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I'm trying to keep an open mind about allegations of mistreatment of Jeanine Áñez, but all I find is that she is (1) detained preventatively, (2) called a criminal by govt officials, and (3) sometimes held back from embracing visiting family members. paginasiete.bo/nacional/2021/8/21/violencia-politica-psicologica-moral-se-hacen-evidentes-en-la-detencion-de-anez-304720.html
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Elsewhere, Áñez complains that she fears the (overwhelmingly poor and indigenous) population in jail. Which is to say, that she is having the experience of those whose crimes are notorious.
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Human rights standards require that the state protect her physical and psychological health, provide her protection from other prisoners. These obligations have escalated in the wake of Áñez's self-harm this past weekend. @CarwilBJ/1429241637675409420
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Pending other substantive complaints, it seems that Áñez's distress primarily boils down to the fact that she is being treated like … a prisoner or a detainee awaiting trial. — "I am no delinquent!," she protested last week. But the record shows otherwise.