july - december VICTIMIZATION REPORT: OLD AGE AT RISK
Violent Deaths of Elderly Persons in Venezuela
«© Convite, A.C. [2020]. Reservados todos los derechos». Este trabajo es parte del proyecto «Monitor de Salud», desarrollado por
Convite, A.C., y sus organizaciones aliadas con el apoyo financiero de la
Unión Europea. Su contenido es responsabilidad exclusiva de Convite, A.C., y no necesariamente refleja los puntos de vista de la Unión Europea.
Credits To quote this report Thais Maingon. REPORT ON VIOLENT DEATHS OF ELDERLY PEOPLE IN VENEZUELA (2020). Convite, A.C. Caracas, Venezuela.
This report was prepared by the Research Coordination Unit of Convite, A.C.: Thais Maingon, in her capacity as senior researcher, under the supervision of Project Manager Francelia Ruiz, and in coordination with Luis Francisco Cabezas, Executive Director of Convite, A.C.
Design and layout: Mayrim Porras Cover photo by Curology on Unsplash.
VICTIMIZATION REPORT: OLD AGE AT RISK VIOLENT DEATHS AMONG THE ELDERLY IN VENEZUELA JULY-DECEMBER, 2020 Executive Summary Violence, and the various forms in which it is inflicted, is a public health issue of prime concern in Venezuela because of its economic, social, cultural, personal, and family implications, and, most importantly, because it is a violation of human rights, particularly of the right to life.
The continued assault on the rule of law in Venezuela for more than a decade now has converged, at least since 2015, with a complex humanitarian emergency of a political origin. Multiple factors are at the root of the latter, with broad consequences such as the disinte-
gration of the State and of the economy, the sustained erosion of the well-being of society, and the violation of human rights. This crisis multiplies humanitarian needs and creates new
ones, exacerbates human insecurity problems, further deteriorates public services, and
undermines the system for the protection of human rights. It has an effect on the entire population, but its impact is much greater on the most vulnerable sectors, such as the elderly.
This report summarizes violations of the right to life and of the right to integrity of elderly
people during the second semester of the year 2020. The data used in the report were
collected and systematized from the News section of 67 national, regional, and local news web portals.
As many as one hundred and eighty-seven (187) violent deaths of older persons were recor-
ded between the months of July and December of 2020. Fifty-two percent (52%), or 97, of
said deaths, which is roughly more than half the total, were classified as violent deaths from specific causes (including deaths from mechanical asphyxiation, stabbing, gunshots, beatings, and others whose cause remains unknown), with robbery as the main motive. Most of
these deaths occurred in the victim's own home. Additionally, thirty-nine (39) violent deaths
#OldAgeAtRisk were the result of carelessness, negligence, or want of skill, experience, or knowledge, which
is twenty-one percent (21%) of the total violent deaths of older people recorded over the semester in question, and they were mostly caused by run-overs (20%). The responsibility for
seven percent (7%) of all violent deaths during the second semester of 2020 can be directly ascribed to the State, be it because of something it did, because of something it failed to do, or because something it permitted to be done –expressly or through others— which resulted
in the death of 13 elderly people. Other violent deaths, including suicide and various types of accidents, account for twenty percent (20%) of violent deaths of senior citizens.
COVID-19 related deaths were recorded separately and presented separately for the purposes hereof. However, based on the classification parameters used in victimization reports of
elderly people since 2019, they are related, directly or indirectly, to actions or omissions by the State and to the State’s failure to comply with its obligations and to protect the elderly from a violent death.
This is an important distinction to make because under numerous international conventions,
treaties and agreements, it is a bounden duty of the State to protect the life of all citizens,
2
particularly that of the most vulnerable groups, including the elderly. These deaths are the
embodiment of various types of violations of the right to life. They also underscore the State’s failure to provide the necessary means to prevent unnatural or early deaths, its inaction, and
the absence of public policies aimed at protecting the elderly from the threat of a premature death, for they are denied the possibility to receive timely medical or social assistance.
On March 13, the administration of Nicolas Maduro's announced that there were two confir-
med cases of COVID-19 in the country. Measures aimed at restricting mobility of the population at the national and international level were announced, much like in the vast majority of countries in the world. Simultaneously, the World Health Organization reported that, based
on the results of their analysis, it is the people aged 60 and older who most need preventive care and attention. The evidence could not be clearer. In Venezuela, people aged 60 or over,
or 4 million inhabitants as per official figures, are the most neglected and potentially more
vulnerable to the economic, social, and health crisis facing the country for over a decade now, a situation that is compounded by the high risk inherent in the COVID-19 pandemic
Keywords: Human Rights; Complex Humanitarian Emergency; Violent Deaths; COVID-19; the Elderly; Impunity; Homicides; Robbery; Negligence; Crisis; Public Policies.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
METHODOLOGY In our effort to keep a record of the number of violent deaths of elderly people occurred
during the second half of 2020, and in the absence of official figures on the subject, we resorted, as in previous reports, to reliable newspaper sources. The recording process invol-
ved three stages: first, the search itself; second, the recording and systematization of the
information in a database especially created for that purpose, which made it possible to
categorize and organize these records, and third, the presentation and analysis of the information.
The information contained in the News section of 67 national, regional, and local news web
portals was thoroughly examined. It is important to note that the violent deaths of elderly persons tend to be presented in the news in such a biased way that the human rights violation aspect thereof is usually overlooked, and the tendency is to report on this fact from a predominantly forensic approach.
The news on the violent death of elderly people that were selected for this report included
all the necessary information, namely the age, name, and gender of the victim, the cause of death and the motive, the federal entity where the death occurred, and the identity of the
perpetrators, when applicable, and the nationality. There were a few cases where the information available was not complete but where the details were sufficient to ascertain that an elderly person had had a violent death.
For the purposes of this report, the criterion set forth in the Compulsory Social Security Act
of 1967 was adopted to characterize the elderly population, which is defined as that segment of the population of men aged 60 and older, and of women aged 55 and older.
By violent death of an older person we mean the death of a woman aged 55 and older, and
of a man aged 60 and older, when his/her passing is the consequence of the overt violation
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#OldAgeAtRisk of his/her right to live and enjoy other human rights. A violent death may or may not be the
result of a criminal act or the consequence of intentional acts or otherwise. Most violent deaths occur because the State does not guarantee the right to life, the right to property, or the right to a decent quality of life with access to food, medicine, services, and medical
care, which are indispensable for survival, especially for vulnerable populations such as the
elderly. These violent deaths could have been prevented. They expose the State’s negligence and its failure to fulfill its obligation to protect senior citizens from threats coming from individuals and/or public or private entities.
This is the same methodological and conceptual approach used to classify violent deaths
of older persons in the previous report (2019). This classification facilitates the differentiation
and analysis of violent deaths and the identification of the victims, the motives, the causes of death, and the perpetrators. It also makes it possible to bring these deaths to the fore-
front as violations of human rights, specifically of the rights to life, integrity, and property of the elderly.
The report consists of two parts. The first part discusses how the violent deaths of elderly
4
people occurred during the second half of 2020. It ends with a comparison of the most relevant indicators recorded between the two semesters of 2020. The second part includes the
official information reported by the Executive on the COVID-19 death toll. The information is
filtered and classified based on the age of the elderly person, as well as on the federal entity where the death occurred and the gender of the deceased.
