NicaNotes: UN Human Rights Council Again Supports US Regime Change Plans for Nicaragua

By Alfred de Zayas and John Perry

[This article has also been published in Counterpunch, Popular Resistance, Dissident Voice, Resumen Latinoamericano, Orinoco Tribune, Black Agenda Report, and Global Research] 

Alfred de Zayas is Professor of International Law at the Geneva School of Diplomacy and a former UN Independent Expert on International Order (2012-18). John Perry is based in Masaya, Nicaragua, and writes for the London Review of Books, Covert Action, Council on Hemispheric Affairs, Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting, Counterpunch, The Grayzone and other publications.

Nicaraguans march for peace in the city of León.

When the United Nations sets up a “commission of inquiry,” it can result in a powerful analysis of violations of human rights law, such as the one appointed in 2021 to examine Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian territories and its apartheid practices. But other commissions can become political platforms aimed at demonizing a particular government by crafting narratives that give the semblance of objectivity, while suppressing all evidence that contradicts the prevailing geopolitical consensus. The ultimate aim of such commissions is not to investigate or to provide advice or technical assistance, but to support a campaign of destabilization. They make it plausible to the world at large that the human rights of the population of the targeted country are being grossly violated and that the doctrine of “responsibility to protect” (known as R2P) should be activated.  In other words, regime change, even by force, would be preferable to inaction. This vulgar weaponization of human rights is a favorite device in the tool kit of some hegemonial states.  It is aided and abetted by non-governmental organizations financed by the hegemons and disseminated by the echo chambers of the mainstream media.

A case in point is the work of the UN’s “group of human rights experts on Nicaragua” (GHREN), appointed to investigate alleged violations in the country in the period since April 2018. The date is chosen because it marked the start of violent protests, which quickly turned into an attempted coup d’état. The violence lasted for three months and left over 250 people dead, including opponents of the government, government officials and sympathizers, and 22 police officers.

The group’s first report, in February of 2023, ran to 300 pages. It appeared to be very detailed: for example, it included a 9-page case study of events in one Nicaraguan city, Masaya, during the period April-July 2018. Yet despite this detail, the GHREN ignored the assignment which had been set for its work, which explicitly required it to investigate “all” relevant events. The report either omitted completely, or mentioned only very briefly, the many extreme acts of violence by those involved in the coup attempt. Instead, it focused only on alleged human rights violations by government officials and, in collecting evidence, the group gave preferential access to a number of NGOs which are highly critical of the Nicaraguan government.

The Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition, a group made up of organizations and individuals in the United States and Canada, Europe and Latin America, including Nicaragua itself, responded in detail to the GHREN’s work. Its letter calling for the report to be withdrawn was signed by prominent human rights experts, 85 different organizations and over 450 individuals. Despite the number of people who were in support, the letter and detailed evidence submitted received no response whatever.

Indeed, the GHREN continued its work, and in February of 2024 published a further report, this time without even passing mention of opposition violence. It made no reference to the Coalition’s submissions: it was as if the criticisms of the first report and the evidence substantiating them never existed.

As one of the human rights experts who was critical of the first report by the GHREN, and as one of the organizers of the Coalition response, we have worked together to produce a second letter, which has been sent to the GHREN and to the President and senior officials of the UN Human Rights Council. This new letter says that the latest report is “methodologically flawed, biased and should never have been published.”  It contends that “excluding pertinent information submitted to the study group is a breach of responsible methodology, a violation of the ethos of every judicial or quasi-judicial investigation.” The letter is signed by ten prominent human rights experts and activists, 47 organizations and over 250 individuals in Nicaragua, USA and Europe, many with long experience in Nicaragua.  (The Coalition is continuing to collect signatures, which will be sent in follow-up at a later date.)

