The Venezuelan government has criticized a United Nations human rights report on the Latin American nation as "lacking technical rigour and objectivity."

"Venezuela categorically rejects the report regarding the alleged human rights situation in the country, published by the Office of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, as a result of a highly questionable methodology that buries the credibility and technical rigor demanded of an office of this nature, and violates the principles of objectivity, impartiality and non-selectivity," a statement released by the Ministry of Foreign Relations said.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and Jordanian prince, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, said Friday that "rule of law is virtually absent in Venezuela," after a report was published citing "shocking" accounts of alleged extrajudicial killings by state forces.

The Venezuelan government responded that "Mr Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein confirms his complicity with the multiform aggression that is underway against Venezuela, keeping silent in the face of the negative impact on the enjoyment of economic, social, and cultural rights created by coercive, unilateral measures imposed by the United States of America and its servile allies in the region."

The statement also pointed out that all official information provided by the Venezuelan government has been excluded from the report, "in order to build a grotesque media farce on this matter."

The Foreign Ministry "reiterates its inescapable commitment to human rights" and its "willingness to continue cooperating with the organs of the United Nations system on issues of human rights, provided that the sovereignty of the country is respected and that it acts in accordance with rigour and truth."

UN independent expert and Rapporteur, Alfred de Zayas, who himself was in Venezuela compiling data on human rights last year, described the report as lacking objectivity and neutrality.

"My worry is the credibility of the office when it shows no neutrality nor objectivity," he stated following the release of the report.

Much of the report referred to the State's reaction to the 2014 and 2017 right wing violent street protests, and the Operation of People's Liberation (OLP) crime operatives which were temporarily held during 2017.

Venezuela's Jose Vicente Rangel, who served as vice president under Hugo Chavez and now has a popular weekly TV show, warned of police abuses back in April, highlighting “operations that police groups are carrying out, operations that involve outrages against citizens and numerous cases of murder in the barrios.”

He alleged that the suspended OLP ops were being continued extra-officially by the FAES special police forces.