Also recorded herein are the deaths of older people working in the healthcare sector as
published by some non-governmental organizations. One would assume that the number
of healthcare workers killed by COVID-19 would be accounted for in the official statistics that are communicated by the spokespersons of the Maduro administration publish on a daily basis. However, following a verification process and the crosschecking of the entire information, especially the one concerning the federal entity where the deaths occurred
and the age and gender of the deceased persons, it is clear that the official statistics do not show the deaths of a substantial number of health workers. It should be noted that the
information on elderly healthcare workers as used in this report was obtained from eight web portals, and only that meeting the minimum data requirements for presentation was taken into account.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
CLASSIFICATION OF VIOLENT DEATHS OF OLDER PERSONS There is a connection between the violent death of older persons and the performance of the State, for it is the duty and obligation of the State, as established in numerous interna-
tional agreements and conventions, to protect them, care for them, and provide them with material life conditions to avoid their premature exposure to the risk of death. The responsi-
bilities of the State in this area include guaranteeing older people their right to life and inte-
grity and their exercise of all other human rights. With the exception of some accidental deaths and other deaths from external causes, the violent deaths of older persons are
directly or indirectly associated with actions or omissions by the State. The fact that violence is inflicted against older people with the consent or acquiescence of governments or official authorities, whether directly or by inciting others, regularly or occasionally, the
immediate or eventual consequence of which is the unnatural or premature death of
senior citizens, reflects the State’s breach of its obligation to prevent violent deaths and evidences the lack of protection and guarantees of the elderly when it comes to their exercise of human rights, especially the right to life.
For the purposes of this report, we have set out certain criteria to differentiate the deaths of older people from various violent causes from those for which the State is responsible, explicitly or implicitly, directly or indirectly. 1. Violent Death from Specific Causes It is an act by one or more persons expressly intended to take the life of another, commonly referred to as murder. A number of murders occur as the indirect consequence of the failure of the State to comply with its duties and obligations. For the purposes of this report, the following are listed as causes of violent death from external causes: 1.1 1.1.
Mechanical Asphyxiation: It is the interference with the uptake and/or
delivery of oxygen, which generally leads to death. This category includes deaths caused by:
1.1.1. Strangulation: Oxygen is prevented from entering the airways through
compression of the neck by an external force, whether manually or by use of a ligature. It includes deaths that occur due to a broken neck.
1.1.2. Suffocation: Air passage to the airways is impeded by the blockage thereof.
1.1.3. Submersion: Air passage to the airways is impeded by a liquid or a semi-liquid substance.
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#OldAgeAtRisk 1.2. Wounds by Bladed Weapons: Murder is committed by use of sharp objects such
as a knife, a machete, an axe, etc. It includes deaths by throat-cutting, stabbing, etc. 1.3. Wounds by a Firearm: Death occurs by gunshots. 1.4. Beating: The person is beaten to death.
1.5. Unknown: SThere is no known cause for the death of the victim. 2. Violent Deaths Due to Carelessness, Negligence, or Want of Skill, Experience, or Knowledge It is any violent act against people whose purpose is not to take an individual’s life, but one which results in the death of said individual. Carelessness, negligence, or want of skill, experience, or knowledge, do not entail a desire to kill, but do not prevent death as an outcome. These include:
2.1. Death by Aggravated Violence: An individual dies from natural causes that have
been made worse by a criminal act; death occurs upon the commission of the criminal act or some time thereafter, but it is always attributable thereto.
2.2. Death by Unintentional Run-over with a Motor Vehicle: An individual dies from injuries sustained during an accident involving a motor vehicle; the driver did not
6
intend to cause the death of the victim. As a rule, it is the result of recklessness, negligence, or carelessness of those involved.
2.3. Death by Provoked Accidents: An individual dies because of an incident that
occurs because of the action of another person or persons who did not intend to cause the death of the victim.
3. 3. Violent Deaths of which the State is Direct Responsible These are deaths whose cause clearly involves the clear action of state agents, as well as
the failure by the State to act appropriately to protect human rights, especially the right to life. The State is potentially responsible because it fails to protect lives in a timely and due manner.
3.1. Death from Starvation: These deaths occur when people cannot take in suffi-
cient food and nutrients or when people do not take in food and nutrients at all, due to shortages or for reasons of physical or financial inaccessibility.
3.2. Torture and Ill Treatment: These deaths are the direct or indirect consequence of physical and psychological violence inflicted by agents specially trained to do so in their official capacity.
3.3. Deaths Due to Lack of Assistance: These deaths that are caused by the lack of medical or paramedical care, or of the lack of access to healthcare services or medical supplies or medical technology, or of the lack of access to any of the services designed to ensure well-being, safeguard human life, and guarantee citizen safety. It includes all deaths caused by the lack of timely and quality assistance,
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
particularly to the homeless or to the dispossessed, and all deaths that are the
result of self-aggression (smoking, alcoholism, suicide) in a clear attempt by the
deceased to avoiding social, economic, political, or other situations that make life intolerable.
4. 4.Other Types of Violent Deaths 4.1. Suicide: It is a deliberate and voluntary act of self-aggression that results in the
death of the person who commits it, with no evidence of influence by external agents or by the person’s close family.
4.2. Accident: The elder dies due to external factors alone; he or she does not want to die, and there is no involvement of a third person or group of persons; the death is not the result of deficiencies in or lack of access to public services. 4.3. Otros: The death does not enter in any of the above categories.
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JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk
PART I
8
1. Aging as a Social Transformation Process and the Global COVID-19 Pandemic According to the World Bank’s World Population Ageing Report 2020, the pace at which the
world population is ageing is leading to one of the most significant social and cultural transformations of the 21st century, with substantial implications particularly for the labor and financial markets, the demand for goods and services, and the structure of families. It
is a fact that the world's population is aging. Globally, the population segment of people over 65 years of age is growing at a faster rate than the rest. By 2050, sixteen percent (16%) of the world population will be over 65 years old, as stated in the Economic Commission for
Latin American and the Caribbean (ECLAC) World Population Prospects 2019 (2020) report. This means that the number of people in their eighties will increase too. At present, fourteen
point five percent (14.5%) of older adults in Latin America and the Caribbean are aged 80 and over, and it is estimated that twenty-two percent (22%) of the total population will be that age by the year 2050.
Globally, the COVID-19 pandemic has hit people 60 or over the hardest, not only because they are “older”, but also because they are the most vulnerable. This reality could be particularly challenging in the poorest and most unequal societies and in those that are subject
to authoritarian, despotic, and militarized political regimes whose health systems are highly inefficient and ineffective, as is the case in Venezuela.
The evidence shows that, since the beginning of the year 2020, the elderly —which is the most vulnerable age group— are the worst affected by the global pandemic due to their
decreased immunity and their higher probability of having a chronic disease. Should they
become infected with COVID-19, they are more susceptible to complications that can lead Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
to a certain death. Today, the elderly in Venezuela are extremely fragile, not only because of the violence that is discussed herein and in previous reports, but also because the threat of dying from the coronavirus looms large over this segment of the population.
If we take the official figures provided so far by the regime to be true, Venezuela is a country that would seem to be “naturally” protected against COVID-19, but said protection could be explained by the increasing isolation that the country has been living in long before the coronavirus outbreak.
This report pays special attention to the deaths of elderly people due to COVID-19 because the virus is a factor that plays a crucial role, albeit circumstantially, in their health and well-being.
This pandemic has brought the weakness and poor performance of the Venezuelan health system, as well as that of many other countries in the region and elsewhere, to the fore. The
system, in the context of a national health emergency such as the COVID-19 emergency, has failed to respond effectively and efficiently to prevent deaths from this cause. Older
people are the largest group at the most risk of becoming infected with the virus and the age group with the highest fatality rate in the world because of it, and Venezuela is no exception.
