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Washington, D.C. – The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights 
			(IACHR) filed an application before the Inter-American Court of 
			Human Rights (I/A Court H.R.) in Case 12.814, Orlando Edgardo 
			Olivares Muñoz and Others (Deaths at Vista Hermosa Prison), with 
			regard to Venezuela.
	
The case concerns the extrajudicial executions of Orlando Edgardo 
	Olivares Muñoz, Joel Rinaldi Reyes Nava, Orangel José Figueroa, Héctor 
	Javier Muñoz Valerio, Pedro Ramón López Chaurán, José Gregorio Bolívar Corro 
	and Richard Alexis Núñez Palma, when they were inmates at Vista Hermosa 
	Prison in Ciudad Bolívar. Those executions were carried out by members of 
	the National Guard during a raid at the prison on November 10, 2003. A 
	further 27 inmates were injured and are also regarded as victims in this 
	case.
	
The Commission concluded that the State had failed to adequately explain 
	the deaths and injuries that happened under its watch in a way that might 
	have defused its presumed international responsibility in such a context. 
	Further, the IACHR established that many elements of the case, taken 
	together and given the lack of appropriate investigation of events, indicate 
	the use of illegitimate, unnecessary and disproportionate force. The 
	Commission noted that the rights to life and personal integrity of the 
	executed and injured victims had been violated.
	
The IACHR further concluded that the State is liable to the injured 
	victims and to the families of victims who were killed for violations of 
	those victims’ rights to a fair trial and to judicial protection. The 
	Commission determined, among other aspects, that no thorough investigation 
	had been conducted, that the autopsies that had been conducted were 
	incompatible with the applicable international standards, that the context 
	of the deaths had not been examined, and that investigation of those 
	events—which remains pending—had not been timely. The Commission further 
	stated that the families of executed victims had seen their right to 
	psychological and moral integrity violated, given the suffering and the 
	anxiety caused by the deaths of their loved ones in the circumstances 
	described above, as well as their lack of access to truth and justice.
	
In the Merits Report, the IACHR recommended that the State of Venezuela 
	provide comprehensive reparations, both material and immaterial, for the 
	human rights violations declared in that report, including economic 
	financial and compensation; provide physical and mental healthcare necessary 
	for the rehabilitation of injured inmates and of relatives of the dead 
	victims in an agreed upon manner, if they so wish; and continue to pursue a 
	diligent, effective and timely criminal investigation to fully shed light on 
	those events, in order to identify anyone responsible for them and to impose 
	appropriate penalties for the human rights violations declared in the 
	report. Further, the IACHR recommended that the Venezuelan State implement 
	non-repetition mechanisms that contemplate the following aspects: ensuring 
	that both the law and current practices deny the military access to 
	penitentiary facilities to watch over inmates or to respond to alterations 
	of law and order; and to take any measures necessary to ensure that—even in 
	emergency situations—guards at detention facilities are civilians with 
	adequate training to work in prisons, including the applicable standards 
	regarding the use of force, in the terms described in the Merits Report.
	
The Inter-American Commission submitted the case to the Court’s 
	jurisdiction on April 1, 2019. The State reported the repeal of the rule 
	that enabled the military to guard detention facilities, but the IACHR 
	received no information about the effective implementation of such a change 
	in the rules. The Commission also received no information about compliance 
	with all the other recommendations held in the report, particularly those 
	concerning comprehensive reparations for the families of the victims and the 
	need to investigate events and to prosecute and punish anyone responsible 
	for them.
	
This case will allow the Inter-American Court of Human Rights to expand and consolidate its jurisprudence regarding States’ obligations that stem from their special duty to protect the rights of persons deprived of their liberty. In particular, the Court will be able to address the safeguards that need to be implemented when responding to alterations of public order in detention facilities, to ensure that the response—including any use of force—is in keeping with the duty to respect and protect the rights of persons deprived of their liberty and to prevent extrajudicial executions in such contexts. The Court will be able to assess whether the use of military forces to restore public order in the specific context of penitentiary facilities is compatible with the Convention. The Court will also be able to analyze more profoundly the standards to adequately explain the fate of persons held in the custody of the State and the direct implications of such standards for the duty of due diligence when investigating violent deaths of persons deprived of their liberty, particularly when such deaths happen at the hands of officers of the State.
A principal, autonomous body of the Organization of American States (OAS), the IACHR derives its mandate from the OAS Charter and the American Convention on Human Rights. The Inter-American Commission has a mandate to promote respect for and to defend human rights in the region and acts as a consultative body to the OAS in this area. The Commission is composed of seven independent members who are elected in an individual capacity by the OAS General Assembly and who do not represent their countries of origin or residence.
No. 092/19