What is wrong with the GHREN’s latest report? Many examples of bias and omissions can be found within its 19 pages. One is its reference to the amnesty announced by the Nicaraguan government in 2019 for those detained and found guilty of crimes, including even homicide, during the coup attempt. The amnesty was an outcome of negotiations with the Catholic Church and others, aimed at achieving reconciliation in the aftermath of the coup attempt. However, the GHREN portrays the amnesty as benefiting only the state itself, when in fact its main beneficiaries were more than 400 opposition figures, including coup organizers, who had been convicted of violent offences. One of the most prominent beneficiaries, Medardo Mairena, had organized several murderous attacks on police stations: the worst, in the small town of Morrito, led to five deaths and nine police officers being kidnapped and beaten. Despite his crimes, Mairena was portrayed as a victim by the GHREN: he was even one of the opposition figures invited to address the UN Human Rights Council in July of 2023.

A second example is the report’s treatment of migration. Initially, the report claimed that 935,065 people had left Nicaragua, i.e., that one in eight of the population had “fled the country since 2018.” This was the figure that received publicity, even though it was absurdly high. Within a few days the GHREN realized their mistake and revised their report, so that the version currently on the website says instead that 271,740 Nicaraguans have become asylum seekers and 18,545 Nicaraguans are recognized as refugees worldwide (fewer than 1 in 20 of the population). But the report still gives no attention to the evidence that most migration from Nicaragua in the past five years has been economic in motivation, given the effects of US coercive measures on the country, and the economic downturns which resulted from the coup attempt itself and from the subsequent Covid-19 pandemic. It also takes no account of the fact that many migrants return to Nicaragua after periods of working abroad. In other words, even the lower figure likely exaggerates the numbers of Nicaraguans who (in the report’s original words) “fled the country.”

The most egregious bias in the report is its treatment of opposition figures as victims. Yes, it is true that there have been arrests, imprisonments and the expulsion from the country (with US agreement and facilitation) of many of those arrested. But the GHREN’s report assumes that those affected are innocent of any crime and are merely being persecuted as opponents of the government. It feeds the narrative of Washington, its allies and corporate media that what happened in 2018 was peaceful protest, when in practice the violent coup attempt affected millions of Nicaraguans, with lives lost, public buildings destroyed, homes set on fire and scores of government officials and sympathizers kidnapped, tortured, wounded or killed. The GHREN ignored the plentiful, detailed evidence from the Coalition which presented a more accurate narrative of what happened.

It is vital that the UN Human Rights Council pay attention to these criticisms and thoroughly review its dealings with Nicaragua. It is clear that the current expert group has totally failed in its assignment to consider “all” relevant events since April 2018 and is behaving in a completely unprofessional manner. Its work should be stopped, and a genuine attempt should be made to work with the Nicaraguan government based on a proper understanding of the needs of its people and of their experience of the 2018 coup attempt. Above all, it should urge the removal of the unilateral coercive measures (wrongly referred to as “sanctions”, implying that they are legitimate), which are worsening conditions for Nicaraguans, not improving them.

Coda by Alfred de Zayas

The dysfunctional situation described above is not without precedent.  During my six years as Independent Expert on International Order (2012-18), I myself observed manipulations and double standards, and duly informed the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) that in my considered opinion some of my colleague rapporteurs were not rigorously observing their independent status and our code of conduct, particularly Article 6, which requires all rapporteurs to give due weight to all available information and to pro-actively seek explanations from all stakeholders, including the government of the state in questions, respecting the over-arching rule of audiatur et altera pars (“let the other side be heard as well”).

When in the summer of 2017 I sought an invitation to visit Venezuela on official mission, I encountered opposition within OHCHR, which attempted to dissuade me.  When I did receive an invitation, thus breaking a 21-year absence of UN rapporteurs from Venezuela, I was surprised to receive letters from three major NGOs who actually asked me not to go, because I was not the “pertinent” rapporteur.  Evidently these NGOs and some officials at OHCHR were “concerned” with my independence, as already demonstrated in 12 reports to the General Assembly and Human Rights Council, and feared accordingly, that I would write my own report on Venezuela, which would not necessarily support the ubiquitous US narrative.

