Arbitrary detention and ill-treatment of human rights defender Henderson Maldonado
On 1 April 2020, human rights defender Henderson Maldonado was released from the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 in Barquisimeto, Lara, Venezuela.
On 31 March 2020, Henderson Maldonado was violently detained when engaging in talks with the police on behalf of a group of health workers and patients with kidney diseases who were peacefully protesting in front of the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 in Barquisimeto, Lara, Venezuela. He was beaten by the police and informed that he would be charged with contempt and disturbing the peace on 1 April 2020. The human rights defender was held handcuffed to a pillar inside the building of the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 for more than 12 hours.
Henderson Maldonado is a lawyer and human rights defender from Venezuela. He is an active member of human rights organisations Movimiento Vino Tinto, Red de derechos humanos del estado Lara, Civilis Derechos Humanos and Programa Venezolano de Educación Acción en Derechos Humanos. He is well known for his work defending the rights of more than 200 persons subjected to state repression in the context of public protests, including professors, trade unionists, artists and the families of those killed as a consequence of police violence.
On 1 April 2020, human rights defender Henderson Maldonado was released from the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 in Barquisimeto, Lara, Venezuela. He was handcuffed to a pillar inside the Bolivarian Guard building for more than 12 hours before being taken to a hearing at the 1st Iribarren Municipal Tribunal. There, he was charged with ‘contempt’ and ‘incitement to violence’ under Articles 218 and 285 of Penal Code. Although he was released, a number of precautionary measures were imposed on him, including an obligation to present before the authorities every 30 days and other movement restrictions.
Henderson Maldonado had been detained on 31 March 2020 after trying to assist a group of health care workers and patients with kidney disease who were peacefully protesting for access to fuel. Following his arrest, he was violently beaten by police.
While Front Line Defenders welcomes the release of Henderson Maldonado it condemns the charges against him and the restrictions on his freedom of movement. Front Line Defenders remains concerned at the criminalisation faced by human rights defenders in Venezuela and calls on the authorities to ensure a safe and enabling environment for the defence of human rights in the country.
On 31 March 2020, Henderson Maldonado was violently detained when engaging in talks with the police on behalf of a group of health workers and patients with kidney diseases who were peacefully protesting in front of the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 in Barquisimeto, Lara, Venezuela. He was beaten by the police and informed that he would be charged with contempt and disturbing the peace on 1 April 2020. The human rights defender was held handcuffed to a pillar inside the building of the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 for more than 12 hours.
Henderson Maldonado is a lawyer and human rights defender from Venezuela. He is an active member of human rights organisations Movimiento Vino Tinto, Red de derechos humanos del estado Lara, Civilis Derechos Humanos and Programa Venezolano de Educación Acción en Derechos Humanos. He is well known for his work defending the rights of more than 200 persons subjected to state repression in the context of public protests, including professors, trade unionists, artists and the families of those killed as a consequence of police violence.
On the morning of 31 March 2020, Henderson Maldonado observed a peaceful protest held by health workers and patients with kidney diseases in front of the National Bolivarian Guard Detachment 121 in Barquisimeto, Lara. The protesters were demanding access to car fuel to allow for the provision of health services. The defender approached the police asking them to engage with the protesters. Given the lack of response from the police, he started filming the protest to raise awareness online on the importance of car fuel for health workers and those who need dialysis treatment.
When the police realised that Henderson Maldonado was filming, they aggressively forced him to erase the video. He was then taken inside the National Guard building under the pretext that he was disturbing peace, and was told to give away his phone for inspection. The defender refused to do so, after which he was formally detained for contempt and disturbing the peace. After being detained, Henderson Maldonado was violently beaten. Moreover, a police Colonel verbally abused him saying that he was a member of an NGO working against the interests of Venezuela, and destroyed his mobile phone.
Henderson Maldonado was informed that he would be formally charged with contempt and disturbing the peace on 1 April 2020. The defender was held handcuffed to a pillar inside the National Guard building for over 12 hours. He received visits from his family and members of his human rights network. A human rights defender who was able to visit Henderson Maldonado heard from a soldier that “he would not get out, he would be killed”. The case is being closely monitored by the Lara Delegate of the Public Defender’s Office, who has visited Henderson Maldonado.
Local human rights defenders express their concern for the life and physical integrity of Henderson Maldonado, since several officers from Detachment 121 have been named in the complaints concerning violence, torture and killings of protesters that Henderson Maldonado lodged in the past, many of which are still under investigation. The defender has been previously threatened by an officer from Detachment 121 whom he had denounced for altering police registers.
The work of human rights defenders is of even greater importance at a time when concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic are growing rapidly. Henderson Maldonado was detained when trying to safeguard the right to life of patients with kidney diseases, who are at higher risk of death if infected with the virus, and need safe transportation to hospital facilities, which requires car fuel.
Instead of being criminalised, human rights defenders working to safeguard human rights in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and minimise its impact on the most vulnerable groups should be recognised and protected by the authorities. Front Line Defenders strongly condemns the arbitrary detention and ill-treatment of Henderson Maldonado and expresses its concern over the hostile environment for human rights defenders in Venezuela.