2. 2. Violence and Old Age: Violent Deaths of Older People in Venezuela VIOLENT DEATHS OF ELDERLY PEOPLE, JULY-DECEMBER, 2020 Specific Causes Carelessness, Negligence, Want of Skill, Experience, or Knowledge Direct Responsibility of the State Other Types of Violent Deaths TOTAL
97
39 13
38
187
As many as one hundred and eighty-seven (187) violent deaths of older persons were
recorded during the second semester of 2020. Fifty-two percent (52%) thereof were classified as violent deaths from specific causes, specifically from criminal acts, with robbery as the main motive.
Over this six-month period, thirty-nine (39) violent deaths were due to carelessness, negligence, or want of skill, experience, or knowledge, with run-overs as the leading cause at
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
9
#OldAgeAtRisk twenty percent (20%). Seven percent (7%) of all violent deaths were the direct responsibility of the State, whereas twenty percent (20%) were associated with other types of violence. (See Chart 1)
In addition to the foregoing, 38 deaths were caused by other types of violence, including 28
involving various types of accidents (at work, motor vehicle, household, other), followed by suicide (10), which accounts for five percent (5%) of the total violent deaths of older people recorded over the period. According to the information collected, seven (7) older men and three (3) older women decided to take their own lives through violent means.
Seventy-one percent (71%) of the violent deaths were caused by different types of accidents and 29% by suicide (Figure 2). (See Chart 2)
Older women are less exposed to violent death than men are. As per the information
collected for the second semester of 2020, seventy-one percent (71%), or 132, of the violent
deaths recorded were of older men, while twenty-nine percent (29%), or 55, of the victims were older women. (See Chart 3)
10 CHART 1
Direct Responsibility of the State
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Cause of Death
July-December, 2020
7%
Otros
Specific Causes
13
20%
38 97
39
21%
52%
Carelessness, Negligence, Want of Skill, Experience, or Knowledge
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
CHART 2
Other Types of Violent Deaths Among the Elderly
July-December, 2020
29%
Suicide Accidents
71%
11 CHART 3
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Gender July-December, 2020
Men Women
29% 71%
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk Sixty-one percent (61%), or 144, of the older people who died violently during the second half of the year 2020 were between 60 and 70 of age, followed by those aged between 71 and
80 (25%). Five percent (5%) of women between 55 and 59 of age, and nine percent (9%) of older people aged 81 and over, suffered a violent death. (See Chart 4) CHART 4
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Age Range July-December, 2020 (Percentages)
91 y+
1,07 8,02
81-90
24,60
71-80 60-70
60,96
55-59
5,35
0,00
10,00
20,00
30,00
40,00
50,00
60,00
70,00
12 In terms of gender, 118 men and 42 women between the ages of 60 and 80 died violently. (See Chart 5)
Most of the violent deaths of older persons recorded were of Venezuelan nationals (180). There were two (2) violent deaths of older persons of Colombian nationality and five (5) deaths of people of five nationalities other than Venezuelan and Colombian (see Chart 6) CHART 5
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Gender and Age Range July-December, 2020 (Percentages)
140 Mujeres
120
Hombres
100 80
65,15
60 40 50,91
20 0
18,18 55-59
60-70
24,24 25,45
9,09 5,5
71-80
81-90
1,52 91 y +
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
ND
2.1. Identification of Perpetrators in Violent Deaths of Older People The perpetrators of violent deaths of older people were identified, captured, and charged
only in twenty-two percent (22%), or 41, of all reported cases. Thirty-five (35) of the people responsible for said crimes had some connection, relationship, or direct kinship with the victims. It should be noted that the vast majority of homicides goes unpunished, which aggravates violence and violates the right to justice for the families of the victims.
Among the perpetrators who had some type of direct relationship or kinship with the victims, twenty-six percent (26%) were neighbors, friends, and acquaintances; twenty-three percent
(23%) were the victim’s children; twenty percent (20%) were the victim’s grandchildren; seventeen percent (17%) were the victim’s siblings, nephews and nieces and other family members; and fourteen percent (14%) were the victims’ domestic partners and spouses. (See Chart 7)
In eight (8) of the violent death cases referred to above, the victims were killed by their own
children, and in seven (7) cases, by their grandchildren. Six (6) of the violent acts were perpetrated by siblings, nephews or nieces, and other relatives. In nine (9) of the cases, the perpetrators
were neighbors, friends, and acquaintances, and in five (5) of the cases the perpetrators were the spouses or partners of the victim. The main motive was robbery, and other crimes were committed during an argument or a fight. These violent deaths underscore the deterioration of
the family and social fabric and the coexistence problems, which are exacerbated in the con-
text of a major economic crisis and hardship and are made even worse during the mandated quarantine that families have to observe to prevent becoming infected with COVID-19.
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
13
#OldAgeAtRisk CHART 7
Perpetrators of Violent Crimes Against the Elderly,
and Their Relationship with their Victims. July-December, 2020 (Percentage of Total Perpetrators Known to the Victims)
50 40 30
25,7 22,9
20
20,0
17,1 14,3
10 0 Son/Daughter
14
Grandchild
Spouse/Partner
Sibling/Nephew, Neighbors, Niece/ Other Relatives Friends and Acquaintances
Angélica María González Castro, 67 years old, was killed by her 35-year-old daughter and her daughter’s partner, who wanted her to sell a house and an apartment, which she refused. Her daughter and her partner asphyxiated her, skinned her face with a knife, and cut off her tongue. (Últimas Noticias, 14 de julio de 2020).
Magaly Josefina, 71, was killed in her own house in Urimare by her 15 year-old grandson, who stuck the tip of a construction pick in one of her eyes while to rob her. (El Nacional, octubre 7 de 2020).
Víctor Manuel Useche González, 60, a farmer, was stabbed to death by his wife, Migdalia Milagros Ortega Urbina, 52, following a fight inside their house. In the heat of an argument, Migdalia stabbed her spouse three times in the chest, which caused his death. (Diario La Calle,1 de diciembre de 2020).
Cruz Manuel Quijada, 74, and his wife María Luisa Jiménez de Quijada, 56, were killed by their nephew and his partner, who wanted to steal a blender, a hair dryer, and a gas cylinder from them at Cruz and María´s house in the town of Araya, state of Sucre. (El Universal, 17 de septiembre de 2020).
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
The Report on Femicides prepared by the Center for Justice and Peace (CEPAZ, by its Spanish acronym) for the June 14 - November 13, 2020 period, reveals that the oldest age of
the victims of femicide went from 70 to 80. The contempt for older people and their vulnerability is evident from the report. Over the period in question, twelve percent (12%) of
the victims were between 64 and 80 years of age, and approximately fifty percent (50%) of
them were living or had lived with their aggressors or were their relatives or acquaintances. Most of these femicides occurred at the victims’ houses or at the house of their partners. These women sustained firearm wounds that killed them, or were stabbed, strangled, or beaten to death.
(https://cepaz.org/documentos_informes/monitoreo-de-femicidios-del-14-de-junio-al13-de-noviembre-de-2020/ https://www.proiuris.org/?p=62415 utopix)
As previously noted, most of these older women were living or had lived with their
aggressors. In other cases, the perpetrators were family members (parents, uncles/aunts, siblings, children, grandchildren).
2.2. Violent Deaths of Elderly People from Specific Causes The most frequent causes of violent deaths from specific causes reported over this period include:
Run-overs: Thirty-seven (37) elderly people were run over, which is twenty percent (20%) of all violent deaths.
