From Nascar Zero's link.
If you actually read the report and compare it to reports from before Chavez was in power, you will find that things are better now and have been improving. That's in spite of anti-Chavez protestors who bring guns to demonstrations and interference from the United States.
Nascar Zero here would return, undemocratically, the elites who were previously in power. They tortured, killed, maimed and beat people with impunity. They controlled all of the press, state and private, so that news reports never got out. They kept the poor uneducated, unhealthy, and terrorised.
Meanwhile, Nascar Zero is to thick to admit that his country, which has been actively trying to remove Chavez from power, has perpetrated far more human rights abuses as well as breaking laws and removing democratically elected leaders from power while supporting military juntas and propping up some of the worst murderers that the world has ever seen.
Nascar James...liar and supporter of human rights abuses all over the world just as long as he gets cheap oil.
which included the use of firearms by some protestors.
Hugo Chávez was democratically elected president in 1998 and, after the approval of a new constitution in 1999, was re-elected for a further six-year term in 2000.
His administration committed itself to ending the corruption associated with the ruling political class and addressing longstanding social injustices, which have made Venezuela one of most unequal societies in the region.
President Chávez has maintained considerable support, particularly amongst Venezuela’s poor and excluded, where social projects have been targeted.
The confrontation between the government and the opposition has been characterised by violent discourse, with the private media explicitly supporting the opposition
In April 2002 the confrontation between the opposition and the government led to wide-scale political violence and a short lived coup d’etat forcing the president from office for 48 hours, leaving at least 50 people dead and many more wounded. The human rights violations committed in this context have not been clarified and virtually all those allegedly responsible have avoided prosecution.
At the end of 2002 the opposition once again tried to force President Chávez from office with an indefinite national strike, particularly affecting Venezuela’s crucial oil industry.
During 2003 there were frequent rumours of impending coup d’etats and continuing polarization - the government accused the opposition of conspiring by non-constitutional means to bring down the democratically elected government, such as occurred in April 2002.
Despite this, the political negotiations between the sides contributed to a reduction in reports of political violence.
The opposition required 2.4 million signatures to trigger the referendum, and claim they collected 3.2 million, but the electoral authority’s preliminary decision recognised only 1.8 million as valid, requiring more than 800,000 to be re-authenticated and the remaining signatures were ruled invalid. The OAS and the Carter Center said that they had "some discrepancies with the CNE over the verification criteria"(4), but called on the opposition to remain within the process for establishing the re-authentication procedures.
On 27 February a summit of G15 leaders from the developing world was held in central Caracas. The opposition called a demonstration rejecting the decision of the CNE.
While the opposition and the government blame each other for the rapid manner in which the demonstrations led to violent confrontation, over the following days there were street protests in many different parts of Venezuela. The majority of demonstrations were by opposition supporters protesting at the CNE decision (which was finally made public on 2 March)
Many demonstrations rapidly became violent confrontations between the Guardia Nacional (GN), National Guard(5) and groups of opposition supporters using barricades, stones, Molotov cocktails and firework rockets. There were also several reports of protesters using firearms. In this context, there were clearly legitimate public security concerns, which the authorities had a duty to respond to.
(pre-Chavez)These types of human rights violations committed by police and security forces have occurred in Venezuela over many years, particularly in situations of mass public demonstrations or civil disturbances. In 1989, in what is known as the "Caracazo", over 250 people were killed in the context of security forces’ response to massive street protests and civil disorder. In 1992 the security forces intervention in the Catia detention centre led to the deaths of over 60 inmates.
In the civil disturbances of 27 February to 4 March 2004 Amnesty International recognises that wide scale indiscriminate or extrajudicial killings were avoided in the face of frequently violent demonstrations.
While many opposition supporters took part in legitimate peaceful demonstrations, a significant number of these protests were violent with the use of barricades, stones, Molotov cocktails, and fireworks and, in some cases, firearms. It is the duty of the state to guarantee public order, respecting the rule of law in accordance with international standards.
If you actually read the report and compare it to reports from before Chavez was in power, you will find that things are better now and have been improving. That's in spite of anti-Chavez protestors who bring guns to demonstrations and interference from the United States.
Nascar Zero here would return, undemocratically, the elites who were previously in power. They tortured, killed, maimed and beat people with impunity. They controlled all of the press, state and private, so that news reports never got out. They kept the poor uneducated, unhealthy, and terrorised.
Meanwhile, Nascar Zero is to thick to admit that his country, which has been actively trying to remove Chavez from power, has perpetrated far more human rights abuses as well as breaking laws and removing democratically elected leaders from power while supporting military juntas and propping up some of the worst murderers that the world has ever seen.
Nascar James...liar and supporter of human rights abuses all over the world just as long as he gets cheap oil.