What happens when the World says you live in a Dictatorship?

in #oas8 years ago (edited)

In 1948 the Organization of American States (OAS) was created for the purpose of regional solidarity and cooperation among its member states. The OAS began with 35 countries; now 34, as Cuba was suspended on violations of democracy.

Seeking to guarantee freedom and justice for the countries, an instrument called the Democratic Charter was signed by member states on September 11th, 2001 (an ironic coincidence). This charter was defined as a mandatory agreement to protect democracy through a series of specific measures and mechanisms, preventing anti-democratic governments from gaining influence in the region.

One the principal sponsors for the Democratic Charter was Venezuela. At that time new and unstable, the leftist government in Venezuela sought to protect its democratic administration from a possible coup. Through this agreement, the OAS established that democracy is not a privilege, but rather a right of every inhabitant of the Americas. Furthermore, five essential elements for democracy were detailed: periodic elections, protection of human rights, access to fair processes of law, a system of checks and balances in the public administration, and pluralism in the political system.

A few weeks ago, the Secretary General of the OAS, Luis Almagro, presented to the General Assembly a 132 page report on Venezuela and its violations to the democratic state. The report points out an institutional, political, social, health, and economic crisis in the country. The government led by Nicolas Maduro is effectively declared as a dictatorship in this report; as a result, it requests that the Democratic Charter be activated to reestablish freedom and justice to Venezuela.

If you wanna see more about the situation in Venezuela check this #SOSVenezuela video:

The General Assembly voted in favor of this request and measures are now being discussed. The situation becomes more dramatic with Maduro's rejection of this resolution and subsequent threat to leave the organization. President Maduro even accused the recently elected congress (containing mostly opposition politicians) of conspiracy, threatening to sue the elected supreme court representatives for treason.

Well, now what?

For the first time, no matter how difficult or even discouraging it seems, latin american countries and politicians are trying to follow the law. The use of diplomacy is actually getting political backing and some actions are being taken.

I believe in a civilized, diplomatic transition from the current Venezuelan regime to a truly democratic government, even though so many people only believe in change when blood is spilt. Technically speaking, the Americas have spoken: Venezuela is under a dictatorship. The plan for a resolution, one with a clear, non-belligerent path that causes no more pain or suffering for Venezuelan citizens, is awaited. If political pressure from the international community occurs (what all these nice institutions and organizations were intended for), there is a plausible path towards the ultimate court.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has already judged a dictator in the past, when humanitarian crises were made the emphasis of his crimes. The ICC's jurisdiction has been vetted and validated for cases involving crimes against humanity, a category under which the political persecutions, unlawful incarcerations, and current health and food crises in Venezuela could fall.

The conclusion of this story is that we have organizations, laws, and sometimes even the political will to find justice in this modern world. Now, the difficulty is determining who the main actor in the show is, and how relevant this justice is to them. Venezuela is small country that may seem unimportant to some, just another crisis in a distant land, but this place is my home, full of people I love and care about. People with hopes and ambitions like any other, people like you, people that want to have a good life. Venezuela is a place that deserves freedom and justice and the world is finally paying attention. I hope.

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I feel bad for Venezuela but let's be honest they chose this government. To this day there are venezuelan's that would fight for Chavez's legacy. These are the same people that are suffering under Maduro. Only Venezuelan's can fix there problem and only they should. I would agree with the international community or the U.S. pressuring venezuela for regime change but a military intervention is out of the question. We all know how that ends up.

Military intervention is out of question for sure. And yes, it is our people's fault, and only the people from Venezuela can actually do something to change the situation. But the gov controls through military power, jail, economic suppression of the middle class and other factors that people can not fight against properly. The international community is funding the military regime through trade and commerce agreements. Plus, there is an external force from Cuba puppeteering the high command of Maduro's office. That is the awareness that we want to spread for the world's eyes. Thanks for reading.

Like yourself I am a venezuelan living abroad, I have lost all hope of other countries doing anything about Maduro, they are happy as long as they get cheap oil.

The only way out is trough a referendum and if they prevent us from having that then all shit must hit the fan... I hope we don´t have to wait 60 years like Cuba did in order for our people to wake up!

Alberto, como podemos usar Steemit para ayudar a los venezolanos? una vez los invite a postear en elr eddit de /r/vzla pero me terminaron puteando, estaría bueno que más personas allá sepan que pueden utilizar la plataforma para obetner ganancias en crypto-moneda

Justamente estoy con esa idea ya varios dias. Yo tengo contacto con bloggers alla, pero no todo escriben en ingles. Seria interesante ver si hay espacio para hacer contenido en español. Tu donde vives? tengo ahora un proyecto que tal vez seria interesante si quieres participar. Estoy haciendo una serie de videos para crear awareness sobre la situacion en el pais. Abrazos.

ICC is not a place where human rights or any other "noble" cause is to be pursued. It is just another instrument that acts on political will. Whose political will is the question?
Now if Venezuela hasn't signed up for ICC then it has no jurisdiction.

Well I think so far what the ICC has done something is when the case is a hunmanitarian type. Human Rights in the very basic notion is the last limit we can try to appeal to political will in general. And Venezuela did sign the treaty.
Thanks for reading.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/States_parties_to_the_Rome_Statute_of_the_International_Criminal_Court

Have you read the Statute of the ICC?

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