Accidents (motor-vehicle, household, job-related, and other): Fifteen percent (15%)
of all violent deaths (28) were the result of accidents. It should be noted that four (4) of the victims died in motor-vehicle/road accidents, and two (2) in accidents at the
workplace. Fourteen (14) senior citizens died as a consequence of a fall they sustai-
ned while looking for firewood to cook. Others died by electrocution while repairing household appliances, or when handling containers with gasoline or cooking gas. Firearms: Nineteen (19) senior citizens (10%) died from gunshot wounds. Lack of assistance: Thirteen (13) senior citizens (7%) died from causes directly attri-
butable to the State, for it failed to provide them with timely healthcare or social
assistance. These people died because of lack of medicines, medical supplies,
medical care, security, or because of deficiencies in public services, among other causes.
Stabbing: Twenty-nine (29) senior citizens (16%) died from some kind of blunt wound made by sharp objects.
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
15
#OldAgeAtRisk Mechanical asphyxiation: Eighteen (18) senior citizens (10%) died from strangulation by others during a robbery or a fight.
Beatings: Twelve (12) of the deaths (23%) were caused by severe beatings in the middle of a robbery.
Suicide: Ten (10) senior citizens (5%) intentionally took their own lives. The director of the Venezuelan Violence Observatory, Roberto Briceño León, during the presentation of the "Annual Report on Violence in Venezuela 2020: Between the Epidemic of Violence and the COVID-19 Pandemic," noted that the destruction of the economy has
reduced the opportunities for crime and that organized crime has concentrated on sectors
with access to foreign currency. One is that of families with relatives living outside the country, who were forced to leave the country or were expelled by the country because it denied
them opportunities for economic, social, and personal development. This is another issue facing the elderly who depend on remittances or assistance from their relatives abroad. On
the other hand, the COVID-19 pandemic and the associated lockdowns may have to do
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with this reduction of opportunities for crime.
The report indicates that in 2020 there was a reduction in the number of deaths from violent
causes as compared against those occurred during 2019. There were a total of 11,891 violent deaths, or forty-five point six percent (45.6%) per 100,000 inhabitants 1. Even so, the rate is
well above the one reported for the most violent countries in the world. Venezuela continues to be one of the most violent countries in the region and globally.
According to the report, ninety-one percent (91%) of the victims were men and ninety-nine
percent (99%) were Venezuelans; the use of bladed weapons increased by fourteen percent (14%); the number of deaths from firearm wounds 2 showed a decrease; the most
violent months were January and May; and the most violent states were Miranda, Bolivar, Sucre, Aragua and the Metropolitan Area of Caracas.
1
The rate of violent deaths recorded for 2019 by the Venezuelan Violence Observatory was 60.3% per 100,000
inhabitants. 2
In 2019, 65 senior citizens were shot to death (Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths of Older Persons
in Venezuela, 2019), and 42 in 2020, (23 during the first semester and 19 during the second semester) (Victimization Report. Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths of Older Persons in Venezuela, First Semester of 2020).
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
CHART 8
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Specific Cause July-December, 2020 1
Provoked Accidents Aggravated Murder
2
8
Unknown Suicide Death Due to Lack of Assistance
10
13
18
Mechanical Asphixiation Firearm
19
Beating
23
27
Accident Stabbing
29
37
Run-over 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
17
35
CHART 9
Number and Percentage of Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Motive July-December, 2020
60
30
54
50
25
40
20
30
55,9
15 15
20 10
15,5
0 Robbery
Fight
10
14
14,4 Score Settling/ Retribution
10 1
1
Kidnapping
3
3,1
10,3
Sicariato
Unknown
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
5 0
#OldAgeAtRisk 2.3 Violent Deaths of Elderly People, by Motive As shown in Chart 9, fifty-five (54) older people, which is fifty-six percent (56%) of all violent
deaths reported for the second semester of 2020, were killed while being robbed, most of them in their own homes. Fifteen (15) older people were killed during a fight, and fourteen
(14) were killed for score settling or retribution. There was no known motive for ten percent (10%) of the violent deaths. (See Chart 9)
Marcos Tulio González Valera, 64, died of a traumatic brain injury after criminals beat him to steal his car in Santa Rosa, east of Barquisimeto. (La Prensa Lara. 7 de julio de 2020).
Three criminals, one of them just 16 years old, killed Saúl Antonio Martínez Villa, 69, a Colombian national, when they broke into his house in Maracaibo. They tied him up, stole
18
his belongings, and shot him several times. He died at the site. (Panorama, 19 de agosto de 2020).
On Monday, Valentín Rodríguez Camacaro, 77, was shot in the mouth and killed in Barquisimeto by armed subjects who were stealing his bicycle, which he resisted. (El Informador, 21 de septiembre de 2020)
Andres Jose Rivas Orta, 62, died from the injuries he sustained during a fight with Luis Gabriel Garcia Millan, 42, in Maiquetia. Rivas and García were drinking. A quarrel broke out between them and they both drew their bladed weapons. (La Voz, 24 de septiembre de 2020).
The plastic artist Antonio Otazzo, 90, was found dead inside his house in Cagua, state of Aragua. A man and a woman who looked like beggars knocked on his door pretending to ask for food and attacked him with a knife. (Efecto Cocuyo, 17 de julio de 2020).
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
2.4 Violent Deaths of Older People, by Federal Entity Only in four federal entities (Amazonas, Apure, Cojedes, and Yaracuy) no records were found of violent deaths of older people during the second half of 2020. Thirty-six percent
(36%) of all the violent deaths of older people reported for the second semester of 2020
occurred in the states of Aragua (20), Anzoátegui (25), and Lara (23), followed by the Metropolitan Area of Caracas and Miranda (17 violent deaths each), Bolívar (12), and Carabobo, Zulia, and Táchira (11 each) for a total of forty-two percent (42%) of the violent deaths. Eleven percent (11%) of the violent deaths of older people occurred in three states: Falcón CHART 10
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Federal Entity July-December, 2020
11
Zulia
7
Vargas
3
Trujillo
11
Táchira Sucre
2
Portuguesa
3
2
Nueva Esparta
19
4
Monagas
17
Miranda
1
Mérida
23
Lara
6
Guárico Falcón
2
Delta Amacuro
8 11
Carbobo Bolívar
2
Barinas
12 20
Aragua
25
Anzoátegui
17
MAC
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk (8), Vargas (7), and Guárico (6). Ten percent (10%) of the total violent deaths occurred in eight of the country’s states, with figures ranging from four (4) violent deaths in Monagas to
one (1) violent death in Mérida, which is the federal entity with the lowest record of occurrences. (See Chart 10)
2.5. Violent Deaths of Older People that are the Direct Responsibility of the State, by Federal Entity As previously discussed, violent deaths of older people were classified into four catego-
ries: Deaths from Specific Causes; Deaths Due to Carelessness, Negligence, or Want of Skill, Experience, or Knowledge; Deaths that are the Direct Responsibility of the State (Star-
vation, Torture and Ill Treatment, and Lack of Assistance), and Other Types (Suicide and Accidents). There is a tendency to consider that violent deaths from specific causes, such as those caused by carelessness, negligence, or want of skill, experience, or knowledge,
are the result of violence among individuals and that, consequently, the State is not to be
20
ascribed any responsibility therefor. However, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has established that “everyone has the right to life, liberty, and security of the person; the
right to life is inherent in the human person, everyone’s right to life shall be protected by
law, and no one should be deprived arbitrarily of his/her life. Furthermore, the States Parties undertake to respect and guarantee the full exercise of these rights to all persons subject to their jurisdiction.” (https://www.derechoshumanos.net/proteccion/index.htm).
