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Nominee for UN Rights Chief Has Problematic Record

Nominee for UN Rights Chief Has Problematic Record On Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua; Watchdog Expresses 'Serious Concerns'


GENEVA, August 8, 2018 - In reaction to the news of Michelle Bachelet's nomination as the next UN human rights chief, the non-governmental human rights organization UN Watch said it had "serious concerns" over her spotty record on supporting human rights in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, and said it hoped to meet the former Chilean president to obtain clarifications.

"There's no question that the former Chilean president is a highly educated and intelligent politician, who also brings important negotiating skills," said Hillel C. Neuer, executive director of UN Watch.

"But she has a controversial record when it comes to her support for the human rights abusing governments who rule Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, and we need to know how she plans to address these urgent situations before her nomination is voted upon."

Neuer cited the following Bachelet actions that he said raise "troubling questions":
2018 Cuba Visit: Bachelet's visit to Cuba earlier this year, one of her last trips before leaving office, was strongly criticized by members of her own party and others, especially human rights activists. She met with the last military dictator of the Americas, Gen. Raúl Castro, without seeing any member of Cuba’s peaceful opposition.

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Opposition leader Rosa María Payá asked Bachelet to meet with human rights dissidents during her trip to the island, but that request was completely ignored. “She is rewarding those responsible for the longest dictatorship in the region,” said Payá.
"Her closeness to Havana is marked by an ideological nostalgia that clouds her view and her ability to recognize the lack of rights that mark the lives of Cubans," said prominent Cuban human rights blogger Yoani Sanchez.
"In each of her two terms," wrote Sanchez, "Bachelet avoided showing sympathy for the cause of Cuban dissidents and has declined any contact with the countless activists from the island who have visited her country in recent years. From her mouth, there has never been any condemnation of the political repression systematically carried out by Raúl Castro, even when the victims are women."
Praised Cuban Dictator: On Fidel Castro’s death, she called him “a leader for dignity and social justice in Cuba and Latin America,” a statement that was sharply criticized by Chilean political leaders across the spectrum, who said it showed insensitivity to victims of Cuban state repression.

• Praised Hugo Chavez: Bachelet eulogized Chavez — whose legacy in Venezuela is mass hunger, jailed opposition leaders and a failed state — for “his most profound love for his people and the challenges of our region to eradicate poverty and generate a better life for everyone and his profound love for Latin America.”

• Refusal to Condemn Maduro, Slammed by HRW: Bachelet was called out by Human Rights Watch's Latin America chief in July 2017 for her "serious error" of "failing to characterize the Nicolás Maduro regime as a dictatorship, or at least as a regime that broke the constitutional order," as affirmed by 20 countries in the OAS. "The most serious thing," said José Miguel Vivanco, "is that the president [Bachelet] continues to insist that the problem of Venezuela is the lack of dialogue, suggesting that there is a kind of shared responsibility."
• Quiet on Nicaragua Killings: Over the past months of the Ortega regime's killing of hundreds of protesters, Bachelet's twitter account shows not a single tweet mentioning Nicaragua or its victims.


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