though this has been a big step forward, the article’s
application in practice has not been possible, due to lack of regulation,
which is why, as the State says, some courts have upheld contradictory arguments
in particular cases, which has prevented the creation of jurisprudence assuring
the certainty of effective judicial recourse, and has meant that real
guaranteeing of the rule of law has not been advanced. In this connection the
Commission has already said that "The argument by the Mexican State in
favor of applying Article 21 of the Federal Constitution of Mexico also fails,
insofar as the available means of recourse must be simple, swift and effective
in accordance with Article 25 of the American Convention, since, even though an
interpretation has been allowed in some cases permitting the exercise of
indirect jurisdiction, this interpretation has not met with widespread
acquiescence in the Mexican courts: Indeed, as the State of Mexico has
indicated, there is another opposite interpretation on this matter, under which
the means of recourse referred to in Article 21 of the Constitution is to be the
object of legal regulation".[13]
Consequently, the fact that said article has not been regulated constitutes a
clear violation of Article 2 of the Convention, given that the measures -
legislative or other - necessary to make the rights guaranteed in Articles 8 and
25 of the Convention a reality have not been taken.
97. As to the third recommendation - providing
appropriate indemnification to the members of the families of the persons killed
and to the surviving victims of the Aguas Blancas occurrences, and providing due
medical attention to those victims in need of it - the government averred that
the Congress of the state of Guerrero, through decree number 319 of November 12,
1996, provided lifetime economic support to widows and economic dependents as
well as scholarships to children of the deceased, in a way consistent with the
economic conditions under which the Congress labors. It added that the State
would like to know what specific criterion the Commission has regarding
compensation to those affected by the events, and that it is ready to provide
due medical care to those victims in need of it as a consequence of injuries
sustained in the Aguas Blancas events, on account of which, if there be any
person requiring such care who has not obtained it, the State would appreciate
the Commission’s providing information on such persons.
98. The main object of standards on international
responsibility in the human rights area as well as of criteria for reparations
is to repair the violated legal condition of the human victim or his family
members. In this context the state’s responsibility is independent of the
rank, greater or lesser, of the agents of the state who commit the unrestituted
illicit act. Hence the perpetrator of the injurious illicit act or negligence
has the obligation to reestablish the status quo ante, and where that is
not possible, to provide reparation for the harm done in some other way which,
in good faith and in accordance with reasonable criteria, substitutes for
monetary restitution.[14]
99. The jurisprudence established by the
Inter-American System for the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights and, in
particular, by the Court, in the Velásquez Rodríguez case, establishes
that:
Reparation of harm brought
about by the violation of an international obligation consists in full
restitution (restitutio in integrum), which includes the restoration of the
prior situation, the reparation of the consequences of the violation, and
indemnification for patrimonial and non-patrimonial damages, including
emotional harm.
100. Taking into account the criteria mentioned, based on
both doctrine and jurisprudence, the State should, in the case under
investigation, proceed with monetary indemnification, which must be divided
into, on the one hand, material, and on the other, mental and moral damages.
101. Material damages include appropriate indemnifications in
the categories of subsequent harm and monetary loss. In connection with
subsequent harm, expenses incurred by the families of victims and by survivors
as a direct consequence of the events should be considered. They should include
costs of transportation, legal assistance, telephone calls, etc. With respect to
monetary loss, there should be a consideration of the income which families of
victims as well as surviving victims would have received during the lifetime of
the dead family member or, to the extent to which the victim loses income as a
result of these occurrences, during the lifetime of the victim.
