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Detention of Juan Requesens

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Juan Requesens talking to Voice of America in 2017

Juan Requesens, a deputy of the Venezuelan National Assembly, was arrested as a suspect in the Caracas drone attack, an alleged assassination plot on the Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, amid much controversy[1][2] and legal irregularities surrounding the case.[3] He has been held at El Helicoide[4] since his arrest on 7 August 2018, with allegations of torture to coerce a confession,[a] and delays impeding the legal process and hearings.[5]

Requesens' detention has been condemned by the National Assembly – as well as international diplomats, politicians and organizations – and large protests have been held in Venezuela demanding that he be freed.[b] His relatives and fellow politicians said they believe he was arrested for criticizing Maduro.[6] The National Assembly condemned the detention of Requesens as a forced disappearance.[7]

The Twitter hashtag "#YoMeNiegoARendirme" – Spanish for "I refuse to give up" – became a popular slogan of his detention.[8][9]

Drone attack

Requesens speaking in the National Assembly shortly before his arrest

On 4 August 2018 several explosions were heard while Maduro was giving a speech on Avenida Bolívar, Caracas; the explosions were labeled by the Venezuelan government as an assassination attempt, and people in the area were arrested.[10] One of those arrested, Juan Monasterios,[11] was interrogated on video and allegedly implicated Juan Requesens in a plot to assassinate Maduro.[12]

Requesens had been a student lead of the 2014 Venezuelan protests against Maduro.[13] At the time of his arrest, he was an opposition leader serving as a deputy for the Justice First party in the Venezuelan National Assembly. On the day of his arrest, he made a speech in Venezuela's National Assembly blaming Maduro for causing unrest in the nation,[14][15] saying "Is Nicolás Maduro going to come and tell me that I cannot speak up, (...) that I cannot blame him? That I cannot say that they are a bunch of corrupt murderers linked to the worst crimes that this Republic has seen? Of course I'm going to keep saying it! And I will say it every time I can! And I will point at you! Because the only weapon us politicians have is words, it's strength, it's our voices and our will to change things." He finished this speech by telling the people "Today, I can speak here, I don’t know about tomorrow (...) the only strategy the dictatorship has here is crushing dissidents, within their own ranks and outside of them."[16][17]

Observors found reason to believe that the supposed attack would be used by the government to justify suppressing the opposition and that Requesens may be the victim of a farce.[18][19] Reuters reported that "Maduro’s critics said he was using the drone explosions as an excuse to jail more opponents and consolidate his power."[20] The BBC said that "some government critics denounced the alleged attack as a 'farce'. Some in the opposition, like Mr Borges, think the attack was staged by the government to justify a further crackdown on the opposition."[21] A Brazilian columnist, Sandra Cohen, wrote, "The rapidity with which Maduro accused the same old enemies - the extreme right, Colombia and the US - also fed, at the same speed, the suspicions of a farce and the fears that the repression will be enlarged (...) [he] reverberates conspiracy theories that make Venezuela the fake news haven."[22] Mirko Lauer wrote in La Republica, "As a fake or as a target of a military attack, it still projects an image of a desperate dictator (...) Some analysts suspect that the attack is a desperate farce, and mention the speed with which a police known for its inefficiency has been able to capture in hours the accused as responsible."[23]

Arrest

Requesens holding his arm against SEBIN agents during arrest

On the evening of 7 August Requesens and his sister, Rafaela Requesens, were detained in their residence by the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN), Venezuela's intelligence agency.[1] Rafaela – following in her brother's footsteps as the president of the student union at the Central University of Venezuela[24] – was later released while Juan was arrested. Rafaela said there were fourteen agents who accosted the pair within a minute of arriving at their apartment building;[20] during the arrest, one turned the building's security camera to face the wall.[21] The BBC reported a tweet showing the closed circuit camera "footage of the two siblings getting out of the lift before being apparently pushed back by armed masked men in uniform".[21] After his arrest, there was no information about Requesens or his whereabouts, given to his family or the public, for several days; the family first got a phone call from him on 12 August.[25]