It became clear to me that some officials at OHCHR were nervous that I would actually conduct a fair investigation, speak to all stakeholders on the ground and then make my own judgment.  Indeed, I read and digested all the relevant reports of Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. When I was on the ground in Venezuela I fact-checked these and other reports, which I found to be seriously deficient.  I also consulted the reports of local non-governmental organizations in Venezuela, including those of Fundalatin, Grupo Sures and Red Nacional de Derechos Humanos, and read the economic analysis by the Venezuelan Professor Pasqualina Curcio.

When in November/December 2017 I became the first UN rapporteur to visit Venezuela in 21 years, I was subjected to pre-mission, during-mission, and post-mission mobbing.  I endured a barrage of insults and even death threats.  Notwithstanding an atmosphere of intimidation, my mission resulted in positive results, including the immediate release of opposition politician Roberto Picon (his wife and son appealed to me, and I submitted the case to the then Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza), the release of 80 other detainees, enhanced cooperation between UN agencies and the government, and new memoranda of understanding. The mission opened the door to the visits of several other rapporteurs including Professors Alena Douhan and Michael Fakhri, as well as by High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet.  My report to the Human Rights Council in September 2018 addressed the root causes of problems, formulated proposals for solutions, incorporating the information received from all stakeholders, including the opposition parliamentarians, Chamber of Commerce, the press, diplomatic corps, church leaders, university professors, students and more than 40 NGOs of all colors.  The report was criticized by mainstream NGOs in the US and Europe, for whom only those rapporteurs are praiseworthy who engage in “naming and shaming” and promote regime change.

Chapters 2 and 3 of my book The Human Rights Industry document the endemic problems in the functioning of OHCHR and the Human Rights Council that continue to cater to the priorities of the major donors.  However, the general perception of OHCHR and the Human Rights Council promoted by the mainstream media gratuitously grants both institutions authority and credibility, without addressing the problems already exposed by a number of rapporteurs, including myself.

This dependence of OHCHR and the Human Rights Council on Washington and Brussels explains some of the abstruse decisions and resolutions adopted by the Council.  Part of the problem lies in the ways in which staff members are recruited and in the procedures by which experts, including rapporteurs, independent experts and commission members, are appointed.

For example, it does not advance “geographical representation” simply by hiring someone from Mauritius or Indonesia, if that person has been trained and indoctrinated in US and UK universities.  “Geographical diversity” does not necessarily ensure the representation of a spectrum of opinions and approaches to problems.  It does not mean much when there are so many persons who are ticked off against a particular nationality, e.g. US, French, Russian, Chinese, South African.  What is crucial is to ensure that all schools of legal thinking and philosophy, are represented.  What is important is that when a candidate from State X is recruited or appointed, that he/she have first and foremost the interests of the United Nations at heart, and that he/she is not a priori committed to support the interests of the US or one of the European powers. I do not challenge the competence or expertise of staff members and rapporteurs – I challenge their ethos and independence — their commitment to the values of the UN Charter and their commitment to impartiality.

There are other obstacles to impartiality. Indeed, some OHCHR staff members are penalized if they do their work properly and do NOT follow the orders coming from above, which are mostly US-Brussels friendly.  It is a regrettable reality that the donors weigh heavily in setting the agenda. There is no mechanism to ensure that the code of conduct of rapporteurs is respected, in particular Article 6.  The impunity for openly siding with the US and Brussels and ignoring the rest of the world is notorious.  In other words, OHCHR and the Human Rights Council have been largely “hijacked” – as indeed the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, European Court of Human Rights have been.  This raises the issue that Juvenalis formulated in his sixth Satire (verses 346-7): Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? – “who will guard over the guardians?”

Experience shows that being a solid professional does NOT facilitate getting a promotion.  One is likely to be penalized.  Abiding by the “unwritten law” of “groupthink” and supporting the Western narratives does contribute to career development. And, alas, most staffers are first and foremost interested in their careers, and not necessarily in promoting human rights.  As elsewhere, it is a job.

