Tarek William Saab | |
Office: | Prosecutor General of Venezuela |
Term Start: | 5 August 2017 Disputed with Luisa Ortega Díaz |
Appointed: | National Constituent Assembly |
Predecessor: | Luisa Ortega Díaz |
Office1: | President of the Republican Moral Council |
Term Start1: | 16 December 2023 |
Predecessor1: | Elvis Amoroso |
Term Start2: | 1 January 2017 |
Term End2: | 7 February 2019 |
Predecessor2: | Manuel Galindo Ballesteros |
Successor2: | Elvis Amoroso |
Term Start3: | 1 January 2015 |
Term End3: | 1 January 2016 |
Predecessor3: | Luisa Ortega Díaz |
Successor3: | Manuel Galindo Ballesteros |
Office4: | 4th Ombudsman of Venezuela |
Term Start4: | 22 December 2014 |
Term End4: | 5 August 2017 |
Predecessor4: | Gabriela Ramírez |
Successor4: | Alfredo Ruiz |
Office5: | Governor of Anzoátegui |
Term Start5: | 31 October 2004 |
Term End5: | 28 December 2012 |
Successor5: | Aristóbulo Istúriz |
Office6: | Deputy to the National Assembly for AnzoáteguiState |
Term Start6: | 30 July 2000 |
Term End6: | 31 October 2004 |
Office7: | Member of the Chamber of Deputies for the Capital District |
Term Start7: | 23 January 1999 |
Term End7: | 22 December 1999 |
Birth Name: | Tarek William Saab Halabi |
Birth Date: | 10 September 1963 |
Birth Place: | El Tigre, Anzoátegui, Venezuela |
Profession: | Politician, lawyer, author |
Party: | Fifth Republic Movement (MVR) United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) |
Alma Mater: | Central University of Venezuela Universidad Santa María |
Tarek William Saab Halabi (pronounced as /es/, Arabic: طارق وليام صعب حلبي; born 10 September 1962) is a Venezuelan politician, lawyer, and poet. He was a leader of the Fifth Republic Movement (MVR) party founded by Hugo Chávez, President of Venezuela, who publicly called him "The poet of the revolution". He was the Governor of Anzoátegui from 2004 to 2012, and a member of the Committee for Justice and Truth since 2013. In December 2014, he was elected "People's Defender", or Ombudsman, by the National Assembly for 2014–2021 term. On 5 August 2017, the National Constituent Assembly appointed him as Attorney General in substitution of Luisa Ortega Diaz.[1]
Tarek William Saab was born on 10 September 1962 into a Syrian and Lebanese Druze family.[2] [3] Saab began his Law School studies in 1985 in Santa Maria University, but for undisclosed reasons he did not graduate in the regular 5 years (his class was graduated in 1990), but graduated as an attorney in 1992.
After Hugo Chavez took office he was a member of the Constituent Assembly that drafted in 1999 the Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. In 2000, he was elected a member of the Venezuelan National Assembly.
During the coup d'état of April 2002, Saab was imprisoned by security forces after a crowd of protesters had gathered around Saab's home, threatening him and his family. He was held incommunicado for several hours.[4]
In October 2002, Saab was head of the foreign policy commission of Venezuela's National Assembly, and was refused an entry visa to the United States. Reuters reported that Saab told local television he had been denied the visa because a U.S. State Department report "identified him as 'an individual linked to international subversion'". According to Venezuela's El Universal, Saab said he been denied the visa because of alleged ties with international terrorist organizations, which he denied any association with.[5] Saab is an outspoken critic of Israel.[2]
Anzoátegui State Governor Election, 2004 Results Source: CNE data | |||||||||||
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In 2005 Saab was accused by critics within his own party (MVR) of participating in electoral fraud in the primary elections for 2005 local elections.[6] His predecessor as governor of Anzoátegui, David de Lima, accused Saab of using his position for political persecution,[7] [8] after Saab's wife accused De Lima of mismanagement.[9] [10]
In 2014, Saab was elected to the post of ombudsman (Defensor del Pueblo) by the parliament, for a term of seven years, with opposition considering the election unlawful on procedural grounds. During the 2014 Venezuelan protests, Saab was criticized by the opposition because it believed he sided with the government during the protests. The Washington Post stated that the opposition viewed him as "an apologist for the unpopular government of President Nicolás Maduro".[11] [12]