Efecto Cocuyo reported multiple irregularities in the arrest; Requesens was arrested without a warrant, his parliamentary immunity as a legislator was not respected, and his family did not know where he was for five days.[3] The government charged that the arrest was in flagrante delicto, which is reserved for those who are apprehended whilst committing, or having obviously just committed, a crime; however, Requesens was arrested three days after the supposed attack.[3]

Rafaela later said that their shared home had been broken into and raided by at least forty SEBIN agents who tried to plant evidence.[26]

Prison videos

Requesens is held at El Helicoide, a detainment center operated by the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN),[4] and described by The Guardian as a "high-profile prison for political detainees" where prisoners report "people being beaten, electrocuted, hung by their limbs, forced into stress positions and forced to plunge their face into a bag of faeces and breathe in".[27]

Requesens was interviewed on video and gave a statement which sources say was forced,[28] and with no defense counsel.[3] The Venezuelan Minister of Communication, Jorge Rodríguez, had the video broadcast by national television during a press conference on 10 August.[29][30] Requesens' father said "that is not my son"; Isabel Pereira Pizani commented that he appeared to be reciting, not speaking for himself.[31]

Rodríguez alleges that Requesens collaborated in the assassination attempt; in the video, Requesens allegedly admits to working with several other people accused of being involved.[29] On video, he says that Julio Borges contacted him asking for "a favour" to "help a person get from Venezuela to Colombia", that the person was Juan Monasterios and that he and Monasterios wrote to a Colombian immigration official, Mauricio Jimenez, who had agreed to help with Monasterios' passage. Requesens gave no details of an attack on Maduro.[29] Rodríguez said that the statements supposedly show the involvement of Julio Borges and former Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos.[30]

In a second video released shortly after the first, Requesens appears dishevelled and in underwear stained with faeces.[32] A third video was shared days later by Maduro, showing what the government claimed was another part of the "confession" from the first video.[33] In the third video, Requesens is seen stating that Borges gave him the contact "Russo (...) who confirmed that Juan Monasterios was already in Colombia"[33] ("Russo" refers to a suspect whose full name is Rayder Alexander Russo Marquez[30]).

El Nacional reported that journalist Javier Mayorca spoke to Vilca Fernández, a former political prisoner held at El Helicoide where Requesens is held, in Peru.[34] Fernández confirmed to the blog Crímenes sin castigo that one of the videos was recorded "in an isolation cell or in the office of Carlos Calderón", a SEBIN head.[34] The other was recorded in "a bathroom for the use of SEBIN agents".[34] Fernández says that the videos were distributed "as part of a campaign to psychologically break Requesens".[34]

Video controversy

Requesens in the first video

When one of his lawyers, Joel García, saw Requesens at the preliminary hearing and mentioned the video confession to him, Requesens said he was unaware of it.[32][35] Delsa Solorzano [es], a National Assembly deputy and spokesperson, stated that Requesens told his lawyer "that he did not remember anything, that he does not remember having recorded any video, much less said anything in that video".[32] Because of this, the Venezuelan legal ombudsman said that they will open an inquiry about the video,[36] and neither this video nor any video was submitted as evidence or added to Requesens' file.[3][35]

García says that his client does remember the second video, and explains that Requesens says guards gave him the stained clothes and told him to wear them so that they could "mock him". Saab denies this, saying that the video is a recording of Requesens during a forensic examination performed when he was in prison and that it should not have been released.[35]

Members of the Justice First party, of which Requesens is a leader, said with certainty to journalists that Requesens had been drugged to get a statement and that the torture continued to the point of incontinence.[28] They accused the government of drugging and torturing Requesens into making a false confession.[28] The party also said that Requesens had been threatened that his torturers would murder his parents and rape his sister.[28] Legislators in opposition to Maduro's government protested against the "humiliation" of Requesens.[11]

Voice of America reported that a clinical analysis concluded there was evidence of "alteration of cognitive conditions that could be associated with the use of drugs that affect consciousness or will, uncoordinated movements, pupillary dilation, as well as loss of autonomic functions such as sphincters".[37] Politician and doctor José Manuel Olivares later suggested the drug was "evidently scopolamine".[37] Borges said in an interview that the video showed Requesens "totally drugged. In these impressive photos you can see that he is [trying to] support himself, cannot hold [himself up], and has dilated pupils."[28] NTN24 said Requesens appeared visibly "drugged, beaten, threatened", and that "as Venezuelans we must feel anger, pain and indignation [at the treatment of Requesens]".[38]

