Standing next to Khan, Maduro called recent meetings a âstep forwardâ in relations between the government and the international tribunal, which began a preliminary investigation in February 2018 focused on allegations of abuse during a brutal 2017 government crackdown on dissidents participating in street uprisings against the president.
Maduro said he respected the prosectorâs decision and would cooperate, but he disagreed with the prosecutorâs criteria for opening a probe. âVenezuelan doors are open because we want the truth, we want justice and we want to get better,â he said.
The presidentâs regime is in its strongest political position in years, with Maduro having consolidated his grip on power after hopes in the oppositionâs ability to reverse authoritarianism and economic collapse petered out. The Lima Group â a collection of Latin American nations and Canada that had called for the alleged abuses to be investigated â is now in tatters.
United Nations investigators have repeatedly reported patterns of rights abuses in the authoritarian country that constitute âcrimes against humanity.â
A report by the U.N.'s top human rights body last year concluded that Maduro and members of his inner circle gave orders, coordinated activities and supplied resources for arbitrary detentions, torture, disappearances and extrajudicial killings, The Washington Post has reported. It recommended that the findings be probed by international courts.
One political detainee told U.N. investigators of being held in a coffin-like vessel in the basement of intelligence police headquarters. Another female witness who was arrested following street protests told a U.N. panel she was tortured with electric shocks and threatened with rape.
Wednesdayâs ICCâs decision was welcomed by rights advocates and the embattled U.S.-supported opposition, whose leader Juan Guaidó said the formal opening of the investigation âvindicates the right to obtain justice that has been denied in Venezuela for the victims and their families.â
âThis decision â the first in Latin American history â gives hope of justice to the hundreds of victims of brutal repression by the Maduro regime,â said José Miguel Vivanco, the Americas director for Human Rights Watch.
Khan didnât lay out the breadth of the ICCâs investigation on Wednesday and it could be years before any charges are laid. Both Venezuelaâs opposition and the government have asked the ICC to look into alleged crimes perpetrated by their rivals.
Maduro expressed hope that a three-page memorandum of understanding he signed with the prosecutor on Wednesday would allow Venezuelan authorities to carry out their own legal proceedings into the alleged offenses.
âI am the first who wants to know the truth. I am the first who wants to see justice,â he said. âI am a man of God.â
Anthony Faiola contributed reporting to this article.
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