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When the Mountains Tremble (clip)

War on Democracy - Guate cut

Bilingual education in Guatemala

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Guatemala Solidarity Network UK's photos More of Guatemala Solidarity Network UK's photos
View Article  Reaching a Trade Agreement Between The EU And Central America
"Trade preferences currently in place must be the starting point in the negotiation of an Association Agreement between the European Union and Central America. Recognition of the enormous differences that exist between the two regions must preside over the negotiations", states CIFCA (Copenhagen Initiative for Central America and Mexico). We received the following press release about this issue from CIFCA:

Brussels, 22 February 2008

The European Comission must accept that the General System of Preferences Plus (GSP+) should be the starting point for the negotiation of an Association Agreement between the EU and Central America, according to the European civil society networks and NGOs: CIFCA, APRODEV, CIDSE, Grupo Sur, and Oxfam Interational.

“The European Union is proposing that the starting point for the negotiation of the Agreement will be less than the preferences already extended to Central America in relation to the entry of Central American products into the EU market, and this is unacceptable. It is impossible to aspire to a just Association Agreement if the debate begins with a reduction in trade advantages that one of the partners currently enjoys”, says Eric van Mele, spokesperson for Oxfam International.

   more »
View Article  Campo Pagado: El Caso de Genocidio


Read the campo pagado attached.
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View Article  Open Letter to President Alvaro Colom
January 31, 2008
 
OPEN LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GUATEMALA,
THE HONORABLE ALVARO COLOM CABALLEROS
 
Dear Mr. President:
 
We, the undersigned individuals and organizations, on January 31 2008, would like to render a worthy tribute to the victims of the Spanish Embassy massacre, by working to clear their names and vowing to carry on with their just struggle for which they lost their lives.
 
As you know, January 31st has been declared International Day of Solidarity with the People of Guatemala.  This year we commemorate the 28th anniversary of the tragic events which culminated in the burning of the Spanish Embassy by members of the Guatemala security forces.
 
As a result of this act of repression, a total of 41 people perished in this Embassy and in the public events related to these acts of cowardice.  Many national and international organizations have demanded justice and punishment for those responsible.
 
Despite this, the response of successive Guatemalan governments these past 28 years has been one of concealment, allowing the perpetrators of these criminal acts to continue to enjoy protection, move with impunity across the national territory, hold public positions and even enjoy sanctuary and privileges in various countries in the region.
 
It is necessary, Mr. President, that firm and consistent steps be taken to move forward, in the spirit of the Peace Accords, and that conditions to reach a strong, authentic, and long lasting peace be created.  Full respect for human rights and the diversity of its people are necessary to enable the reconciliation of the Guatemalan people.

We believe that it is important to respond to the demands of the different organizations of the Guatemalan popular movement as well as the recommendations of the Commission for Historical Clarification.  It will also be of vital importance to fully support the work of the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala.
 
We consider that your government has a historic opportunity to take effective and concrete actions for the implementation of the rule of law and the governability of the nation, and in so doing,  make real the hope of ending over half of a century of  impunity and human rights violations which have “cast shadow over” the country and which has turned it into a  refuge for those who committed genocide and a paradise for organized crime.
 
For these reasons, we request that your government:
 
First: Prosecute those who were intellectually and physically responsible for the massacre in the Spanish Embassy and the genocide in Guatemala, in accordance with national and international laws.
 
Second:  Ensure justice and respect for all the women and men who work in the construction of a tolerant, just, and dignified new Guatemala.
 