Some outside observers have understood what game is being played and what the rules are.  Reality at OHCHR and the Human Rights Council is closer to Machiavellianism and Orwellianism than to the spirituality of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the ideals of Eleanor Roosevelt, René Cassin, Charles Malik, P.C. Chang and others.  Notwithstanding these problems, we are optimistic that the system can be reformed, and we encourage all non-governmental people of good will and good faith to insist on reforming these institutions so that they serve all of humanity and not only the interests of a handful of powerful states.  Among the NGOs that are making concrete proposals for reform are the International Human Rights Association of American Minorities and the Geneva International Peace Research Institute, both in consultative status with the United Nations.

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Briefs
By Nan McCurdy 

World Solidarity Calls for Signatures to Denounce the UNHRC
The Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition is calling for signatures on a letter to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), protesting a recent UN report by the misnamed Group of Experts on Human Rights in Nicaragua (GHREN). An earlier letter was sent in 2023 and now, with the support of human rights expert Alfred de Zayas, a former UN Independent Reporter, we have drafted a new response. He and some other leading figures have signed the letter, and we would like to collect as many signatures as possible. You can go to either of these links in English or Spanish to sign. Signature collection continues until April 17 in an effort to show massive resistance to the UN report. It is time for us to denounce falsehoods such as those in the GHREN report.

Thank you for your support of this effort. Below are excerpts from the recent letter:

Excerpts of Letter to the United Nations Human Rights Council:
The report of the “Group of Experts on Human Rights on Nicaragua” (GHREN), released by the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) on February 28, 2024, is methodologically flawed, biased and should never have been released. This is the second GHREN report. The first, published in March 2023, was denounced in a letter signed by many distinguished human rights experts, by 119 organizations and by 573 individuals. That letter of protest was totally ignored.

The Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition (the Coalition) submitted detailed evidence to GHREN about the errors and omissions in its first report. These submissions received no response; nor are they acknowledged in the new report. It is clear that the GHREN only takes into account evidence provided by opponents of the Nicaraguan government. Thus, the claim of the study group to exercise “independence, impartiality, objectivity, transparency, integrity” is absurd. In this context, former UN Independent Expert on International Order [2012-2018], Alfred de Zayas, commented that “excluding relevant information presented to the study group [GHREN] is a violation of responsible methodology, a violation of the ethics of any judicial or quasi-judicial investigation.”

 

To read the entire letter and sign please go to: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf7qGfgoC_wAilGEZWTjiuwOw2jQM3srPmo3jQo5P9DVH9cPw/viewform

World Court Opens Hearings on Genocide Claims Brought by Nicaragua
Preliminary hearings opened on April 8 at the United Nations’ top court in a case that seeks an end to German military and other aid to Israel, based on claims that Berlin is “facilitating” acts of genocide and breaches of international law in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. Israel strongly denies its military campaign amounts to breaches of the Genocide Convention. While the case brought by Nicaragua centers on Germany, it indirectly takes aim at Israel’s military campaign in Gaza that has killed more than 33,000 Palestinians in Gaza. Nicaragua has asked the court to hand down preliminary orders known as provisional measures, including that Germany “immediately suspend its aid to Israel, in particular its military assistance including military equipment in so far as this aid may be used in the violation of the Genocide Convention” and international law. The court will likely take weeks to deliver its preliminary decision. On April 5, the U.N.’s top human rights body called on countries to stop selling or shipping weapons to Israel. The U.S. and Germany opposed the resolution. Hundreds of British jurists, including three retired Supreme Court judges, have called on their government to suspend arms sales to Israel after three U.K. citizens were among seven aid workers from the charity World Central Kitchen killed in Israeli strikes. Israel said the attack on the aid workers was a mistake caused by “misidentification.” (Associated Press, 8 April 2024)