102. The mental and moral damages are based on the suffering
which the death of the victims provokes, starting at the time of death. In the
case of survivors, this moral damage must provide indemnification for the
psychological damage resulting from the events as well as the anguish suffered
by their families. In this connection, the State has cited Article 1916 of the
Criminal Code of the Distrito Federal, which expressly indicates that “when an
illicit act or negligence produces mental/moral harm, the person responsible for
it shall have the obligation to provide reparation through monetary
indemnification . . . ”
103. Along the same
line, as a point of reference, it is worth citing what the court said in the Lusitania
case, ruling of November 1, 1923, about determining damages in cases of death:
To estimate the amounts (a)
which the deceased, had he not been killed, would have contributed to the
claimant; thereto must be added (b) the pecuniary value which the
personal services of the deceased represented for that claimant in terms of
the care, education or supervision he provided for her; and we should
also add (c) reasonable compensation for the mental trauma plus the
suffering, if any, caused by the violent severance of family ties which the
plaintiff may have experienced due to that death. The sum of those
estimated amounts, reduced to the present cash value thereof, will generally
represent the loss suffered by the plaintiff.[15]
104. At this point in the case, the Commission should point
out that Mexico has never made a detailed study of the particular conditions of
the victims in accord with the above-mentioned standards. Hence the State should
do a study complying with those standards in order to be able to provide due
indemnification to the victims or their families and, pursuant to the results of
the study, proceed to indemnify the victims who have been individually
identified, or their families. Also, the Commission has pointed out that the
publication of the February 27, 1996 report by the then Special Prosecutor in
the case, is not a substitute for mental/moral damages due to them, so that the
State should include this issue in its study of the indemnification question.
105. Also, in connection with the request for information on
victims who have not received proper medical care, the Commission points out
that this constitutes one of the State's inherent juridical duties. As its
contribution to reparation of the damages suffered by the victims in this case,
however, the Commission itself ascertained during its on-site visit to Mexico
that Messrs. Aníbal Pastrana Gallardo and Andrés Sánchez Rodríguez have not
been properly cared for through their final rehabilitation, with the result that
they have not been able to recover from their injuries and are unable to work.
106. Finally, the State asked the Commission to revise the
language of the report to avoid terms like “massacre” and “extrajudicial
executions” in the Aguas Blancas case, since, as paragraph 52 of the
Commission’s own report reflects, it is clear that the facts are not in
dispute and that all the witnesses agree that the police acted in a
"compulsive, cold-blooded, abusive, and irate manner."
107. On this matter the Commission’s view is that the
nature of the facts remains unchanged, given that the events have not been
disputed by the State, and all the more so since it is being stated that the
police, who are government employees, acted in a compulsive, cold-blooded,
abusive, and irate manner. In this case the Commission has used the term “massacre”
because, first, it is the term invariably used by the petitioners as well as in
the larger arena of national and international public opinion, and second,
because the Spanish-language dictionary defines this term as “killing of
persons, generally unarmed, by armed attack or similar cause.” The State, as
it indicates, has not denied the facts, which fit perfectly well within this
definition.
108. As to the term “extrajudicial executions,” this is a
legal concept referring expressly to any person deprived of life without that
decision being the result of a final judgment handed down by an authorized judge
in a country where the legal system provides for capital punishment.
Consequently, since this is the nature of the case we are dealing with, the
Commission deems this use of the term perfectly appropriate.
109. Finally, the Commission points out that the National
Human Rights Commission (CNDH) reported in July of 1997 that the Government of
the State of Guerrero had not complied with all of the recommendations resulting
from its report No. 104/95 on the Aguas Blancas incidents. According to
the CNDH report, only three of the 14 recommendations contained in that report
had been carried out in their entirety. That account coincides with the
concern evinced by the Commission in this report concerning the end result of
the inquiries, and concurs with the sentiments of the Federal Executive who, in
the name of the Mexican people and pursuant to Article 95 of the Constitution,
exercised the special remedy consisting of an appeal to the Nation's Supreme
Court of Justice.
VII. CONCLUSIONS
110. Based on the considerations of fact and law contained in
this report, the Commission concludes that by virtue of the events in the Vado
de Aguas Blancas, town of Coyuca, state of Guerrero, on June 28, 1995, the State
is responsible for the violation of the obligation to adopt domestic legal
provisions pursuant to Article 2 of the Convention, as well as human rights
provisions providing judicial guarantees, judicial protection, life, and
personal safety pursuant to Articles 4, 5, 8, and 25 of the Convention.
