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Sep 23, 2015

HRF pres. on the arrest of his cousin, Leopoldo Lopez, in Venezuela

HRF pres. on the arrest of his cousin, Leopoldo Lopez, in Venezuela
HRF pres. on the arrest of his cousin, Leopoldo Lopez, in Venezuela

Leopoldo L├│pez is a prisoner of conscienceтАФand also a threat to leftist autocrat Nicolas Maduro.

By Thor Halvorssen

HRF president Thor Halvorssen published the following article in The Daily Beast upon the jailing of his cousin, Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo L├│pez, after a sham trial engineered to eliminate him as a political threat.

тАЬTheyтАЩre either going to have to kill me or imprison me because IтАЩm not leaving and IтАЩm not giving up.тАЭ ThatтАЩs what Leopoldo L├│pez, VenezuelaтАЩs most prominent opposition leader, told me in his Caracas home after the policeman assigned to protect him, Carlos Mendoza, was shot at twelve times and killed as he waited for L├│pez in his SUV in what was a failed assassination attempt against the latter.

Ten years on from that conversation L├│pez has survived several attempts on his lifeтАФthe Venezuelan government has typically claimed they are botched robberies. He is now in prison and was declared last Friday Amnesty InternationalтАЩs first official Prisoner of Conscience from Venezuela in living memory. But what the media covering L├│pezтАЩs sham trial and sentencing have failed to appreciate is that the governmentтАЩs objective is to extinguish L├│pezтАЩs life force.

Leopoldo is my first cousin (he is the only son of my motherтАЩs only sister). He was sentenced last week to the maximum sentence possible for allegedly having engaged in arson and incitement to violence. L├│pez was railroaded. According to a credible Venezuelan polling firm, L├│pez leads in Venezuelan electoral polls by 43.8% in a one-to-one match-up against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, the successor to, and disciple of, the deceased socialist strongman Hugo Chavez.

Maduro is terrified of an electoral contest where VenezuelaтАЩs poor overwhelmingly vote to elect as president a man who rejects the kleptocracy and its hateful revolution. L├│pez is in prison precisely and only because he is among the few opposition leaders with an unwavering commitment to consistently denouncing the government as what it is: a dictatorship that must come to an end.

The prison sentence was very clear to underline that L├│pez is disqualified from running for election. If you add this new disqualification to ChavezтАЩs previous order to bar Leopoldo (in 2005), he has been disqualified from electoral office for a total of 23 years and 9 months.

The government has so far failed to drive L├│pez into exile despite several sub rosa approaches including a scenario where L├│pez тАЬescapesтАЭ from prison and is allowed to exit the country unharmed. Maduro has also tried to force him out of the country in an тАЬexchangeтАЭ whereby president Obama frees a Puerto Rican separatist in order to secure LopezтАЩs freedom. L├│pez would have none of it.

After his recent sentencing, L├│pez was defiant and he managed to handwrite a message to his supporters promising that he will тАЬnever tireтАЭ in his struggle for a free Venezuela. The stubborn refusal of L├│pez to give up has now pushed the Venezuelan government to severe measures with regard to his confinement. The objectives of the Maduro government, now that L├│pez is sentenced to almost 14 years in prison, are revealed by the conditions of his incarceration.

Most egregiously, L├│pez has been forbidden to see a medical doctor since the day of his arrest 18 months ago. Despite dozens of requests by my aunt and my cousins, no blood tests have been permitted, let alone a urine test to determine if L├│pez is affected by an infection or imbalance. Leopoldo was a mountain climber and triathlete prior to his arrest, but nobody knows what physical ailment he could be suffering from at presentтАФat 44, he is no spring chicken.

Viktor Yushchenko, the former Ukrainian president and leader of the 2004 Orange Revolution, sent a public letter to L├│pez in prison, expressing his admiration and support, which was echoed by the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights (PDF), U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (PDF), U.N. Committee Against Torture (PDF), 33 former Ibero-American presidents and prime ministers (PDF), the European Parliament (PDF), Human Rights Watch, International Crisis Group, and many more.

Yushchenko subsequently contacted me with urgency to warn me about the possibility that L├│pez might be poisoned while in prison. Yushchenko, who was famously the target of a Russian assassination plot using dioxin, explained told me that there are multiple ways the Venezuelan regime could slowly destroy L├│pezтАЩs physical integrity. ItтАЩs not like the Venezuelan government doesnтАЩt have PutinтАЩs unquestionable support. Equally problematically, CubaтАЩs police state (which supervises VenezuelaтАЩs security services) has perfected the art of breaking political prisoners so that, once released, they are a shadow of their former selves.

Beyond the worry over LeopoldoтАЩs physical integrity there is the urgent concern about the governmentтАЩs obvious plan to destroy his mental health. In violation of international treaties on the treatment of prisoners, Leopoldo is held in Ramo Verde military prison where there are two buildingsтАФAnnex A and Annex B. In Annex A there are 179 prisoners in several dozen cells. In Annex B, a four storey building with dozens of cells, there is only one prisoner: Leopoldo. He is held in a 6 foot by 6 foot holding cell containing only a bed. There is no chair in his cell. He is allowed only one book, the Holy Bible, whereas prior to the sentencing he had a library of more than 100 books. Leopoldo is not allowed any paper, no pencils, no notebooks. He is not allowed to study. A practicing Catholic, Leopoldo has been refused access to a priest for 18 months and only on three occasions has he been allowed to attend Catholic mass.

In theory, solitary confinement is reserved for either prisoners who have disciplinary problems or prisoners who are extremely dangerous. In the eyes of Maduro, Lopez lacks discipline inasmuch as he refuses to bend to the will of the revolutionary government. But Lopez has only engaged in peaceful protests and his focus is non-violent action and his crime is to think differently. Solitary confinement for Lopez is an egregious violation of his human rights and is aimed at destroying his mental health.

The isolation of being in an empty building, with no contact (not even with prison guardsтАФLopez is watched by twelve cameras in Annex B), nothing to read, nothing to write with, and the impossibility of having any meaningful interaction is under every conceivable psychological metric considered tortureтАФcruel and inhuman treatment (PDF). Lights are turned off at 7:30 p.m. and Lopez isnтАЩt even permitted a candle. He must bear the darkness until daybreak. Without reading material or human contact the brain atrophies. Without conversation the mind decays. Isolation leads to anxiety, depression, anger, hopelessness and psychosis.

Nelson MandelaтАЩs autobiography details his opinion of such conditions: тАЬI found solitary confinement the most forbidding aspect of prison life. There was no end and no beginning; there is only oneтАЩs own mind, which can begin to play tricksтАж I had nothing to read, nothing to write on or with, no one to talk to. The mind begins to turn in on itself, and one desperately wants something outside oneself on which to fix oneтАЩs attention.тАЭ Another Nobel laureate, Liu Xiaobo, is currently in solitary confinement in China, where his wife, Liu Xia, has suffered terribly herself isolated under house arrest.

Millions of people hope that Leopoldo, who stands as an immovable oak against the winds of VenezuelaтАЩs tyranny, will survive the harsh conditions of his imprisonment in what remains of MaduroтАЩs presidency. The alternative, that LeopoldoтАЩs brilliant, courageous mind will decay, is a frightening prospect and underlines the need to urgently protest his false conviction and imprisonment.

Thor Halvorssen is president and CEO of Human Rights Foundation and founder of the Oslo Freedom Forum.

Read the original article in The Daily Beast.

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