FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 2, 2009
7:24 PM
CONTACT: Human Rights First
Brenda Bowser Soder
(202) 370-3323, bowsersoderb@humanrightsfirst.org
Test Case for Colombian Supreme Court to End Widespread Criminalization of Activism
Colombian Activist, Victim of Arbitrary Detention, Seeks Annulment of Trumped-Up Charges
NEW YORK - June 2 - A test case filed today with the Colombian Supreme Court could mark a turning point in Colombia’s efforts to end the criminalization of human rights defenders, according to Human Rights First (HRF), a New York-based international human rights organization.
Principe Gabriel Gonzalez Arango, a student activist and member of the Colombian Political Prisoners Solidarity Committee, has filed an appeal with the Colombian Supreme Court seeking an extraordinary remedy (casación) to quash his malicious terrorism conviction.
"This appeal gives Colombia’s Supreme Court of Justice a historic opportunity to overturn years of arbitrary detention and unjust persecution against Gonzalez," said Andrew Hudson, Senior Associate at HRF. "The Supreme Court should send a strong message that it will not tolerate abuse of the judicial system to intimidate and silence human rights defenders."
According to Gonzalez's legal team, this is the first time a human rights defender has sought this type of extraordinary remedy from the Colombian Supreme Court. The precedential value of this case is enormous, and a strong decision by the Supreme Court would help dozens of other Colombian activists who are victims of baseless criminal prosecutions. "Gonzalez's case is just the tip of the iceberg. Throughout Colombia, human rights defenders are subject to trumped-up charges intended to persecute them" said Hudson.
Gonzalez was detained in Bucaramanga for more than one year starting in 2006, and remained incarcerated while awaiting trial on charges of rebellion and of being in charge of an urban militia force linked to the FARC guerrilla group. At trial, a judge acquitted him of all charges, finding that they were baseless and should never have been initiated. Inexplicably, the acquittal was appealed, and in March 2009, after two years of liberty, the Superior Tribunal of Bucaramanga overturned the lower court's judgment and sentenced Gonzalez to seven more years in prison for the same false charges. The prosecution relied on two witnesses: one who was unable to physically identify or even name Gonzalez before he was detained, and the other who admitted to providing statements under duress from prosecutors.
Gonzalez's appeal to the Supreme Court argues that his conviction is void for two reasons. First, it violates his right to defense by failing to inform him that a preliminary investigation against him was underway. Second, for error of reasoning by accepting contradictory and incoherent witness evidence from ex-combatants receiving re-integration benefits from the state.
A range of international entities have expressed concern about Gonzalez’s prosecution: the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders, and the United States Department of State.
According to HRF, Gonzalez's case is emblematic of many others. In February 2009, the group released In the Dock and Under the Gun: Baseless Prosecutions of Human Rights Defenders in Colombia, a comprehensive report that, for the first time, documented the widespread use of trumped-up charges to silence Colombian human rights activists.
HRF and Gonzalez's legal team are currently considering whether to take the case to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2009/06/02-12