111. Wherefore the Commission concludes that the State has
not fulfilled the obligations to respect human rights and guarantees imposed by
Article 1.1 of the Convention.
VIII. RECOMMENDATIONS
THE
INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS REITERATES TO THE STATE
OF MEXICO THE FOLLOWING RECOMMENDATIONS:
A. To carry out a complete, serious,
impartial, and effective investigation of the events described in this report,
which occurred in the Vado de Aguas Blancas on June 28, 1995, based on the
ruling of the nation’s Supreme Court of Justice dated April 23, 1996.
B. To carry out the criminal justice
procedures necessary to establish the individual responsibility of the senior
state of Guerrero officials identified in the Supreme Court ruling and carry out
the corresponding penal sanctions following therefrom.
C. To grant proper indemnification to the
members of the families of those killed as well as to the surviving victims of
the Aguas Blancas occurrences, and provide proper medical care to those victims
who are in need of it as a consequence of injuries sustained in the Aguas
Blancas incidents.
D. To take whatever measures are necessary
to promptly write regulatory legislation for Article 21 of the Mexican
Constitution, so that the judicial guarantees and judicial protection written
into Articles 8 and 25 of the Convention can be made effective.
IX. PUBLICATION
112. On October 24, 1997, the Commission sent the Mexican
State Report No. 49/97 which had been adopted in the present case, granting it a
two-month period for taking the necessary steps to comply with the
recommendations cited above and thus remedy the situation addressed.
113. The deadline cited above expired without a response from
the State of Mexico. On January 9, 1998, the Commission received its note
asking for a 30-day extension to comply with the requirement indicated in the
previous paragraph. Since that request was received 16 days after the
period for presenting the requisite data had expired, the IACHR declined to
respond.
114. On January 21, 1998 the Commission received a note from
the State citing the measures it had adopted to comply with the recommendations
contained in Chapter VIII above. The Commission sent a copy to the
petitioners on January 29, 1998 asking that their comments be sent as quickly as
possible, given the short term imposed by the procedural stage which the case
had reached by that time. Their response was received on February 3, 1998.
115. Since the Mexican State failed to comply with the
request for information within the period set, the IACHR proceeds to
examine the State's reply and the petitioners' observations to determine whether
measures had been adopted to comply with the recommendations indicated in the
preceding section of this report.
A. INVESTIGATION
116. As to the recommendation contained in Section A
concerning the investigation of the Aguas Blancas incidents, the State compiled
an extensive account of the formalities carried out prior to October 24, 1997 by
the National Commission on Human Rights, the State Attorney General's Office and
the Federal Attorney General's Office. The State nevertheless concluded in
its report that
Based on the activities cited and on the resolution issued by the
Nation's Supreme Court of Justice, the pertinent authorities carried out the
activities within the purview of each to complete--diligently, impartially and
pursuant to strict technical and juridical practice--their investigation of the
incidents which took place in the "Vado de Aguas Blancas" area on June
28, 1995.
117. In this context, the petitioners noted that the Mexican
State had confined its input to "pointing out" the various juridical
bodies which had intervened in the inquiry into the Aguas Blancas massacre; and
to the comment that an analysis of the performance of each such body "was
not appropriate" at the present stage. The petitioners disagree with
that assessment, emphasizing the importance of asking the State to specify the
action undertaken by each of its agencies--and, in particular, to explain why
the results achieved by those agencies have been inefficient and
unproductive--in order to clarify the penal responsibility indicated by Mexico's
Supreme Court in this case.
118. The petitioners further note that the State fails to
provide any new information concerning its investigation of the facts, but
simply mentions the "fruitless activities carried out prior to the
Commission's latest report, dated October 24, 1997."
B. PENAL ACTIONS
119. As to the recommendation contained in Section B, calling
for the corresponding penal action to be instituted, the State continues to
maintain the position that was described in its communication of June 23, 1997:
...penal action was taken
against those persons in whose cases it was possible to establish the
existence of elements of a penal nature and the probability of their
responsibility, while no such action was taken against individuals regarding
whom such extremes were not established.