On 5 August 2017 the National Constituent Assembly appointed him Attorney General[1] after former Prosecutor General Luisa Ortega Díaz was removed from office for allegedly being part of the "counterrevolution".[13] This occurred months after Saab stated himself that he had "no gut, no encouragement, no willingness to be Attorney General" and that he wanted to be Prosecutor "not yesterday, not today, not tomorrow".[14]
On 14 June 2018, the National Constituent Assembly appointed Saab as president of the Truth Commission, considering the appointment of the constituent Delcy Rodríguez as Venezuela's Vice-President.[15] [16]
On 2 February 2023, the National Bolivarian Police of Nueva Esparta state arrested two men implicated in an assassination attempt on several high-ranking officials of the Public Prosecutor's Office, including Saab, whose foiled attempt had been ordered by Jhonatan Marín, a former mayor of Guanta municipality, accused of corruption in Venezuela and convicted of bribery in the United States.[17] [18] [19] [20] [21]
In April 2023, Saab said 51 people had been detained in connection with a corruption investigation at the state oil company PDVSA and the metal conglomerate Corporacion Venezolana de Guayana (CVG).[22]
During its 2023 annual report before the United Nations Human Rights Committee, experts questioned William Saab's independence. One of its members, Juan Manuel Santos Pais, remarked: "I have never seen a prosecutor defend a government so much."[23] [24]
In July 2017, the United States Treasury sanctioned thirteen senior officials of the Venezuelan government, including Saab, associated with the 2017 Venezuelan Constituent Assembly elections for what the Treasury describe as their role in undermining democracy and human rights.[25] [26] Tarek William Saab has been sanctioned by several countries and is banned from entering neighboring Colombia. The Colombian government maintains a list of people banned from entering Colombia or subject to expulsion; as of January 2019, the list had 200 people with a "close relationship and support for the Nicolás Maduro regime".[27] [28]
In September 2017 Canada sanctioned 40 Venezuelan officials, including Saab.[29] [30] Canada said the sanctions were "in response to the government of Venezuela's deepening descent into dictatorship".[29] Canadians were banned from transactions with the 40 individuals, whose Canadian assets were frozen.[29]
On 18 January 2018, the European Union sanctioned seven Venezuela officials, including Saab, and accused them of human rights abuses or breaching the rule of law.[31] The sanctioned individuals were prohibited from entering the nations of the European Union, and their assets were frozen.[32]
In March 2018, Panama sanctioned 55 public officials, including Saab.[33]
On 20 April 2018, the Mexican Senate froze the assets of officials of the Maduro administration, including Saab, and prohibited them from entering Mexico.[34]
Tarek began writing poetry at the age of fourteen, when he studied at the Liceo Briceño Méndez in El Tigre, Anzoátegui, publishing poems in the Antorcha newspaper of that city. In the 1980s, his poems reached the pages of Papel Literario de El Nacional.[35] The influence of the American poets of the beat generation such as Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and the hippie counterculture movement were influential in the beginnings of Tarek William Saab's poetry, as were his readings of the German novelist Herman Hesse.[36]
In 1993 he was selected by a jury to represent Venezuela at the "Foro Literatura y Compromiso" (Literature and Commitment Forum) held in Mollina/Malaga (Spain).[37]
His book "Los Niños del Infortunio" was written after he was invited by Cuban President Fidel Castro, during an interview in Havana in 2005, to visit the Cuban medical mission in Pakistan. It was presented at the Cuban capital's book fair the following year, in the presence of Castro and Hugo Chávez. Chávez dubbed him "el poeta de la revolución" (the poet of the revolution).[38]
Saab has written numerous publications, including Los ríos de la Ira (1987), El Hacha de los Santos (1992), Príncipe de Lluvia y Duelo (1992), Al Fatah (México, 1994), Angel Caído Angel (1998), Cielo a Media Asta (2003), Cuando Pasen las Carretas (2003), Poemas selectos (Colombia, 2005), Los niños del infortunio (Cuba, 2006. China, 2007), Memorias de Gulan Rubani (Caracas, 2007), Un paisaje boreal (Valencia, 2008. Caracas, 2009), Hoguera de una adolescencia intemporal (Caracas, 2022).[39]