The Bar Association of Venezuela [es] released a statement saying they had "numerous and very grave objections" to what La Patilla called an "arbitrary and illegal" arrest and an attempt to "stigmatize" the accused.[39] It objected to the "dissemination" of the videos, an act it described as "obscene, protuberant, impudent, and even boastful".[39] The association said it would seek legal action against the government and those involved in the Requesens case, "once the rule of law has been restored".[39]

Diego Scharifker, a friend of Requesens and a former city council member and student leader from Caracas, called the public airing of the videos "part of a macabre show meant to intimidate the political opposition".[40]

Hearings

At his first hearing, Requesens said: "Since I got into politics I knew this could happen. And that I could lose my life and liberty. I will not lower my face, I do not have any reason to ask for forgiveness. I have always sought the exit of this Government in a constitutional manner, not in a violent manner. They will not bend me."


"Desde que me metí en política sabía que esto podía pasar. Y que mi vida y libertad podía dar. No bajaré la cara, no tengo por qué pedir perdón. Siempre he buscado la salida de este Gobierno de manera constitucional, no de manera violenta. No me doblegarán."

Juan Requesens [3]

According to Efecto Cocuyo, Requesens' first hearing should have occured within 48 hours, according to Article 44 of the Constitution of Venezuela.[3] Unnecessary delays in hearings have occurred since the original hearing, scheduled for 10 August, was deferred.[3] At his two-day hearing on 13–14 August, Requesens was represented by lawyers Charity Flores, Alejandra Tosta and Joel García.[41] The charges against him were:[42]

  • Treason
  • Attempted magnicide (assassination of a Head of State) of Nicolás Maduro
  • Attempted murder of seven National Guardsmen
  • Terrorism
  • Conspiracy to commit a crime
  • Repeated incitement of the public
  • Illicit possession of arms and munitions

Requesens declared that he was innocent,[43] was denied bail, and was returned to prison.[44] His bank accounts were frozen and his assets confiscated.[35] He faces a maximum punishment of 30 years in prison.[45] Six other alleged participants of the attack on Maduro were present and had their cases heard at the same time.[46]

Requesens' next court hearing was scheduled for 18 December 2018,[47] but was deferred until January,[48] in an act that lawyers described as "orchestrated" in line with the nation's use of court deferrals to keep political prisoners incarcerated indefinitely; lawyer García had beforehand mentioned that the courts closed on 14 December.[47][48] The hearing was set for 24 January 2019. Requesens' family encouraged people to attend the hearing, and for the 23 January demonstrators to march on the Supreme Court building.[49] In preparation for the hearing, García was given access to the file on the drone attack, and told reporters that though it was 219 pages, only 35 lines of the file related to his client, noting that 14 related to his past social media and that the "presented evidence has nothing to do with Juan Requesens".[47]

The 24 January hearing was also postponed.[50] On 22 February, Requesens was again transferred to Venezuela's court at the Palacio de Justicia de Caracas for a hearing that was postponed to 8 March on the reasoning that it was too late in the day to begin it.[5] Attorney García said there were now 17 charges being presented, and that the hearing should have been rescheduled for the next day according to Venezuelan law.[5] Requesens was forbidden from speaking to his attorney, and a member of the defense team was expelled from the courtroom for communicating with their client.[5] Requesens was able to send a message to his attorney, saying, "If I have to be imprisoned for defending those who do not have health, for defending the youth of the resistance, for defending Venezuelans, I will be imprisoned 20,000 times because I will do it again."[5]

Prison conditions and health

An overweight Requesens in 2014; his medical conditions are weight-related.