In the case of Attorney Ruben
Figueroa Alcocer, no criminal responsibility was found for the commission of
unlawful acts in connection with the violent events that took place on June
28, 1995 in the Vado de Aguas Blancas,
At that time, the three
possible modalities for participation in a criminal offense are contemplated
in the State of Guerrero Penal Code--direct, indirect or inductive--were
explored. As to the role played by that State's former Governor to
conceal the crimes he had committed, the State of Guerrero's Public Prosecutor
was unable to establish grounds for presuming his criminal responsibility,
particularly in connection with any evidence of undue abuse of public office.
Without prejudice to that
circumstance, it should be noted that owing to the nature of their public
duties, both the Chamber of Deputies of the Federal Congress and that of the
State of Guerrero examined and aired the presumed responsibility incurred for
purposes of the putative impeachment proceedings...
In fact, and pursuant to a
resolution of Mexico's Supreme Court, parallel procedures took place in those
bodies to establish the requisite responsibility. We should point out
that in matters involving the federal area, our Constitution establishes that
the Governor of a federative entity may be held responsible for serious
violations of the political Constitution itself. Such responsibility may
be exacted pursuant to the terms of the Federal Law on the Responsibilities of
Public Servants, Article 7 of which establishes the grounds on which such
cases may be based. Thanks to the work of the Prior Examination
Subcommittee and, thereafter, that of the Chamber of Deputies' Joint
Committees of the Interior, Constitutional Points and Justice, it was
established that former Governor Ruben Figueroa Alcocer had indeed committed
serious violations of the individual guarantees set forth in the Basic Law of
the Republic since, in the terms cited by Mexico's Supreme Court, there had
been violations of Article 6 on the Constitution, concerning the right to
information; and Article 1 thereof concerning restricted enjoyment of the
guarantee established by that same Article 6 of our Magna Carta on that
subject.
However, for impeachment
proceedings to be launched, such violations must be not only serious but
systematic the latter term being understood to describe the reiteration of
violating events and the repetition thereof within a given time and space) and
the belief that in the Aguas Blancas case, the violations occurred without the
systematic perpetration required in the pertinent ordinance, the Chamber of
Deputies decreed the inadmissibility of entering into the corresponding
impeachment proceedings. (Emphasis added.)
120. The petitioners point out in this respect that
As may be seen, the State has
failed to comply with the Commission's recommendations, inasmuch as the only
action thus far has been the opening of judicial proceedings against Rosendo
Armijo de Los Santos, Adrian Vega Cornejo, Esteban Mendoza Ramos and Rodolfo
Sotomayor Espino. To date, no sentences of guilt have been handed down
in the case before us.
C. INDEMNIFICATION
121. The recommendation contained in Section C on reparation
for the consequences of the violation is the object of a detailed explanation
from the State concerning the sums paid and the basis used for the calculation
thereof. In its report, the State mentions the following items:
i.
The families of the persons who died have received indemnification in the
amount of 50,000 for moral prejudice;
ii.
The State Government has covered all of the expenses incurred for burying the
victims;
iii.
As of May 1997, the lifetime monthly pension paid to the families to
compensate them for the loss of the victims' earnings was increased to 1,700
pesos. That amount, equivalent to 2.715 times the minimum wage in the
district, is subject to revision whenever the latter figure rises;
iv.
Scholarships of 100, 200 and 250 pesos a month--for preschool, primary and
secondary education, respectively--were established for a total of 41 persons.
Those amounts are subject to revision by the same figure as cited above;
v.
The 17 widows of the victims received housing valued at 70,200 pesos and
household appliances costing 16,346 pesos. In addition, 14 of them
received "a stud-bull and seven heifers," while others were given
credit from supply stores in the amount of 50,000 pesos each, and each of the
remaining women was awarded "a tortilla-making machine worth 65,000
pesos." All of them were given a two-month course in dress-making,
with a scholarships amounting to 450 pesos a month;
vi.
The wounded--five persons in all--receive monthly support in the amount of
1,000 pesos, equivalent to 1.28 times the minimum wage in the area; and
vii.
