Human Rights Watch organization
also: Human Rights Report
Explore in graph → Export claims (CSV) ↓
Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Colombiacountry · 6United Statescountry · 3George Sorosperson · 2Colombian Armyorganization · 2Boliviacountry · 2Plan Colombiaoperation · 1AUCorganization · 1George H.W. Bushperson · 1Jose Vargasperson · 1Israelcountry · 1Bill Clintonperson · 1Warsaw Pactorganization · 1Rumen Radevperson · 1
Claims (4)
Human Rights Watch funded
George Soros host_asserted
“Human Rights Watch, for example, has effectively legitimized U.S. military aid to Colombia in the war on terror. Billionaire George Soros' organization, Human Rights Watch, is relatively silent on the routine killings of labor leaders and r…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Cocaine Death Squads and the War on Terror Part 7 @ 50:41
Human Rights Watch exposed
Colombia documented
“Human Rights Watch continued to document the involvement of senior Army commanders in the planning and execution of paramilitary massacres. According to the report, quote, evidence links half of Columbian's 18 brigade-level Army units to pa…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Cocaine Death Squads and War on Terror Part 1 @ 19:19
George Soros headed
Human Rights Watch host_asserted
“For the increase, which is exactly what happened, in the drug trafficking, we have to have a boogeyman. Under the legal banner and drug policies of the Colombian plan, Clinton militarized the nation and financed the counterinsurgency with t…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Cocaine Death Squads and the War on Terror Part 7 @ 8:09
Human Rights Watch funded
Plan Colombia host_asserted
“For the increase, which is exactly what happened, in the drug trafficking, we have to have a boogeyman. Under the legal banner and drug policies of the Colombian plan, Clinton militarized the nation and financed the counterinsurgency with t…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Cocaine Death Squads and the War on Terror Part 7 @ 8:09
Mentions (16)
▶ 19:45
in the past, much of it reads completely different once you understand what's going on. So the next thing we're going to do is move to a review of the Bulgarian arms trade that was written up in the Human Rights Watch report in 1999. And ba…
▶ 27:08
The Human Rights Report says it supplied Bulgarian-made weapons to countries of the Warsaw Pact and communist-backed governments and rebel groups on several continents. The official figures are not available, but basically it ended up being…
▶ 34:19
members of NATO. So NATO has no qualms about corruption or are they necessarily a representation of democracy? So I did want to get to this one part in this human rights where it talks about a particular company.…
▶ 38:55
Anyway, so I wanted to use this entrance to talk to you about a specific guy, Raman Radev, R-A-D-E-V. Now, this is where it gets crazy. So I just read to you in a human rights write-up for the UN.…
▶ 19:30
In all cases of drug trafficking activity, military personnel, police officers, and local officials worked together with narco-military networks and were even listed on the payrolls of many businesses. A Human Rights Watch report in 2001 re…
▶ 8:09
For the increase, which is exactly what happened, in the drug trafficking, we have to have a boogeyman. Under the legal banner and drug policies of the Colombian plan, Clinton militarized the nation and financed the counterinsurgency with t…
▶ 50:17
is going to react. Most journalists in Colombia are killed for exposing corruption. Human rights experts paid little attention to a prevailing culture of paramilitary terror. Some non-governmental organizations in Colombia have offered virt…
▶ 50:41
Human Rights Watch, for example, has effectively legitimized U.S. military aid to Colombia in the war on terror. Billionaire George Soros' organization, Human Rights Watch, is relatively silent on the routine killings of labor leaders and r…
▶ 51:12
This is a quote. Colombian remain committed to human rights and democracy. They need help. Human Rights Watch has no fundamental problem with the U.S. providing that help. Unquote. Yeah, because it's all about democracy in a military dictat…
▶ 17:48
And understanding that there's precedent for all of this makes today seem, it makes today make a lot more sense. Okay. The AUC operated with impunity until 1989 when their activities were outlawed. But Human Rights Watch in a detailed repor…
▶ 18:52
the CIA financed new military intelligence networks there in 1991. But the new networks did little to stop drug traffickers. Instead, they incorporated illegal paramilitary groups into their ranks and strengthened existing death squads. In …
▶ 35:46
of the state, but rather a component of the Colombian overall intelligence network. U.S. military advisors with British and Israeli assistance helped reshape the military intelligence network. According to Human Rights Watch in a report in …
▶ 51:56
Again, it just seems like a win-win for them and a lose-lose for the people involved. The book goes on and talks about a whole bunch of different environmental groups going in and talking about it. And that there were people from Britain th…
▶ 42:48
People operated with impunity until 1989 when their activities were outlawed. Human Rights Watch wrote in a report that documented how in 1991, the U.S. military and CIA personnel collaborated with the Colombian Army to institute a new syst…
▶ 43:17
In the Army's grounding document, Order 200-0591, some of these units continued to act as paramilitary. They were armed either with Israeli guns or U.S. equipment by the Colombian Army, despite them not being allowed to do that. In a new re…
▶ 2:33
to be basically terrorists. The resulting involvement with paramilitary in Colombia basically blurred the lines between national police, local police, and the actual paramilitary terrorists that were protecting the poppy field as they were …