During the second semester of 2020, thirteen (13) of the violent deaths recorded were the direct responsibility of the State, including those from lack of assistance and essential
supplies, and those involving the direct action of security forces of the Venezuelan State. The Venezuelan State failed to guarantee the right to life to many of the elderly who suc-
cumbed to the circumstances in question. Most deaths were caused either by deficiencies in public services such as water, electric power, and gas, or by deficiencies in the health care system.
Violent deaths where the State is directly responsible are those that occur because of the
action, inaction, omissions, or consent or acquiescence, directly or by inciting others, of governments or official authorities, the immediate or eventual consequence of which is the premature death of elderly citizens. These deaths underscore the various violations of the right to life and other human rights that are universally guaranteed, for the State failed to meet its obligation to preserve and protect the lives of the elderly when faced
with the risk of dying unnaturally or prematurely. Quite the opposite: the elderly were
denied and deprived by the State of means of protection, which led to their unnatural or premature death.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
As seen in Chart 11, the violent deaths for which the State is directly responsible occurred
in nine (9) federal entities. The Metropolitan Area of Caracas is the one with the most violent deaths attributable to this cause (4), followed by Anzoátegui, Lara, and Miranda, with two (2) cases each, and the remaining federal entities with one (1) case each.
CHART 11
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly where the State has a Direct Responsibility, by Federal Entity. July-December, 2020 5 4
2
2 1
1
1
2
1
1
21 Táchira
Miranda
Lara
Carabobo
Barinas
Bolívar
Aragua
Anzoátegui
MAC
0
In Venezuela, the elderly’s rights to life, integrity, health, food, and security are consistently
violated. The State does not guarantee older people their exercise of said human rights, and
the limitations and health complications characteristic of old age amplify the risks of premature death. The lingering complex humanitarian emergency is compounded with hyperinfla-
tion and spiking food and medicine prices, which makes access thereto difficult for senior citizens. Treatment for chronic diseases and other ailments typical of old age is very costly for the vast majority of older persons3.
The State's lack of interest in implementing policies for the care, preventive assistance, and protection of the older population makes them an easy prey to crime, with criminals acting
with total impunity under the cold stare of a State that seems not to have concerns about the lives of its citizens.
3
See the 2020 issues of the Convite A.C. Monitoring Access to Health in Venezuela publication.
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk
José Antonio Rojas Aular, 66, who worked as a driver for the public transportation company Unión El Limón, died of a heart attack. He was waiting in line to fill up the unit's diesel tank in order to continue to drive users to their destination. Mr. Rojas Aular had arrived at 5:00 a.m. at a service station located at the Maracay Passenger Terminal, which had been cleared for the public sector transportation providers to refuel their units. (El Periodiquito,4 de octubre de 2020).
Nurse Hilda Lameda, 61, was bitten by a snake in the tiny village of Pico e' Gallo in the municipality of Torres, state of Lara, on the night of October 2. She passed away in the early hours of October 3 because there was no ambulance available, or fuel, to transfer
22
her to the Pastor Oropeza Riera Hospital in Carora. (Reporte Confidencial, 3 de octubre de 2020).
Henry Tineo, a retired employee of of CVG ALCASA, in Puerto Ordaz, state of Bolívar, died of a heart attack while in a line for gasoline. Tineo was part of a group of people who had been waiting for several days to purchase the 20 liters of gasoline that the service stations of the state are allowed to sell to customers. (Nueva Prensa de Guayana, 12 de octubre de 2020).
On Monday, siblings Silvia Margarita Sandoval Armas, 72, and Rafael David Sandoval Armas, 73, were found dead at their home in Caracas, their bodies decomposing. They died of causes associated with malnutrition. The neighbors used to provide them with food, given that Silvia only received a pension of 400,000 bolivars. (El Nacional 30 de octubre de 2020).
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
2.1. Violent Deaths of Older People by Month of Occurrence October was the month with the highest number of violent deaths of older people. Thirty-seven (37) senior citizens died violently over that month. The months of July, with thirty-six (36) deaths, and that of November, with thirty-four (34), come next. The month
with the lowest number of deaths was August, with twenty-five (25) violent deaths. (See Chart 12).
CHART 12
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly, by Month of Occurrence July-December, 2020
28
December
34
November
37
October
23
27
September
25
August
36
July 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
2. 3. Violent Deaths of Older People: A Comparison Between the Two Semesters of the Year 2020 VIOLENT DEATHS AMONG THE ELDERLY, 2020 Causas específicas Carelessness, Negligence, Want of Skill, Experience, or Knowledge
Direct Responsibility of the State Other Types of Violent Deaths TOTAL
jan - jun
jul - dec
TOTAL
31
38
69
40
39
81
33
185
97 13
187
178 46 79
372
A total of three hundred and seventy-two (372) violent deaths of elderly people were recorded in 2020. Forty-four percent (44%) of said deaths occurred during the first semester of
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk the year, whereas fifty-two percent (52%) did over the second semester. According to the
classification parameters used in this report, the types of violent deaths follow a general
similar trend during the two six-month periods in question. The number of elderly persons who died violently for reasons that are directly attributable to the State differ substantially
from one semester to the other. This is due to the fact that a database was created for the second semester that contains the official number of COVID-19-related deaths in senior
citizens, which is presented in the second part of this report. On the other hand, there are no major variations between the two semesters as far as the number of deaths due to accidents and suicides is concerned. (See Chart 13 and Chart 14)
Women are less the object of violent death than men are. Based on the information collec-
ted, seventy-four percent (74%), or 275, of all violent deaths were the result of violence perpetrated against older adult men, while twenty-six percent (26%), or 97, were from
violence perpetrated against women. There are no significant differences between the two semesters. (See Chart 15)
Eighty-six percent (86%), or 319, of the elderly persons who died violently in 2020 were aged
24
between 60 and 80. Sixty-two percent (62%), or 229, of the latter were in the 60-70 CHART 13
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in 2020, by Cause of Death (Percentages)
21,6
Other
20,3 17,8
Direct Responsibility of the State
7,0 16,8
Carelessness, Negligence, Want of Skill, Experience, or Knowledge
20,9 43,8
Specific Causes
51,9 0
10
January-June
20
30
40
50
July-December
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
60
age bracket, while twenty-four percent (24%), or 90, were in the 70-80 age group. Additio-
nally, five point four percent (5.4%), or 20, women between the ages of 55 and 59 died violently in the year aforesaid. (see Chart 16)
El 86% (319) de las personas mayores que perdieron su vida en forma violenta durante el año 2020, tenían entre 60 y 80 años. De entre éstos, 229 (62%) de las personas mayores fallecidas, se encontraban en el rango de edad comprendido entre 60 y 70 años y 90 personas entre 70 y 80 años (24%). Además, hubo 20 mujeres entre 55 y 59 años (5,4%) que perdieron la vida de forma violenta (V. Gráfico 16).
CHART 14
Other Types of Violent Deaths (Percentages)
65,0
Accidents
73,7
35
Suicides
26,3 0
10 January - June
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
July - December
Chart 17 shows the changes in the percentage of violent deaths between the first half and the second half of 2020. During the first semester of the year, there were twenty-six (26)
deaths where the perpetrators had some relationship or direct kinship with the victims. In the second semester, there were thirty-five (35) violent deaths. The number of victims killed
by neighbors, friends, acquaintances, and partners during the first semester almost doubled that of the second semester. Nevertheless, a higher number of violent deaths was
recorded during the second semester where the perpetrators were the victim’s grandchildren (7) and children (8).