Sincerely,
 
Asociación de Estudiantes para el Bienestar Internacional, Lund, Suecia
Asociación Guatemalteca de Lund, Suecia
Asociación Guatemalteca Americana de los Angeles California -AGUA- USA
Asociación Salvadoreña Canadiense –ASALCA-
Atlantic Regional Solidarity Network – Canada
Café Justicia – Ottawa, Canada
Canada-El Salvador Action Network –CELSAN-
Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives –KAIROS-
Canadian Student Fair Trade Network
Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Ontario Division International Solidarity Committee
Comité de Base del Frente Amplio-Uruguay "El Ceibo", Toronto, Canada
Comunidad Rutilio Grande – Toronto, Canada
Church of the Brethren Supporting Community for Guatemala Accompaniment Program, Eldora, IA, USA
Denver Justice & Peace Committee –CAMINOS- USA  
Francesca Lupo – Italia
Guatemala Community Network, (GCN) Canada
Guatemala Solidarität Österreich – Solidarity with Guatemala-Austria
Guatemalan Working Group of the Ontario Public Interest Research Group, Mcmaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
Jesuit Forum for Social Faith and Justice, Canada
Kickapoo/Guatemala Accompaniment Project, SW Wisconsin, USA  
Kitchener-Waterloo Mayan Project, Canada
Lakes Area Group Organizing in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala –LAGOS-  St Paul/Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Latin-American Canadian Solidarity Association –LACASA- Canada
London-Guatemala Solidarity Committee, Canada  
Maritimes-Guatemala Breaking the Silence Network, Canada
Mothers for Justice, Hamilton, Canada
Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala –NISGUA- USA
New Democratic Party (NDP) Latin-American Ethnic Committee (Ontario), Canada
No One is Illegal – Toronto, Canada
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty – OCAP – Canada
Organization of Latin American Students  -OLAS- Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada
Organización de Estudiantes para una Globalización Positiva, Lund, Suecia
Punto de Encuentro CKCU Universidad de Carleton, Ottawa, Canada
Rights Action – Canada
SALVAIDE, Canada
Shawna Greenberg,  World Literacy of Canada
Sisters of St. Joseph, Office for Systemic Justice, London, Ontario
Suzanne Rumsey, LA/C Program Coordinator, PWRDF/Anglican Church of Canada
The Social Justice Committee, Canada
Tzijolaj - Cross Cultural Communication, Ottawa, Canada
Unitarian Universalist Central America Network –UUCAN- Seattle, Washington  USA  

This is letter is attached in Spanish and English
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View Article  Honduras/Guatemala: Attacks on rights activists reaching 'worrying proportions'
Amnesty International UK has just published a 32 page report documenting a recent wave of human rights abuses:

The level of threats, intimidation, attacks and killings of activists in Honduras and Guatemala who campaign to defend the rights of marginalised communities is reaching 'worrying proportions' said Amnesty International today (8 August) as it published its new report.  

Amnesty International's report - Persecution and Resistance: The experience of human rights defenders in Guatemala and Honduras - exposes a systematic pattern of attacks against those who defend the rights of marginalised communities, including indigenous peoples and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
 
Director of Amnesty International's Americas Programme, Susan Lee, said:

'Those who protect others from suffering human rights violations end up suffering abuses themselves. The insecurity of human rights activists in Honduras and In Guatemala is reaching worrying proportions.
 
'Threats, intimidation, unfounded criminal charges and killings of activists in Honduras and Guatemala are designed to stop them from protecting people's rights, particularly when their work goes against powerful economic interests,' said Susan Lee.

# Read a copy of the report Persecution and Resistance: The Experience of Human Rights Defenders in Honduras and Guatemala
# Take action to protect human rights defenders at risk in Honduras
# Listen to an audio report from human right defender Dina Meza
View Article  Campesino Organisations Demand Justice on Land Rights

Se acordó hacer la mesa de diálogo en la banqueta de la calle, en frente del edificio ocupado.

We received this press release from CUC:

LAS POLITICAS IMPLEMENTADAS DE ESTE GOBIERNO NO RESUELVEN LA CONFLICTIVIDAD AGRARIA.

Durante este gobierno se ha dado una oleada de desalojos violentos, asesinatos y persecución de los dirigentes de las comunidades que luchan por la recuperación y defensa de la madre  tierra.
 
La política de desagrarización de la conflictividad Rural no se resuelve con la creación de otros fondos como el caso de la reactivación de la economía campesina, la compra de fincas rápidas sin profundizar en la certeza jurídica de la propiedad, los programas de arrendamiento de tierras,  por parte del MAGA; por otra parte está la política de créditos individuales por parte del Fondo de Tierras, la creación de los centros de arbitraje agrario que sólo vienen a generar dispersión y gastos innecesarios para evadir de fondo la crisis agraria.

Por otra parte, la compra de tierras improductivas, la sobrevaloración de tierras, la falta de capital de trabajo, la facilitación de los medios de producción que han accesado  a la tierra ha agudizado más  pobreza y extrema pobreza en el campo y la ciudad. Por lo anteriormente expuesto,

SOLICITAMOS

1.Suspender las amenazas de desalojos a las comunidades que han accesado a tierras por parte del Fondo de Tierras y Banrural.
2.La renegociación de los créditos atorgados a través del Fondo de Tierras, en base a un nuevo avalúo de las fincas.
3.La condonación de las deudas de algunas fincas que no tienen posibilidades de pago.