Requesens' family said that they had been in contact with him on 12 August, and that he told them of his condition and the lack of bathroom and hygiene facilities.[25] His lawyer said on 22 August that Requesens has "become deteriorated because of the poor conditions he is isolated in", but that "his morale is high" and "he knows he is innocent and that his fight is worth it".[51]

Speaking in the weeks following his son's arrest, Juan Guillermo Requesens (Juan's father) expressed concern that Juan "has a special condition" that requires him to take a "regime of certain nutrients".[52] The Requesens family doctor, Ricardo Alfonso, agreed, referring to "patients like Requesens" as a bariatric patient with a metabolic syndrome and hypertension, thyroid and insuline problems,[53] saying that such people "need sun for at least 20 minutes every day, to take vitamin supplements, and have regular medical control". He added that without good treatment, Requesens could die,[54] likely within two months, and that to be given drugs, even a small dose, would destroy his stomach.[55] Alfonso added that Requesens' need for medical treatment was especially pertinent, because he also suffers from a compromised immune system.[56]

Rafaela said that the family had still not seen her brother as of 30 August, and that SEBIN weren't allowing them to give him his diet;[57] their mother took his food to the prison every day, but it was only accepted by guards when the media was watching. They asked the media to maintain a constant presence outside Helicoide.[58] When the family presented an information packet on Juan's health to the International Red Cross on 31 August, Juan Guillermo spoke to the press about the 43 other people who have been incarcerated for the same crimes.[59][60]

The Venezuelan government gave a presentation on 4 October 2018 at the 169th session of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and used previously unseen, professionally shot photographs of Juan Requesens to claim that they are benevolent to prisoners.[61] This caused controversy, not only because of the dubious legality of Requesens' imprisonment, but also the doctored effect compared to the videos released prior. The images include Requesens with a trainer exercising outside, meeting his parents in a conference room, and having his blood pressure measured. The photograph with his parents had been taken a week before the conference, at the then-only visit they had been allowed.[61]

His parents were allowed to enter the prison to see Juan on 9 October, the day after the death of Fernando Albán – a fellow Justice First politician supposedly arrested for the same crimes and who was allegedly tortured and murdered.[62] Rafaela affirmed that he was alive, his parents had seen him, but he was in isolation and that he was still denied the hearing that was supposed to be scheduled within 45 days.[62] García said that his client was actually shackled at the ankle, too, and unable to physically move of his own free will.[63]

Requesens was transferred to a military hospital to see a dentist on 30 October,[64] after days of the public campaigning to raise awareness about a molar infection he had, with politicians saying that it was inhumane to not let him be treated.[65] Concern was that the infection had compromised facial tissue,[66] and people had only been alerted on 26 October when Requesens' parents visited and he told them himself that he had jaw aches which were being ignored.[67] The family also said that Juan informed them that he had been tortured.[68]

File:Reverol shares information of Requesens and Borges as suspects.png
An image of Requesens shown on 9 August 2018, claiming he financed the assassination attempt

Because of Requesens' government position, he should have received political immunity. Diosdado Cabello, acting in his position as president of the Constituent National Assembly, unlawfully revoked this protection for both Requesens and his co-accused Julio Borges the day after Requesens' arrest.[69][70] The Venezuelan National Assembly Vice President Julio César Reyes [es] invoked the Constitution of Venezuela, which says that "only the Supreme Court of Justice has the authority to order a deputy's arrest, with congressional approval",[70] in Article 200, which states that a prior decision to arrest a lawmaker must be made by the National Assembly and then approved by the Supreme Court in order to be legal.[69]

On the day of Requesens' initial hearing, the second Vice President of the National Assembly, Alfonso Marquina [es], said that there would be great international consequences of Requesens' "disappearance", mentioning that Article 44 of the Constitution says that all prisoners must be given free access to their lawyers from the moment of detention for the whole process and that "this just didn't happen" in Requesens' case.[71] On Monday 20 August, Requesens' lawyers went to Helicoide and asked to see him but were refused, as were his family.[72] The lawyers tried again to see him on 23 August, and were again denied access. García declared that SEBIN were in violation of Article 49 of the Constitution by impeding Requesens' access to defense during an ongoing case.[73][74]

García said on 30 August that the lawyers had not even been given access to Requesens' court file or to the details of his charges.[57][75] He made that announcement on International Day of the Disappeared — a day marked across Latin America for remembrance of victims of forced disappearances. García spoke from outside the Helicoide, defining the term "forced disappearance" and denouncing how it matched the situations growing in Venezuela.[76] The next day, it was announced that Requesens and all others imprisoned for the attack had been put into a mandatory isolation, preventing any access to them by family or by lawyers for thirty days.[60]