In July and December of 1997, a total of 218,500 pesos was distributed to the
widows and parents of the victims as welfare assistance.
122. The petitioners' observations reflect their attitude
concerning the indemnities paid in this case:
... The amounts have not been
fair, in the terms of inter-American jurisprudence, especially since not all
of the victims received compensation or medical care. The Commission
itself, during its on-site visit to Mexico in 1996, interviewed the victims,
whose testimony expressly indicated the flaws in the indemnities granted.
123. They continue to point out that the State has not yet
carried out the study of the victims' individual conditions which was expressly
stipulated by the IACHR in paragraph 104 supra as a necessary step toward
adequate indemnification of those victims' families. The State contends
that its calculations were predicated on the assumption that the victims were
engaged in farm work, and on the anticipation of future development in the
district, so that the hypothetical emergence of jobs for peons in the
construction industry was the premise accepted. The petitioners emphasize
the skewed results of using such a criterion, which renders the indemnity
figures unfair and disproportionate. This, they claim, is clearly shown by
the State's own data, which makes no attempt to explain why livestock had been
awarded to some of the widows; financing for supply shops to others; and the
money for tortilla-making equipment to yet another group.
D. REGULATORY MEASURES FOR ARTICLE 21 OF
THE CONSTITUTION
124. The State makes the following comments concerning the
recommendation contained in Section D:
...independently of the work
currently being performed in the executive branch to draft a law that would
set up a precise judicial procedure for impugning the failure to exercise--or
any waiver of--penal action, on November 11, 1997, the Federal Supreme Court
of Justice established jurisprudential thesis CLXVI/97. It determines the
propriety of using a writ of amparo against resolutions addressing the
failure to exercise, or any waivers of, penal action when the resulting
judgments might violate individual guarantees.
125. The State also notes that the use of an amparo offers
the combined advantages of a simple and prompt, or any other effective,
recourse, as set forth in Article 25 of the American Convention.
Accordingly, the State considers that the right thus guaranteed is immediately
protected; and that compliance with the Commission's respective recommendation
should not "be subject to the requirement that a specific provision be
introduced to regulate the instrument for impugning decisions of the Attorney
General's Office by means of the ordinary jurisdictional procedure."
126. On this point, the petitioners contend that the
jurisprudence in question is not applicable to the present case. To that
end, they quote a decision handed down on June 15, 1992 by the First Circuit's
First Collegial Court of Penal Matters relevant to direct amparo 1594/91, which
holds that procedural reforms cannot be applied retroactively. The
petitioners close by noting that the IACHR recommendation in this regard clearly
referred to legislative--not judicial--measures.
E. ANALYSIS AND FINAL CONCLUSIONS
127. The IACHR must decide whether the Mexican State has
taken adequate measures to carry out the recommendations noted in report No.
49/97. Its most recent communication--summarized above--as well as the
petitioners' corresponding observations, clearly indicate that the State did not
fully comply with the recommendations shown in Sections A, B and C between
October 24, 1997 and December 24 of that year, when the deadline for presenting
the requisite information expired; nor had it done so by January 21, 1998, the
date when the pertinent information was received at the IACHR. Quite the
contrary: the information that was furnished by Mexico during this
procedural stage precisely confirms the findings already noted by the Commission
in Chapter VI supra (paragraphs 91 through 94, and 97 through 105).
128. In fact, to this day the State has still not completed a
serious or impartial investigation of the events giving rise to the present
report. This is all the more serious in view of the time that has elapsed
since April 23, 1996--the date of the Supreme Court's decision. The lack
of efficacy displayed by the investigations currently under way is all too than
evident, given the lack of concrete results and the consequent impunity enjoyed
by the material and intellectual perpetrators of the acts.
129. As to the exercise of penal action, on the one hand the
State replies that in the case of the former Governor of Guerrero "it was
determined that no penal responsibility had been incurred in connection with the
Aguas Blancas incidents." On the other hand, the State reports in
that same communication that the Supreme Court of Justice itself found that
there had been a grave violation of individual guarantees" in the events
examined here; and that the persons responsible for such violation are Ruben
Figueroa Alcocer, "a Governor, on indefinite leave," and another seven
public officials belonging to the same regime.
