Venezuela

08/01/1998

1 Conscription

conscription exists

Conscription is enshrined in art. 53 of the Constitution which states that military service is compulsory and is to be performed, regardless of an individual's social status, as and when the law requires. [2]

Compulsory military service is regulated by the 1978 Law on Conscription and Military Enlistment (Ley de Conscripcion y Alistamiento Militar). [1] [6]

The Venezuelan armed forces are very popular as they were established by Simon Bolivár, Venezuela's liberator from the colonial oppressor Spain.

military service

All men aged 18 to 50 are liable for military service. [3]

Military service lasts for two years. [1] [3]

postponement and exemption

Regulations on postponement are not known.

A conscript may be exempted if he is medical unfit, married, the sole family breadwinner, a widow's eldest son or the eldest of orphaned siblings, a college student with an average of 15 academic marks, a trainee religious minister or a convicted criminal. (Art. 78 of Reglamento de la Ley de Conscripcion Militar). [1] [5]

recruitment

All men are legally obliged to register for military service when they turn 18. In practice many do not register. Of those who register only 20 percent are actually recruited. [1]

The military registration and recruitment is done by Municipal or Parish Conscription Boards. Every district is assigned a recruit quota. The recruitment officers are paid for each young men they recruit. In 1994 they got 200 Bs. per recruit. It is not unusual for conscripts to 'buy themselves out' by offering the recruitment officer more money than he would receive for recruiting. [1] [6]

The average age for performing military service is between 18 and 24. [1]

Conscripts past their mid-twenties are unlikely to be recruited. [5]

forced recruitment

Recruitment takes place in public at places were many people gather, such as cinema entrances, schools and market places. Recruitment officers, sometimes dressed as civilians and assisted by the military and police, 'verify the documents' and then arbitrarily force recruits into buses bound for to the barracks. The officers are paid for each young men they recruit. According to Venezuelan COs only lower class recruits get picked as those with economic means are able to buy themselves out. Such forced recruitment constitutes systematic violation of the physical integrity and the freedom of movement and becomes a man-hunt. Furthermore, it is prohibited by law. [1] [6]

2 Conscientious objection

The right to conscientious objection is not legally recognised. [1] [2]

Many who resist military service try to evade recruitment and do not respond to call-ups. [1]

In November 1997 for the first time in Venezuela a group of 34 COs publicly announced their conscientious objection to military service. As of now, the armed forces have not proceeded against them. [6]

3 Draft evasion and desertion

penalties

Evading military service is punishable by a fine or by imprisonment, according to art. 41 of the Law on Conscription and Military Enlistment. [3]

Desertion is punishable by 2 to 4 years' imprisonment and exclusion from the armed forces (art. 525, Military Penal Code). [1]

According to a government source, the penalty for desertion is one to 5 years' imprisonment. [5]

practice

Apparently, draft evasion is widespread and draft evaders are not searched for.

Venezuelan COs estimate that there are approximately 180 deserters every year. [1]

Anyone who has deserted or failed to report for reserve service without justification is considered a deserter and, up to the age of 60, faces arrest and imprisonment. [5]

6 Annual statistics

The armed force are 79,000 strong, which is 0.35 percent of the population. They include some 31,000 conscripts. [4]

Every year about 220,000 young men reach conscription age. [4]

An average of 100,000 young men are called up annually, of whom 50,000 actually perform military service. About 120,000 of the registered conscripts are exempted for various reasons. [1]

Sources

[1] ROLC 1994. Informe del taller de formacion para la objecion de consciencia i encuentro latinoamericano de objecion de consciencia. Serpaj, Asuncion, Paraguay. [2] UN Commission on Human Rights, 1991. Report of the Secretary-General prepared pursuant to Commission resolution 1989/59. United Nations, Geneva. [3] Amnesty International 1991. Conscientious objection to military service. AI, London, UK. [4] Institute for Strategic Studies 1997. Military Balance 1997/98. ISS, London, UK. [5] Consulate of Venezuela in Ottawa, 8 August 1991. Telephone Interview from DIRB with Representative. [6] Red de Apoyo por la Justicia y la Paz 1997. Corrections and amendments to the draft report. Red de Apoyo, Caracas, Venezuela.

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Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 16 Nov 2009 - 21:16

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Hace falta actualizar tal informacion. Hoy por hoy el servicio militar no es obligatorio en Venezuela, pero es un deber que se constriñe a cumplir,so pena de severas sanciones.