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
25
#OldAgeAtRisk CHART 15
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in 2020, by Gender (Percentages)
80 70
77,8
60
70,6 42,9
50 40 30 20
22,2
10
26
29,4
0 MEN
WOMEN
January - June
CHART 16
July - December
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in 2020, by Age Range and Gender (Percentages)
80
67,8
70
65,2
60
50,9
50
42,9
40 30 20
23,8
26,2
7,1
10 0
25,5
23,1
24,2
18,2 5,5
7,0 0,0
WOMER
0,0 MEN
JANUARY - JUNE
55 - 59
9,1
WOMEN JULY - DECEMBER
60 - 70
71 - 80
81 - 90
91 Y +
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
MEN
CHART 17
Perpetrators of Violent Crimes Against the Elderly in 2020, by Their Relationship with the Deceased (Percentages) 1
Neighbors, Friends and Acquaintances
46,2
25,5 11,5
Sibling/Nephew, Niece/ Other Relatives
17,1 23,1
Spouse/Partner
14,3 Grandchild
7,7
20 11,5
Son/Daughter
0
5
22,9
10
15
20
January-June
25
30
35
40
45
50
July-December
CHART 18
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in 2020 Due to Specific Causes (Percentages) 14,1
Run-overs
19,79
14,1 14,4
Accident Armas de fuego
10,2
Death due to Lack of Assistance
12,4 17,8
7,0 15,7 15,5
Stabbing 5,9
Mechanical Asphixiation
6,5
Beating Suicide
5,3 0,5 0,5
Provoked Accidents
3,2
Unknown Aggravated Murder
1,1
12,3 7,6
4,3
2,2
0
5 January-June
10
15
20
July-December
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
27
#OldAgeAtRisk The violent deaths of elderly people due to specific causes along the two semesters of 2020 showed the same trend overall. There were changes only in two categories: those that are the direct responsibility of the State, mostly from COVID-19, which were recorded separately
for the second half of 2020, and those caused by beatings. During the first semester of the year, there were twelve (12) violent deaths caused by beating, whereas during the second semester, that number almost doubled, with twenty-three (23) deaths. (See Chart 18)
As shown in Chart 19, fifty-seven percent (57%), or 103, of elderly people were killed during a
robbery. The number of deaths due to this cause over the second semester almost doubled that of the first semester. The same applies to the other violent deaths from various motives.
CHART 19
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in 2020, by Motive (Percentages)
28
60
55,9
50 40 30
27,8
20
14,4
15,5 8,5
10
4,5
1,0 0,6
0 Robbery
January-June
Fight
Score Settling or Retribution
Kidnapping
5,1 0
10,3
3,1
Hired Killings
Unknown
July-December
Chart 20 depicts changes in this type of violent deaths in the various federal entities
between the first and second semester of the year 2020. The most significant variations are
those recorded for the states of Anzoátegui, Lara, and Táchira. Over the second semester of
2020, the number of violent deaths recorded for these states doubled as compared against that recorded during the first semester of that year. In two of the states, namely
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
Trujillo and Zulia, more deaths occurred from the causes in question during the second semester than during the first one. The rest of the federal entities show a similar trend along both semesters. (See Chart 20).
CHART 20
Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in 2020, by Federal Entity (Percentages)
Zulia 7 7
Vargas Trujillo
3
Sucre
2
Portuguesa
2 2
11
3
2 2
Nueva Esparta
13
5
Táchira
Monagas
29
6
4
12
Miranda 1
Mérida
3
1
6
Falcón Delta Amacuro
2 2
Cojedes Carbobo Bolívar
11
6
2
23
10
8
3
0
17
12
Lara Guárico
19
11
13
Barinas
20
Aragua
0
1 8
Anzoátegui AMC
17 0
24
5
January-June
10
15
25
19 20
25
30
July-December
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk
PART II 1. 1. COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly July-December, 2020 The death of older persons from COVID-19 or related causes during the second semester of the year 2020, as well as the death of elderly health care workers for reasons associated with the coronavirus, are addressed herein separately from those discussed in previous
sections. There State has played a direct or indirect role in said deaths because of its actions or omissions, including its failure to comply with its obligations as regards the heal-
thcare system to prevent the premature death of senior citizens from COVID-19. The State is responsible for those deaths.
In this report, we have treated separately COVID-19 deaths because, on the one hand, the
coronavirus is now a global pandemic and, on the other hand, we needed to arrive at the
approximate number of COVID-19 deaths by gender, age brackets, and federal entities over the period.
For the purposes of this report, as mentioned in the methodology section, the information used in systematizing and presenting COVID-19 deaths in elderly people was obtained from
the official reports published daily in the press, mainly in Últimas Noticias, El Nacional, El
Universal, Tal Cual and Efecto Cocuyo. The official spokespersons for the Executive were the members of the Presidential Commission for the Control and Prevention of COVID-19 Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, Minister of Communication and Information Freddy Ñáñez, and President Nicolás Maduro. These official reports do not necessarily include information on
the number of COVID-19 deaths among healthcare workers. The official information was contrasted with that published by the news outlets and by Médicos Unidos de Venezuela [Venezuela Doctors United], a NGO with more than 4,000 healthcare workers throughout the Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
country, and with research work specifically on COVID-19 deaths in the healthcare sector.
This approach made it possible for us to collect information on the name, gender, age, and federal entity of residence of the senior citizens who died because of the coronavirus, as
reported, and build a database with approximate cross-referenced information on the number of deaths of elderly persons from COVID-19 in the healthcare sector vs. the number reported by the Executive on a daily basis.
According to official data, from March 2020, with marks the beginnings of the pandemic in
Venezuela, to December 31, 2020, there were 1,028 COVID-19 deaths and 113,558 COVID-19
people infected with the virus. Of the total number of people who contracted the disease,
107,583 (95%) have recovered, 4,947 are active cases, 2,917 are being treated in hospitals, 1,715 are being treated in Comprehensive Diagnostic Centers (CDI, by its Spanish acronym), 299 are in home isolation, and 16 are being treated in private clinics (Efecto Cocuyo, 31-12-2020)4.
1.1. COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly As per the information obtained from official channels, a total of 539 senior citizens died
from COVID-19 during the second half of 2020. Forty-four point five percent (40.5%), or 218, were elderly women, and sixty percent (60%), or 321, were elderly men. (See Chart 21). CHART 21
COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly by Gender
July-December, 2020
40,45%
Women Men
4
59,55%
Efecto Cocuyo: Coronavirus: Venezuela Closes 2020 with 1,028 Deaths and 113,558 People Infected with COVID-19,
December 31, 2020.
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
31
#OldAgeAtRisk Forty-seven percent (47%), or 255, of the elderly people who died from COVID-19 in the
second half of 2020 were between ages of 60 and 70, followed by those aged between 71 and 80 (33%), and those aged 81 and over (16%). There were 9% of women between the ages of 55 and 59 who died from COVID-19. (See Chart 22).
According to the official information from the Executive, all federal entities recorded elderly
deaths from COVID-19 or from causes associated therewith. Sixty-six percent (66%), or 358, of the total COVID-19 deaths of older people recorded for the second semester of 2020
occurred in seven federal entities, with between 67 and 36 victims: Táchira (67), Apure (56),
Mérida (54), Miranda (51), Zulia (50), the Metropolitan Area of Caracas (44) and Lara (36), followed by seven states with with between 25 and 7 victims and twenty-five percent (25%),
or 135, of the deaths, and by ten federal states with between 7 and 1 senior citizens who fell victim to the disease and nine percent (9%), or 46 of the total deaths, (See Chart 23).