¡La tierra es Nuestra Madre, no se compra ni se vende, se recupera y se DEFIENDE!

Comité de Unidad Campesina CUC, miembro de CNOC, MICSP, WAKIB’ KEJ, CLOC Y Vía Campesina

You can see more photos of the occupation and protest organised by CUC and CNOC at FONTIERRAS here.

Thanks Mikkel Moldrup-Lakjer for this information. The copy of the Act that was signed by FONTIERRAS, CNOC and CUC is attached.
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View Article  Mining in Guatemala as reported by CBC


This is a clip from CBC's On The Map with Avi Lewis where he interviews Andrew Grant of Skye Resources Limited for the corporate point of view. You can see the full programme here with a documentary report from CBC correspondent, Jean-Michel LePrince. The programme was aired 20 June this year.

"In the 1970's, nickel giant, Inco mined the site near the town of El Estor. The company left a ghost town behind in 1981 as the civil war in Guatemala raged. Now the price of nickel is at a twenty year high and a Canadian company is back.

Skye Resources, based in Vancouver, bought the land from Inco and is ramping up to start production. If you talk to the company, the community is solidly behind them and if you talk to the mayor, you'll hear the same thing."
View Article  Amnesty International step up lobbying on CICIG in Guatemala
Amnesty International have just released the following press release about the CICIG which was CICIACS in a previous encarnation;

Guatemala: Congress must ratify UN-backed commission against impunity

The Guatemalan Congress must urgently ratify the new International Commission Against Impunity (CICIG) if the country is to tackle clandestine criminal groups, said Amnesty International today.

Once approved by Congress, the UN-sponsored CICIG will act in support of the Public Prosecutor's Office, suggesting methods of investigation and presenting evidence. The Public Prosecutor's Office will have ultimate responsibility for deciding whether or not to pursue an investigation.

"The existence and operations of clandestine groups severely undermines respect for the rule of law and human rights" said Sebastian Elgueta, Amnesty International's researcher for Guatemala. "The CICIG could become a valuable contributor in the fight against clandestine criminal groups and the impunity they enjoy."

The CICIG is an extremely important step in the fight against impunity and clandestine groups operating in Guatemala. There is grave concern that if the ratification of CICIG is not made a priority by all political parties, it will fail to advance.

"It is now over three years since initial proposals were discussed to establish an international commission to investigate clandestine criminal groups. The longer discussions and agreements are delayed, the more entrenched criminal networks become in state institutions and the more difficult it becomes to purge the system."

Amnesty International welcomes the international support that the CICIG initiative has received. The organization calls on the Congress of Guatemala to maintain the engagement of the international community and to show a real commitment to the protection of human rights by approving the CICIG without delay.
View Article  European Union wants to accelerate the negotiation of an WTO Plus agreement with Central America
This is a recent press release from CIFCA about the current trade negotiations between the EU and Central American governments.

The European Union wants to accelerate the negotiation of an WTO Plus agreement with Central America

Oxfam International, the International Federation for Human Rights –FIDH-, the Coalition of the Flemish North-South Movement/-11.11.11-, the National Center of Cooperation for Development –CNCD/11.11.11-, Grupo Sur and the Copenhagen Initiative for Central America and Mexico –CIFCA-,

...we consider that the European Union doesn’t fulfill with its foreign relations duties that consists in promoting sustainable economical and social development for developing countries, fight against poverty – including the fulfillment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG)- established in the Article 177 of the Treaty on European Union and the European Consensus on Development of November 2005.

The European Union, on the initiative of the German presidency, has invited the Central American –CA- vice Ministers for Trade to come the next 15th of June in order to establish a dialogue with the European Commission, putting aside the previous requirements to establish a Central American trade and tariff barriers union, it seems that the EU would be satisfied with a mere framework agreement between the Central American Governments, to announce the starting of the negotiations of an EU-CA Association Agreement and a biregional Free-Trade Zone.

The EU, following its “Global Europe: competing in the world” strategy, includes through these Agreements the issues of investments, competition and government procurement – the so-called Singapore Issues-, as it has been made obvious with the exclusion of the explicit reference to the ILO Agreement n°169 on indigenous people that guaranty their autonomy and the obligation to consult them on policies or investments that could affect their rights, during the approbation by the Council of the EU of the negotiation mandate the last 23rd of April.