130. But immediately thereafter, the report notes the
inapplicability of instituting impeachment proceedings against Figueroa Alcocer
in the Chamber of Deputies, owing to the provision which requires that any
violation--regardless of how flagrant the offense--must be of a
"systematic" nature. The report goes on to state that neither
was the Chamber of Deputies able to pursue the initiative aimed at depriving
Figueroa Alcocer of the protection granted him by the Constitution, for the sole
reason that the "hypothetical offense" he had committed lacked federal
scope.
131. The Nation's Congress, for its part, had also
scrutinized the possibility of launching impeachment proceedings against the
aforesaid former Governor, along with Jose Ruben Robles Catalan and Antonio
Alcocer Salazar. As noted by the Mexican State in its response, however,
the Congress decided that such proceedings were also out of order because the
State of Guerrero Law on Civil Servants' Responsibilities requires that
"the violation shall have been effected in a systematic manner."
The State goes on to explain that there were no grounds for linking Figueroa
Alcocer with grave offenses of a common nature.
132. The proceedings thus examined appear to be confused and
contradictory. The end result, however, is only too clear: the impunity
enjoyed by high-ranking public officials, whose responsibility in these somber
events was determined by Mexico's loftiest jurisdictional body. The
Commission therefore concludes that the State has not complied with its
recommendation, cited in section B above, to the effect that penal action be
taken. Moreover, the IACHR observes that the group of provisions examined
here tends to thwart unimpeded exercise of the right to a recourse or effective
remedy to judge and punish officials who violate human rights, shielded by the
powers and impunity conferred by their posts. The result is a clear-cut
violation of the State's obligation to respect and guarantee their rights--as
well as the right to judicial protection--which are set forth in Articles 1.1
and 25 of the American Convention.
133. Turning now to the question of indemnification, the
Commission observes that the State has still not carried out a study including
the detailed analysis of the individual conditions of the victims. In the
absence of that component, specifically indicated in paragraph 104 supra,
the Commission concludes that the indemnity amounts were not adequate.
134. As to the recommendation contained in Section D above,
the Commission takes note of the recent jurisprudential thesis upheld by
Mexico'_ Supreme Court of Justice which determines the applicability of an amparo
to combat the abstentions or delays of the Public Prosecutor's Office, as
discussed in the present report. That step by the Judiciary constitutes
welcome progress toward full efficacy of the rights enshrined in Articles 8 and
25 of the American Convention, and may very well constitute an alternative
means of compliance with eh Commission's recommendation. However, the
Commission notes that the above mentioned jurisprudence has not been applied to
the instant case, and therefore decides to confirm its recommendation, until
such remedy is proven to be "adequate and effective" in the terms of
Article 25 of the Convention. To that end, the Commission notes that
Article 197-A of the Ley de Amparo in effect in that country establishes:
The decision handed down
shall not affect the juridical situations resulting from those trials in which
the sentences have been issued.
135. Based on the reasons stated and developed in the present
report, and in order to achieve a firm juridical foundation, as required by the
right in question, as well as the verification and proof from the State, of a
remedy that is adequate and effective, the IACHR reaffirms its
recommendation contained in the aforementioned Section D, to the effect that
Article 21 of the Mexican Constitution be regulated by law. However, the
Commission shall be informed by the parties on the application of the amparo to
the instant case, so that it may be duly noted and made public, if that were the
case.
136. Based on the foregoing considerations and the provisions
of Article 51.3 of the American Convention and Article 48 of the Commission's
Regulations, the IACHR decides to reiterate the conclusions and recommendations
set forth in Chapters VII and VIII supra; to publish the present
report; and to include it in the IACHR Annual Report. Pursuant to
the rules that govern its mandate, the IACHR shall continue to evaluate the
measures adopted by the Mexican State with respect to the recommendations issued
in this report, until such time as full compliance by that State has been
achieved.
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