32
CHART 22
COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly, by Age Range and Gender july-december 2020 100 90 80
9,17
53,89
33,33
12,15
0,62
37,61
33,49
19,27
0,46
60 - 70
71 - 80
81 - 90
91 y +
70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 %
55 - 59
Women
Men
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
CHART 23
COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly, by Federal Entity July-December, 2020
Zulia
4
Vargas Trujillo
50
20
Yaracuy
7
67
Táchira
25
Sucre
2
Portuguesa
13
Nueva Esparta
4
Monagas
51
Miranda Mérida
36
Lara
6
Guárico Falcón Delta Amacuro
1
Cojedes
2
7
17
7
Barinas
56
Apure Aragua Anzoátegui
16
Amazonas
19
25
44
AMC
0
54
6
Carbobo Bolívar
33
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
#OldAgeAtRisk 1.2 COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly in the Healthcare Sector The number of deaths of elderly people from COVID-19 as presented herein is an approxi-
mate number. The information used in preparing this report was obtained from the
research work of the NGO Médicos Unidos de Venezuela [Venezuela Doctors United] and from that published in the Efecto Cocuyo website, whose figures do not always match. For example, Efecto Cocuyo notes that it has been able to confirm the death of 245 health professionals from the beginning of the pandemic until December 31, 2020, with the state of
Zulia being the most affected federal entity. (Efecto Cocuyo, December 31, 2020). However, Médicos Unidos de Venezuela reports as many as 294 health workers dead from COVID-19 over the same period.
With thirty point thirty-one percent (30.31%) of the total deaths of healthcare workers from
COVID-19 in the American continent, Venezuela was, until August 31, the country with the highest number of deaths in this group. While the Maduro administration had reported
three hundred and eighty-six (386) COVID-19 deaths by August 31, 2020, Médicos Unidos de Venezuela reported and additional 117 deaths of patients with clinical symptoms suggestive
34
of the disease. CHART 24
COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly in the Healthcare Sector by Gender July-December, 2020
33,80%
Women Men
66,20%
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
During the second half of 2020, a total of 71 elderly healthcare workers died from COVID-19, as reported. Thirty-four percent (34%), or 24, were women over 55 years of age, and sixty-six percent (66%), or 47, were men aged 60 and over. (See Chart 24).
Sixty-six percent (66%), or 47, of the elderly healthcare workers who died from COVID-19 in the second half of 2020 were between 60 and 70 years of age, followed by those aged between 71 and 80 (18%). Six women between the ages of 55 and 59 died from COVID-19 in this group. (See Chart 25).
Zulia stands out as the federal entity with the most deaths of healthcare workers from
COVID-19, with 23 deaths, or thirty-two percent (32%) of the total COVID-19 deaths. Forty-two percent (42%) of COVID-19 deaths in the healthcare sector occurred in six (6) federal enti-
ties, including the Metropolitan Area of Caracas: MAC (7), Táchira (6), Bolívar (5), and Anzoátegui, Carabobo, and Barinas with four deaths each. Sixteen percent (16%) of
COVID-19 deaths in the sector occurred in five (5) states: Guárico (3), and Mérida, Monagas, Portuguesa, and Aragua, with two (2) deaths each. On the other hand, there were seven (7) states, or ten percent (10%) of the total, with one (1) death each. (See Chart 26).
CHART 25
COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly in the Healthcare Sector, by Age Range and Gender. July-December, 2020 68,09
62,50 25
21,28
14,4
55 - 59
Women
60 - 70
71 - 80
8,51 0 81 - 90
2,13 0 91 y +
Men
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
35
#OldAgeAtRisk CHART 26
COVID-19 Deaths Among the Elderly in the Healthcare Sector by Federal Entity
July-December, 2020
Zulia
23
1 1
Vargas Trujillo
6
Táchira
1
Sucre Portuguesa
1
Nueva Esparta Monagas
1
Miranda
36
Mérida
1
Lara
2 2 2 3
Guárico
1
Falcón
4
Carbobo Bolívar Barinas
2
Aragua Anzoátegui
5
4 4
7
MAC
0
5
10
15
20
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
25
References Center for Justice and Peace (CEPAZ) 2020: Monitoring Femicides in Venezuela: June 14 – November 13, 2020.
ECLAC 2020: The Economic Commission for Latin American and the Caribbean (ECLAC) World Population Prospects 2019. UN Methodology for Population Estimates and Projections. Population and Development Series, 132. Santiago de Chile. https://repositorio.cepal.org/bitstream/hand-
le/11362/45989/S2000384_es.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y Convite A.C: Monitoring Access to Health in Venezuela, 2020. Newsletters. Inter-American Court of Human Rights
https://www.derechoshumanos.net/proteccion/index.htm). Fermín, Yeannaly: Runrunes.es, April 5, 2020. Global Health Security Index 2019. Jeanfreddy Gutiérrez: “Seventy-Seven Percent of COVID-19 Deaths in Venezuela are of People Younger than 69.” Efecto Cocuyo, June 9, 2020.
Venezuelan Violence Observatory, 2020: Annual Report on Violence in Venezuela, 2020. Between the COVID-19 Epidemic and Violence. Caracas.
https://observatoriodeviolencia.org.ve/informes/informe-anual-de-violencia/ Olivieri, María Laura, 2020: COVID-19 and the Elderly: Measures Taken in the Region. News from Latin America and the Caribbean (NODAL). May 29, 2020.
Venezuela: Compulsory Social Security Act of 1967. 2008 Reform to the Compulsory Social Security Act of 1967.
Venezuela: Organic Law of the Integral Social Security System, 1997. Utopix-Proiuris Monitoring Femicides in Venezuela World Population Ageing Highlights 2020
https://www.un.org/development/desa/pd/sites/www.un.org.deve-
lopment.desa.pd/files/undesa_pd-2020_world_population_ageing_highlights.pdf
JULY - DECEMBER 2020
37
#OldAgeAtRisk APPENDICES VENEZUELAN LEGISLATION ON THE PROTECTION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF THE ELDERLY Name
Coments
Venezuelan Constitution, 1999
Article 80. The State shall guarantee senior citizens the full
Articles 80 and 86.
exercise of their rights and guarantees. The State, with the joint participation of families and society, is under the obligation to respect their human dignity and autonomy, and shall guarantee them integral care and social security benefits that improve and ensure their quality of life. Pension and retirement benefits granted through the social security
38
system shall not be less than the urban minimum wage. Senior citizens shall be guaranteed the right to work, should they express their desire and should they be able to do so. Article 86. “All persons are entitled to Social Security as a nonprofit public service that guarantees health and ensures protection in the event of maternity, fatherhood, illness, invalidity, catastrophic illness, disability, special needs, occupational risks, loss of employment, unemployment, old age, widowhood, loss of parents, housing issues, burdens deriving from family life, and any other circumstances warrantying social welfare. The inability of persons to pay taxes shall not be ground for excluding them from protection by the system.
Social Security Act of 1991
They regulate the situations and legal relations concerning
Organic Law of the Social Security
the protection under the social security system.
System, 2002.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
Name
Coments
Law on Violence against Women and
It orders that penalties be increased by half if there is the
the Family, 1998. Section 21.
aggravating circumstance that a crime was committed against an older person.
Law on the Provision of Social Services
It defines and regulates the governance, organization, opera-
to the Elderly and Other Categories of
tion, financing, and determination of benefits, as well as the
Persons, 2005.
requirements for their provision, as created by the Organic Law of the Social Security System.
Decree-Law No. 8694 on the Creation of
It establishes that the beneficiaries of the “Gran Misión en
the “Amor Mayor Venezuela” Great
Amor Mayor Venezuela” are all elderly women who are 55
Mission
years of age or older, and elderly men who are 60 years of
December 9, 2011. (The Great Venezuelan
age or older, whether Venezuelans or aliens who have been
Mission for Love of the Elderly).
legal residents of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela for the last ten years.