Responses

National Assembly

Deputies taking Requesens' case to the Apostolic Nunciature

The Venezuelan National Assembly, the country's parliamentary body, has repeatedly denounced the arrest of Juan Requesens and asked for his release.[77]

In shows of solidarity, a sign was secured to Requesens' seat in the assembly by other members, saying "kidnapped by SEBIN".[78][79] During the 14 August National Assembly meeting, deputy Gilber Caro stripped to his underwear in front of the assembly in a move of solidarity, to make a speech saying that a man's dignity is not dependent on his state of dress.[80] The assembly erected a large black-and-white banner hanging in the assembly hall with Requesens' face, a ribbon of the Venezuelan colours (yellow, red and blue) behind him, and the words "Liberty for Deputy Juan Requesens, kidnapped by the dictator".[81]

On 22 August, the National Assembly demanded that Maduro at least "allow a commission of the Inter-Parliamentary Union to enter the country and verify the situation of Requesens".[51] Deputy and lawyer Armando Armas [es] asked that Michelle Bachelet, High Commissioner of Human Rights to the UN, urgently make a pronouncement on the case of Requesens.[82]

With few other routes of legal recourse within Venezuela, the National Assembly took the Requesens case to the Apostolic Nunciature to Venezuela, represented by Aldo Giordano, on 24 August. They hoped to appeal to the Holy See, for which an Apostolic Nunciature operates like an embassy, to pronounce Requesens' treatment as an injustice.[83][84] Later in August, an agreement drafted and approved by councillors in Venezuela demanded the release of Requesens, and was sent to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.[85]

Maduro administration

The Venezuelan government criticized the support of Requesens, in particular from international bodies. Maduro tweeted to the Foreign Minister of Chile, Roberto Ampuero that Requesens is a "self-confessed terrorist and assassin" and that "in Venezula justice will act to protect the people, democracy, and to avoid a tragedy", saying the Chilean judicial and political systems supported such threats in their own country and others.[86]

Diosdado Cabello denied that Requesens was abused at El Helicoide.[87] Tarek William Saab, de facto Prosecutor General of Venezuela, denied the release of the video of Requesens in his stained underwear, and said that the video was taken during a medical examination and report on Requesens.[88] Cabello later added that Requesens was not drugged during his confession, that he was "calm" and "nobody pressured him".[89] Constituent National Assembly member Hermann Escarrá addressed that body on 13 August, and told its members that there were no human rights violations with Requesens' detention.[90]

In 2016, the Minister for Prison Services [es], Iris Varela, had been assigned to "restructure" politics in the state of Táchira, which Requesens represented, shortly after he was elected to the position.[91] On 12 August, in response to Venezuelans growing increasingly concerned with the economy of the nation, she tweeted that people shouldn't speculate or doubt, otherwise "they will end up worse off than Requesens, [where] they aren't able to speculate". This tweet was denounced as inhumane, for using the incarceration of Requesens as either a joke or a threat, especially by the woman in charge of his conditions in prison.[92]

Images of Requesens during his incarceration were used by the Venezuelan government in an October 2018 presentation to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to demonstrate that political prisoners were treated well; this action was met with scorn and controversy.[61]

Other national

Rafaela Requesens (center), standing next to her father, speaks surrounded by protesters in underwear

The release of the prison video sparked protest, with Venezuelans taking to the streets wearing underwear in a show of support for Requesens, whose stained underwear shown in the video raised concern.[93] One 68-year-old woman involved in a protest said that she supported Requesens because she knows he's "a good clean kid, from an honourable family".[94] By 16 August, there were peaceful protests nationwide, joined by members of most political parties, as well as groups like Juntos por la Libertad ("Youths for Freedom"), Sin Mordaza, and Las Piloneras.[95][94] A group of young people in Mérida formed a blockade, preventing traffic from moving along the main viaduct across Campo Elías.[96] A large protest march was held on 25 August, claiming to be bigger than the 2017 Venezuelan protests.[97]

