Peru joins calls for reform of OAS rights panels

LIMA, (Reuters) – Peru said on Thursday the  Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has been “abusing” its  powers and should be urgently reformed, joining a growing number  of Latin American countries to attack the panel after being  faulted for rights abuses.

Oscar Valdes

The government has harshly criticized the commission since  late December, when it said Peru had violated the human rights  of three Marxist insurgents who were summarily executed after  surrendering to commandos who raided the Japanese ambassador’s  house in Lima in 1997 and freed dozens of hostages.

The commission has sent the findings of its investigation to  its sister organization, the Inter-American Court on Human  Rights, where families of the victims could demand reparations.

“All of the commandos who participated in the raid are  heroes to us,” Peruvian Prime Minister Oscar Valdes told  Congress on Tuesday. “The Inter-American Commission on Human  Rights has been committing abuses that other friendly countries  have made serious complaints about too.”

Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela have bristled at  what they call overreach by the commission, mainly for weighing  in on disputes that are still being heard in domestic courts.

They have said the panels, widely seen as the most important  bodies of the 35-member Organization of American States, should  be reformed.

An OAS official said a working group led by Brazil and  Colombia will present recommendations this month to the OAS  Permanent Council on how to change the panels.

Peru has long had a tense relationship with the commission  and the court, which have heard scores of cases related to the  state’s tough crackdown on leftist insurgents during a civil war  in the 1980s and 1990s that killed 69,000 people.

President Ollanta Humala, who like Valdes is a former  military officer, took office in July vowing to defend human  rights but has since criticized the Commission for encroaching  on Peruvian sovereignty.

Rights advocates say the panels provide crucial protections  for citizens in countries with weak judiciaries or a history of  authoritarian leaders.

The commission can investigate and observe human rights  cases in OAS countries but some countries, like the United  States, do not recognize the jurisdiction of the court or its  power to enforce rulings.