MINSA to Apply Second Dose of HPV Vaccine
In the months of May and June, the second dose of vaccine against Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) will be given to girls between 10 and 14 years old. Dr. Martha Reyes explained that a second dose is required to have the immunity level required for the protection against HPV. During the first HPV vaccination campaign 100% of girls between 10 and 14 years of age were vaccinated. “When we talked to the PAHO/WHO (Pan American Health Organization-World Health Organization) immunization advisors, they said that when a vaccine is introduced, usually 80% coverage is achieved. She indicated that the application of this vaccine will greatly reduce the risk of contracting the virus that causes cervical cancer. Finally, the official called on the population to participate in the National Vaccination Days that began on April 2 and ends on April 28, to protect against 18 diseases. (La Primerisima, 4 April 2024)

Mexico and Nicaragua Approve Eight Cooperation Projects

A Nicaraguan delegation participated on April 8 in the eleventh Meeting of the Joint Commission between Mexico and Nicaragua in which eight technical cooperation projects in the agricultural, environmental and risk management sectors were approved. The Ambassador of Mexico in Nicaragua, Guillermo Zamora Villa, conveyed his gratitude to President Daniel Ortega and Vice President Rosario Murillo for the expressions of solidarity with Mexico and the breaking of relations with Ecuador, in view of the events that occurred at the Embassy of Mexico in that country. The Executive Director of the Mexican Cooperation Agency, AMEXCID, Gloria Sandoval, highlighted the excellent bilateral relationship between Mexico and Nicaragua and said that the projects to be developed with Mexico are aligned with the National Plan for the Fight against Poverty and for Human Development 2022-2026. (La Primerisima, 8 April 2024)

Government Provides Motors to 80 Fishers in Corn Island
The government delivered 80 outboard motors to artisanal fishers of Corn Island to strengthen their productive capacities after Hurricanes Eta, Iota and Julia. The 60 and 75 horsepower engines were delivered to 17 women and 63 men, as part of the government’s support for Caribbean fishing families. Lawrence Queen said he felt happy and affirmed that it is a blessing from God that these motors have been given to them. Each engine includes fuel tank, hose, an additional propeller, oil for gasoline mixture, grease for the engine and washers. This is part of the effort promoted by the government to strengthen the capacities of fishermen and fisherwomen and thus contribute to guarantee food and nutritional security for Caribbean families. So far this year, 6,686 productive packages have been delivered to 5,662 families involved in artisanal fishing on the Caribbean Coast. See photos: https://radiolaprimerisima.com/entregan-motores-a-80-pescadores-en-corn-island/

(La Primerisima, 6 Abril 2024)

Nicaragua Breaks off Relations with Ecuador and Fully Supports Mexico
On April 5 Ecuadorian police officers, in open violation of international law, stormed the Mexican embassy in Quito and captured Jorge Glas, former vice president of Ecuador during the administration of Rafael Correa (2007-2017). Hours before, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had granted political asylum to Glas for being a victim of political persecution in his country. Mexico announced the immediate rupture of diplomatic relations with Ecuador.

The Government of Nicaragua issued a press release on April 6th breaking diplomatic relations with Ecuador. Here are excerpts from that press release:

“The Government of Reconciliation and National Unity of Nicaragua, pronounces itself in absolute rejection and condemnation of the neo-fascist political barbarism of the government of Ecuador. … We condemn this flagrant violation of International Law that we see repeated by corrupt servants to the Empires, who unfortunately occupy institutional positions in that Brother Country…. In view of this unusual and repudiatory action carried out early this morning in Quito … we make our sovereign decision to break off all diplomatic relations with the Ecuadorian Government [and] we ratify … our adherence to international law. On September 1, 2020, we had withdrawn our embassy in Quito and with this pronouncement we formalize the rupture of all diplomatic relations. Our solidarity and accompaniment in any legal action is with the president of Mexico, Andrés Manuel López Obrador.” (TN8TV, 6 April 2024; Resumen English, 7 April 2024)

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