OEA/Ser.L/V/II.45 REPORT ON THE SITUATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN NICARAGUA (Findings
of the “on-site” observation in the
Republic of Nicaragua October
3 – 12, 1978 CHAPTER III THE RIGHT TO PERSONAL INTEGRITY1 A.
Constitutional regulations and general background
Article 52 of the Constitution of Nicaragua prohibits “every act of
cruelty or torture against persons detained, awaiting, or in the course of being
tried or serving a sentence. The violation of this guarantee constitutes a
crime”. Article 197 establishes that “In no case may the decree of
suspension or restriction affect (the following guarantees) ... the prohibition
against acts of cruelty or torture and infamous punishment.”
In early August, shortly before the armed struggle had begun, the
Conference of Catholic Bishops of Nicaragua published a document calling for
peace and reconciliation. In this letter the Nicaraguan bishops pointed out,
among other things, that:
The number of wounded, imprisoned, tortured, and disappeared persons is
endless and is increasing daily. The
Special Commission has since received overwhelming testimony that, as the
Conference of Bishops suggested, such guarantees are not fulfilled in practice. B.
The situation seen by the Special Commission
As is mentioned in another part of this report, the Commission visited
twelve detention sites located in Managua and in the interior of the country.
These visits allowed the Special Commission to enter into direct contact with a
large number of prisoners, interview them privately, take photographs of them,
as well as receive their testimony.
During the conversations with the prisoners, the Special Commission
repeatedly received charges of physical and psychological torture. The great
majority of the prisoners alleged that while under detention they had been
severely beaten by rifle butts, pistol-whipped, beaten with fists and kicked. On
several occasions, the prisoners, very frightened that they might be seen by the
guards, showed scars on their heads and other parts of their bodies, black and
blue marks, and broken ribs and bones. The Commission also took note of the
easily visible scars on the wrists of many prisoners in different locales of the
country who stated that they had been hung by their arms. The Special
Commission's attention was drawn to the similarity of the scars.
The Commission also received claims related to the application of
electrical shocks through the use of electric prongs or cables connected to
generators, batteries or “jumper cables”. The places where the claimants
alleged that electric shock was most used as a means of torture were the
National Guard Command Posts in Masaya and Jinotepe and the National Security
Office of Managua.
Many prisoners informed the Commission that at the moment of arrest they
were blindfolded, and upon arrival at the National Security Office, hoods were
placed over their heads which was not removed for a long period of time. This
claim was confirmed by a Captain from the Security Office who admitted that the
prisoners often arrived blindfolded with their own shirts and that afterwards
they were hooded for the interrogation process.
The Commission received claims that various prisoners had been hooded and
held incommunicado for prolonged periods of time, often passing days without
water or food. Other prisoners said that during the period in which they were
held incommunicado they were striped naked and kept in a room in which the air
conditioning was set for the coldest temperature.
Many of the prisoners complained that not only were they frequently
threatened with death but also their relatives. In some cases they alleged that
these threats were carried out by guards while they were held at gunpoint.
In various instances the Commission could attest to the fact that some
prisoners had bullet wounds and that they were in a precarious state of health.
A fourteen year old youth in the prison in Masaya had a bullet lodged in his leg
and he had not seen a doctor since entering jail. In the same prison, as well as
in the Police Jail in Managua, among the common and political prisoners there
were two persons who appeared from their behavior to be mentally deranged. In
all the jails visited, the prisoners alleged that they rarely saw a doctor, but
that when they did see one he was giving instructions as to the voltage of
electricity to be applied during the torture, or examining the tortured persons
to see if they could resist any more shocks.
Time and again the Commission could see that hundreds of persons were
detained in places that were clearly inadequate, and jeopardized their health
and welfare. The Commission observed that scores of people were being held in
cells with inadequate ventilation and unacceptable conditions of hygiene. One
cell in the Police Jail in Managua contained no sanitary facilities and the
prisoners had to use a bucket for their physical necessities. Various persons
informed the Commission that this cell, known as “the tiny one,” had been
filled with so many prisoners that they could scarcely move. The Special
Commission observed a similar situation in Jinotepe.