Rafaela Requesens and the Requesens family organized several marches, worship services, and protests demanding the freedom of Juan.[98][99] Requesens' wife and two young children remained reclusive for many of these, but did attend a mass held in Guayana, several hundred miles from Caracas on the eastern edge of the country.[100] Rafaela also said on 29 August that Juan's daughter asks her where he is.[101] The Venezuelan activist Lilian Tintori joined forces with the family in protests.[102]

International

File:Packet on Juan Requesens arrest.png
Packet presented by the Venezuelan National Assembly on Requesens' detention

On 9 August, the National Assembly held an extraordinary meeting to discuss Requesens' arrest and detention. In addition to representatives from the European Union,[103] the session was attended by representatives from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Chile, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, the United States.[103][104]

The US Senator Marco Rubio strongly criticised the detention of Requesens, saying that "the rights of Requesens have been violated and his capture is further proof that Maduro and his followers want to silence their political opponents".[105] Francisco Palmieri, a US diplomat for Latin American affairs, called the arrest the "latest example in a long litany of human right abuses".[106] The US Embassy in Venezuela restated this, with an announcement adding that they "condemn the illegal detention of hundreds of political prisoners, many of them without due process. The case of Juan Requesens is the latest in a long litany ..."[107] A number of US Senators submitted an official letter to Mike Pompeo, urging their government to intercede in Venezuela to free Requesens.[108]

The Paraguayan government denounced the treatment of Requesens, and sent their support both to the National Assembly and to the people of Venezuela, who they told to "fight for democracy".[109] Paraguayan senators asked their nation to take action to pressure Venezuela to free Requesens.[110]

Roberto Ampuero, Foreign Minister of Chile, stated that "the persecution of representatives Requesens and Borges is unacceptable, as is that of every citizen that freely chooses to oppose a dictatorial and cruel regime".[86] Maduro criticised this support of Requesens, tweeting to Ampuero that Requesens and others are "self-confessed terrorists and assassins" and that "in Venezuela justice will act to protect the people, democracy, and to avoid a tragedy", criticising the Chilean judicial and political systems.[86]

British diplomats condemned the ongoing imprisoned status of Requesens at the end of October 2018.[111][112] A 10 December initiative signed by members of the European Parliament called for the immediate release of Requesens.[113] Beatriz Becerra, Vice President of the Subcommittee on Human Rights of the European Parliament, described Requesens' situation as him being "kidnapped, tortured, humiliated" and denounced that this had happened to someone who won the Sakharov Prize.[114]

The Lima Group and its nations stated that they "strongly condemn and reject the violation of due criminal process and international norms in matters of law enforcement and respect for human rights, in the arbitrary and illegal detention without any previous investigation of National Assembly representative, Juan Carlos Requesens", saying that it was an "open violation of their parliamentary privileges and immunities enshrined in the Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (Article 200), as well as the American Convention on Human Rights, the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, and the Charter of the Organization of American States, among other applicable international instruments" and expressing "deep concern on the use of the Venezuelan State security and justice apparatus to persecute political opponents, which indicates, once more, the breakdown of democratic rule and the continued violation of its Constitution, contrary to the will of the Venezuelan people".[115]

"Yo Me Niego A Rendirme"

Rafaela Requesens Twitter logo, a stylized blue bird
@RRequesens

Spanish: Esta familia no dejará de luchar por #Venezuela, mis sobrinos y todos los niños del país merecen un futuro lleno de libertad, justicia, seguridad y paz.
#YoMeNiegoARendirme por ellos, por mi hermano @JuanRequesens por VENEZUELA.


