HRW decries lack of Colombia’s accountability over abuse in anti-government protests

Police beating a student newspaper reporter unconscious in Medellin. (Screenshot: Twitter)

Human Rights Watch decried police abuse in attempts to quell largely peaceful protests in Colombia last year and a lack of efforts to hold these cops accountable.

The HRW report confirms previous reports by local media, lawmakers and human rights organizations, and observations made by United Nations human rights officials.

Human Rights Watch

HRW Americas director Jose Miguel Vivanco was particularly concerned about “worrying accounts and evidence of abuses by Colombia’s police, including arbitrary detention and brutal beatings against peaceful protesters, detainees, and bystanders.”

None of the 104 cops formally accused of using unlawful excessive force have effectively been prosecuted while the cases of 32 of them, including the case of a police captain who murdered a student protester, were being prosecuted by the Military Justice System in violation of international human rights law.

HRW Americas director Jose Miguel Vivanco

HRW additionally expressed its concern about the expulsion of 60 Venezuelan and one Peruvian national that local human rights lawyers said were not allowed any legal assistance.

Human Rights Watch

HRW confirmed claims of the unlawful arrest of journalists covering the protests, highlighting the arrest and physical abuse of one female journalist who was covering a peaceful protest at Bogota’s El Dorado Airport and refused to surrender her cell phone.

“The officers took her to a police bus, she said, and pulled her aboard by her hair, then took her to an administrative detention unit, saying they were detaining her for her ‘protection,’ according to HRW.

The HRW is the latest in a series of reports on the police attempts to quell peaceful protests that are set to resume later this month.

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