Bassil Da Costa Explained

Bassil Da Costa
Birth Name:Bassil Alejandro Da Costa Frías
Birth Date:7 May 1990
Birth Place:Guatire, Venezuela
Death Place:Caracas, Venezuela
Death Cause:Gunshot
Parents:Alejandro Da Costa
Jeneth Frías
Occupation:Student
Known For:First death during the 2014 Venezuelan protests

Bassil Da Costa (Guatire, 7 May 1990 – Caracas, 12 February 2014) was a Venezuelan university student, killed during the 2014 protests against the Venezuelan government, the first death of the wave of protests. Da Costa was a marketing student at the Universidad Alejandro de Humboldt in Caracas.

Death

On 12 February 2014, Youth Day in Venezuela, various parties in opposition to the Venezuelan government and student groups marched in the entire country in protest against the government. In Caracas, the protest march was held from Plaza Venezuela to the Public Ministry's offices in the city's downtown. An hour after the march ended, clashes occurred in the La Candelaria Parish; protesters armed with rocks, bottles, fireworks and slingshots skirmished with authorities who responded with tear gas.[1] During the confrontations, Da Costa was shot and killed.

On 13 February 2014, President Nicolás Maduro said Da Costa and Montoya were killed by the same person and that the murders were part of the "violence generated by the opposition". The secretary of the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), the opposition coalition, Ramón Guillermo Aveledo, rejected President Maduro's statements and maintained the protesters were not ill-intended, while hinting at possible government infiltrates in the march.

Investigations

The first investigations made by the Cuerpo de Investigaciones Científicas, Penales y Criminalísticas (CICPC) identified at least three members of the Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN) who had shot against protesters near the Public Ministry offices the day of the march, amongst them the alleged killer of Da Costa.

Days later, Últimas Noticias published the results of an investigative work on the murders, in which it claimed to have discovered both men in uniform and civilians had shot against the protesters on 12 February. In April 2014, six SEBIN officers were apprehended and the alleged murderer of Da Costa was formally indicted.

The trial on Da Costa and Montoya's murders was delayed in various occasions, until it finally started on 16 June 2015, over a year after they took place. One of the SEBIN officers was sentenced to prison in 2016.[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Meza . Alfredo . 2014-02-13 . Venezuelan protests leave three dead and dozens injured . 2023-11-12 . . en.
  2. News: A nueve años de sus asesinatos, persiste el recuerdo de Bassil Da Costa y Robert Redman . es . Nine years after their murders, the memory of Bassil Da Costa and Robert Redman persists . El Diario . 12 February 2023.