Law on Food and Medicine Bonuses for
Its purpose is to supplement, through bonuses, the monthly
Pensioners and Retirees,
income of pensioners and retirees in the public and private
sanctioned by the National Assembly on
sectors as a means to protect their right to purchase food
March 30, 2016.
and medicines. It provides that pensions and retirement benefits granted through the social security system may not be less than the urban minimum wage and that the elderly shall be guaranteed the right to work, should they express their desire and are able to do so.
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39
#OldAgeAtRisk MAIN INTERNATIONAL AND REGIONAL INSTRUMENTS ON THE PROTECTION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF THE ELDERLY Name
Coments
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
It recognizes the right to social benefits in old age.
United Nations, 1948.
The International Covenant on Economic,
It recognizes the right of all persons to social security,
Social and Cultural Rights. Resolution 2200 A
including social insurance.
(XXI), United Nations, 16 December 1966, which
40
came into force on January 3, 1976.
The Convention on the Elimination of All
It expressly prohibits age as a reason for discrimina-
Forms of Discrimination against Women.
tion and outlaws discrimination in access to social
United Nations, 1979. It came into force in 1981.
security in old age.
The Vienna International Plan of Action on
It states that fundamental human rights do not dimini-
Ageing, adopted by the United Nations
sh with age. Due to the marginalization and disabilities
General Assembly in 1982 (Resolution 37/51)
that old age may bring, older persons are at risk of losing their rights and being rejected by society unless said rights are clearly identified and respected. The proposal was included in the United Nations Principles for Older Persons as a statement of aspirations and not as a declaration.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
Name
Coments
Additional Protocol to the American Conven-
The rights of older persons are explicitly recognized in
tion on Human Rights in the Area of Econo-
this Protocol. They are circumscribed to the area of
mic, Social and Cultural Rights of Older
welfare and assistance policies. Pursuant to Article 17
Persons (Protocol of San Salvador), 1988.
of the Protocol, everyone has the right to special protection in old age. The States Parties agree to adopt such measures progressively.
United Nations Principles for Older Persons
Governments are encouraged to incorporate the
adopted by the United Nations General
following principles into their national programs:
Assembly in 1991 (Resolution 46/91)
Independence Participation Care Self-fulfillment Dignity
In 1991, the International Federation on Ageing
The obligations of the States Parties to the Internatio-
and the Dominican Republic introduced the
nal Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
Declaration on the Rights and Responsibili-
in this area are specified, including:
ties of Older Persons. It laid the foundation for
The right to work (articles 6, 7 and 8)
the United Nations Principles for Older Persons,
The right to social security (Article 9)
adopted by a resolution of the General
The right to family protection (Article 10)
Assembly in 1991.
The right to an adequate standard of living (Article 11) The right to physical and mental health (Article 12) The right to education and culture (Article 13)
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#OldAgeAtRisk Name
Coments
The UN General Assembly decided to declare
Following the recommendations of the International
1999 as the International Year of Older
Conference on Aging, it was decided that October 1 of
Persons.
each year would be the International Day of Older Persons.
The Toronto Declaration on the Global
All States are urged to ensure the full and equal enjoy-
Prevention of Elder Abuse, 2002.
ment of the rights of older persons through the adoption of measures against age discrimination, abuse, and violence, and the provision of adequate health care.
42
Political Declaration and International Plan of
An international policy on ageing was designed that
Action on Ageing, Second World Assembly on
included a plan of action advocating for a change of
Ageing. Madrid, 2002.
attitudes and practices at all levels aimed at harnessing the potential of older persons in the 21st century. The recommendations for action prioritize the development, promotion, and protection of the health of the elderly.
The Second Regional Intergovernmental
The resulting Declaration was considered by the PAHO
Conference on Ageing in Latin America and
in the Plan of Action on the Health of Older Persons,
the Caribbean, which was organized by the
which included active and healthy ageing.
ECLAC and was held in Brasilia in 2007.
General Comment No. 6 of the Committee on
It provides for protection for individuals or groups who
Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, United
are at greater risk of torture or ill-treatment, including
Nations, 1995. This Committee has been
the elderly.
expanding content through its General Comments, particularly General Comment No. 14 of 2000, General Comment No. 19 of 2008, and General Comment No. 20 of 2009.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
Name
Coments
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel,
States Parties are called upon to take appropriate
Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
measures, including legislative, aimed at eliminating
Punishment. General Comment No. 2. United
discrimination
Nations, 2008
gender- and age-sensitive policies and measures
against
older
women,
implement
that ensure the full and effective participation of elderly women in all spheres of society (political, social, economic, cultural, civil, or otherwise). General Recommendation No. 27 on older
A general recommendation was adopted on older
women and the protection of their human
women and the protection of their human rights,
rights. United Nations Committee on the
pursuant to Article 21 of the Convention on the Elimina-
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
tion of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
October 2010.
43
Resolution 21/23 of the United Nations Human
States are called upon to provide for and ensure the
Rights Council, 2012, on the human rights of
full and equitable enjoyment of all human rights and
older persons.
fundamental freedoms for older persons, including by taking measures to combat age discrimination, neglect, abuse, and violence. They are also urged to provide adequate health care, bearing in mind the importance of solidarity, reciprocity, and generational interdependence in the family for social development.
The Inter-American Convention on Protec-
This Convention is the first one of its kind to have the
ting the Human Rights of Older Persons, 2015.
elderly as the exclusive subject of protection. It contains provisions that promote, protect, and ensure the recognition, full enjoyment, and exercise of all human rights of older persons. Article 2 provides specific definitions of terms such as abandonment, palliative care, age discrimination, multiple discrimination, ageing, active and healthy ageing, abuse,
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#OldAgeAtRisk Name
Coments neglect,
older
person,
older
person
receiving
long-term care services, integrated social and health services, and old age.
Follow-up to the International Year of Older
This report analyses how the current agenda for
Persons: Second World Assembly on Ageing.
ageing and older persons fits into the development
Report of the Secretary-General, 2015.
agenda beyond 2015, including the sustainable development goals. It focuses on six issues directly related to the post-2015 development agenda: poverty, health, gender equality, employment and decent work, inclusive cities, and environmental emergencies. It also presents an update on recent developments in relation
44
to ageing provided by the regional commissions. It includes recommendations to ensure that no older person is left behind in the implementation of the post-2015 development agenda.
General Comment No. 36, Article 22, 2017.
It is establishes that the right to life shall be protected by law. This means that States Parties must establish a legal framework to ensure the full enjoyment of the right to life by all persons. The duty to protect the right to life by law also includes, for States Parties, the obligation to take appropriate legal measures to protect life from all foreseeable threats, including threats from private individuals and entities.
Victimization Report: Old Age at Risk. Violent Deaths Among the Elderly in Venezuela
RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE 2011/2016 UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW OF VENEZUELA ON HUMAN RIGHTS FOR OLDER PERSONS Name
Recomendation
UPR 2011/Cycle 1. Made by Vietnam/Accepted.
Recommendation 94.10: Give more importance to the
Field: Civil and political rights. Right to effective
protection of vulnerable social groups such as
protection under the law.
women, children, the elderly, and the poor.
UPR 2016/ Cycle 2. Made by Singapore/
Recommendation 133.56: Fully implement the National
Accepted. Area: Economic, social, cultural, and
Human Rights Plan to strengthen institutional coordi-
environmental rights (ESCER). The right to
nation and oversight of human rights policies in the
social security.
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, particularly with respect to social protection programs that support the elderly and persons with disabilities.
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