The following is an account of what one Nicaraguan experienced in the
jails in his country. This case has been selected from among the numerous
complaints received because it vividly illustrates the various methods of
torture which were described:
I was captured on Saturday, the 17th of June of this year, at
8:30 a.m. at my workplace without a warrant from a duly constituted authority
and brutally beaten. I was taken from my workplace along with the office
equipment and my automobile which was undergoing repairs, as well as two cars
belonging to clients. I was taken to the Security Offices where they began to
torture me physically and psychologically, beating me with clubs and fists,
kicking me in the spinal column and subjecting me to intensive interrogations
about things I knew nothing about. They also forced me to do physical exercise
to the point of exhaustion, and when my stamina completely gave out, I was
savagely beaten and they forced me by means of kicks and lows to continue the
exercises. During the day they kept me in a cold cell and at night in a room
with the air conditioning turned to the coldest temperature. For ten days I was
kept without food and they did not give me water. Because of the torture I spent
ten days urinating blood and without being able to have a bowel movement. I
asked on a Friday that I be taken to the bathroom which they did not allow until
Sunday. I urinated only with difficulty and could only defecate in a bucket when
they wanted to pass it to me. I still have wounds from the blows and acts of
torture on my genitals—I was made to lie mouth down, naked, and then someone
stood on my buttocks forcing my genitals against the floor. The psychological
torture consisted of being taken out and told that I was going to be shot Friday
night. During thirteen days I was kept handcuffed and beaten, kicked and forced
to do exercises, all this while I was not being interrogated. Then during each
of the interrogation sessions, which were long and tiring, I was again beaten
and humiliated.
I remained in the basement of the jail three days. After having been
there a week, I was made to wash the shirt which they had used as a blindfold,
and then it was replaced, soaking wet, so that after three days with it over my
eyes, my face was peeling because the soap they had provided was a detergent.
Afterward I had difficulties in urinating and defecating, passing blood in both
cases.
I was obliged to sign a declaration without knowing what it contained. I
was then taken on the 30th of June to the Police Judge where, under
coercion, with false witnesses favorable to the Government, who were inebriated,
a declaration was drawn up with which they sent me before the judge. The same
day, the 30th, I was transferred to the Central Police prison where I
was taken to a common cell where I was again stripped and beaten by the guards
who had been put in charge of the cell by the penal authorities.
Once they had stripped me of what I was wearing, I was taken to a cell
known as “the tiny one”, which does not haven even the minimal conditions of
hygiene nor the most basic services. I was kept in the cell from the 30th
of June until the 28th of September when I was transferred to the
“Model Jail”. During this time I was subjected to threats, psychological
tortures, and direct death threats; was deprived of family visits, medical
attention, and services of hygiene, such as potable water; was forced to urinate
in a common can also used by 10 or 11 other persons, taken to the lavatory when
the guard wanted to take me and not when it was necessary, and forced to put up
with the need to defecate for up to two hours, and the often unhealthy
conditions of the can used for urinating.
Throughout all this time I was without drinkable water, without any
circulation of air, without any sun, and with water leaking into the cell since
it was located between two bathrooms.
During this entire period I never ate the prison food because it was
totally unhealthy and of the worst quality, based on rice and beans, and
sometimes noodles, all in a decomposed state and wadded into a single mass.
Whenever there was some activity in the street they kept me from going to
the bathroom, and they placed guards in the doorway of the cell aiming their
weapons at us, loaded and with the safety catch released, ready at any moment to
fire, having previously threatened to do so, because they told us that they had
orders to fire upon whatever movement or shots they heard. Often while I was in
the Central Police Jail I was deprived of visits from my family.
My family was also threatened by the head guard of our prison section;
furthermore, my entire family was subjected to a check, as were their houses,
which resulted in a complete search by large bands of armed personnel three
months later.
I was also under pressure from the constant watch set up at my business,
my clients were frightened, and companies with which I was working were under a
lot of pressure to fire me. The workers were threatened and I was forced to
close the business, thus leaving my family completely without support. Finally,
due to the constant pressure, they were forced to leave their homes.
In addition, legal steps involving the right to protection and legal
guarantees were presented with no effect during the thirteen days of my unjust
and arbitrary detention in the Security Center; the searching of my workplace;
the actions against my own physical security; the taking of private goods such
as three automobiles and office equipment; putting a wire-tap on the telephone;
and the most serious abuse, being subjected to violent torture over a period of
thirteen days. I was kept from sleeping, without food, without the elementary
means of hygiene, without medical attention, and under sub-human conditions.
Furthermore, the delay in the functioning of justice due to judicial
laws, because justice delayed is not justice. I am enduring the consequences of
prison even now since my family has been thrown out of the house and I have been
thrown out of work.
During all the time that I was handcuffed to the wall, and thrown onto
the ground, someone stood on my stomach, chest, arms and legs pressing al their
weight against me. Thirty days after leaving the Security Center my spinal
column and my head still ache, and I still get fevers and headaches, at times
not being able to exercise since my spinal column bothers me.
Finally, the Commission would like to state that it informed some of the
Commandants of the prisons of the names of the persons who were pointed out as
the torturers, receiving assurances from the Commandants that measures would be
taken accordingly; but to date, the Commission has not been informed of any
charges against any member of the National Guard responsible for torture or any
other unacceptable abuses.
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Article I of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man
states that: “Every human being has the right to life, liberty and the
security of his person.” The third paragraph of Article XXV of this
Declaration points out that every individual has the “right to humane
treatment during the time he is in custody.” |