This family isn't giving up the fight for Venezuela, my niece and nephew and all the children of this country deserve a future complete with freedom, justice, security, and peace.
#YoMeNiegoARendirme for them, for my brother @JuanRequesens, for VENEZUELA

21 August 2018"Rafaela Requesens Twitter" (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 August 2018.

Requesens gave a speech before the National Assembly the day before he was arrested, using the phrase Yo me niego a rendirme ("I refuse to give up" in Spanish).[15] Carlos Paparoni, a National Assembly deputy, gave a speech to the assembly the day after the arrest where he said, "let's make this our creed: 'Yo me niego a rendirme', as Juan Requesens said".[15]

The Twitter hashtag "#YoMeNiegoARendirme" became popular;[8][9][116] Internet messages supporting Requesens used the hashtag, and it was displayed on signs during protests. A compilation video was shared by Requesens' family and publicity team, showing supporters across the world, including countries of Latin America, the US, UK, and Spain, holding smaller signs with the slogan.[117] The part of the speech from which the slogan was taken has been distributed as an audio file, and played at meetings of opposition political groups and as a rallying call for students and protestors.[118]

During the protest marking one month of his detention, a mural was painted in downtown Caracas of Requesens' face with the slogan. Maduro supporters quickly plastered over the mural; Rafaela Requesens returned to the site to paint a message demanding her brother's release.[119]

After the death of Fernando Albán, another Justice First politician who was illegally arrested and who died in SEBIN custody in October 2018, protesters marched with signs bearing the slogan.[120]

See also

Notelist

  1. ^ For allegations of torture, see the Video controversy section of this article
  2. ^ For national and interational reaction to the detention of Requesens, see the Responses section of this article

References

  1. ^ a b "Dictadura en pleno desarrollo: Así se llevaron a los golpes a los hermanos Requesens (VIDEO)" [Dictatorship in full swing: Taking the coup to the Requesens siblings]. La Patilla (in European Spanish). 7 August 2018. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  2. ^ Smith, Scott (7 August 2018). "Venezuela's President Ties Opposition Leader to Drone Attack". US News. Associated Press. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Moreno Losada, Vanessa (15 August 2019). "Siete irregularidades en detención y audiencia del diputado Juan Requesens" [Seven irregularities of the detention and hearing of Rep. Juan Requesens]. Efecto Cocuyo (in Spanish). Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Requesens trasladado desde Helicoide a Palacio de Justicia" [Requesens transferred from Helicoide to Justice Palace]. El Nacional (in Spanish). 10 August 2018. Retrieved 11 August 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Audiencia de Juan Requesens fue diferida para marzo" [Audience of Juan Requesens was deferred for March]. Tal Cual Digital (in Spanish). 22 February 2019. Retrieved 7 March 2019. Si tengo que estar preso por defender a los que no tienen salud, por defender a los chamos de la resistencia, por defender a los venezolanos, voy a estar 20.000 veces preso porque lo volveré a hacer.
  6. ^ "Venezuelan officials release video from jailed lawmaker". AP News. 10 August 2018. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  7. ^ "Condenan desaparición forzada de Juan Requesens". El Nacional (in Spanish). 10 August 2018. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
  8. ^ a b Sierra, Mayra Alejandra (13 September 2018). "Vergara: Venezolanos huyen de una crisis hambreadora creada por Maduro" (in Spanish). Asamblea Nacional – Gobierno Venezolano. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
  9. ^ a b Leon, Rafael (7 September 2018). "Esposa de Requesens: "Hace un mes secuestraron a Juan, un hombre inocente"". El Nacional (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 November 2018.
  10. ^ Brocchetto, Marilia (5 August 2018). "Venezuelan President evacuated from stage after attempted attack". CNN. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  11. ^ a b "Opositores venezolanos protestaron contra 'humillación' a diputado detenido" [Venezuelan opposition protested against 'humiliation' of detained deputy]. El Espectador (in Spanish). 11 August 2018. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  12. ^ Rosati, Andrews and Patricia Laya (7 August 2018). "Maduro says 11 hired assassins offered 50 million". Bloomberg. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  13. ^ Miroff, Nick (11 March 2014). "Student who lives with parents rises as a leader in Venezuela's protests". The Washington Post. Retrieved 10 June 2017.
  14. ^ "Requesens y la derrota del régimen". Noticiero Universal (in Spanish). 20 August 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  15. ^ a b c León, Ibis (9 August 2018). "Encarcelamiento de diputado Requesens unió a las fracciones opositoras en la AN". Efecto Cocuyo (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  16. ^ Stolk, Raul (10 August 2018). "Juan Requesens: "Politicians must assume risks others won't take"". Caracas Chronicles. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
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