The E.U. is prioritizing the expansion of its own economic interests, setting apart an adequate acknowledgement of the asymmetries that would retain a correspondence with the reality of poverty and inequality that prevail in Central America. By this way, the Association Agreement will not contribute to reach Social Cohesion, considered as a priority for the EU cooperation strategy for the region.

The inclusion of the so-called Singapore Issues, excluded from the negotiations in the WTO since 2004, entails strict restrictions for each country to define its own development pattern, grants the European companies with the possibility to operate with the same equality conditions as local companies, putting the latest at a vulnerability level that brings effect on the development and the right to work at a national level ; shrinks the governmental capacity to guarantee the right to an healthy environment, the right to food and to ensure the right to health.

Moreover, the EU, with this kind of agreements would infringe the right to development of CA, and the adequate protection of its natural resources, it would affect the enjoyment of their rights by indigenous and afrodescendant people: it would affect the right of self-determination of the peoples to determine their own model of development.

In any case, and if the Agreement was to be negotiated, it should allow Central American countries and communities to preserve their sovereignty over their natural resources, including the continued use of restrictions on exports, investments and intellectual property rights claims. Therefore, legitimate domestic laws, regulations, policy instruments and standards aimed at protecting the environment and biodiversity, at promoting the sustainable use of natural resources or at preventing or mitigating global warming, should be excluded from the negotiations on ‘non-tariff barriers’.

For these reasons, as signing organizations, we urge the public opinion to ASK for the negotiations to be carried on in total transparency, substantial and relevant information, open participation of all the sectors that can be affected by the issues negotiated and reject contents and mechanisms that can violate human rights.
View Article  US Congressional Letter to Guatemala re Rios Montt
We got sent a copy of this letter from Human Rights First. The story was quoted in the Washington Post:

"In over six years since the petitions were filed, there has been little discernable progress in the cases," the U.S. congressmen said in their letter yesterday to Attorney General Juan Luis Florido. "We do not believe that the delay can be adequately explained by the replacement of Special Prosecutors and procedural appeals by the defendants."

Andrew Hudson of the Human Rights Defenders program, part of Human Rights First, a nonprofit organization based in New York and Washington , suggested that prosecution of the Rios Montt case would have broad consequences.

"It is important to bring the perpetrators of serious human rights violations to justice in order to break the culture of impunity and create a safer environment for human rights defenders," he said.




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View Article  UK Strategy on Latin America Set Out

The UK Goverment has just launched a new strategy paper for Latin America. The paper was set out by Lord Triesman on 28th March in Canning House, London. It contains the rather embarassing insinuations that there`s a chance Latin America can be saved from ill by becoming a partner of the UK...

"I believe there are four realistic scenarios for Latin America in 2020:

  • First, a secure, prosperous continent working in partnership with the UK on global issues;
  • Second, a continent where democratic progress stalls, replaced by a new form of caudillo;
  • Third, a continent unable to compete with either Asia in the manufacturing sector or Europe and the US on services, leaving it dependent on its raw materials;
  • Fourth, a continent with a dividing line between prosperous and economically under performing states - with all the political instability that entails."

Not sure if Lord Triesman has any idea how pompous that kind of statement sounds. Here`s the deal: Latin America let`s us exploit it natural resources and in return gets a pat on the head. Triesman`s words come at the same time tension has again surfaced with the Argentina- as the UK has been sniffing around the Falkland Islands for oil. Hey Triesman- let`s not try to kid the UK public that we`re interested in real partnership.

And the UK Government`s not even that bothered about the rights of islanders- the case of the Chagos Islands clarified that little misrepresentation of the Falklands war. Hey- and let`s not even mention Belize! Nuff said. Triesman please put a diplomatic sock in it.

View Article  Events For International Women's Day And Beyond


This photo is thanks to Cristen. The women involved were from the various schools in the town of Livingston, Guatemala. They marched in a parade through town with handmade posters, gathered in the park and listened to various speakers, and participated in performances for the people watching. It was part of many marches organised around Guatemala for International Women's Day on 8th March. Many were specifically part of the campaign against violence against women in Guatemala. The day was celebrated by Central America Women's Network (CAWN) amongst others who recently had a speaker from Guatemala here in the UK.

We've heard that Amnesty International is planning a series of events as part of the culmination of the campaign against violence against women in early May (probably 1st-13th). We'll be able to confirm this and give more details about the events themselves which should involve a speaker from Guatemala soon.
View Article  US Deploys Troops Across Latin America In 'Goodwill' Gesture
1,000 US marines are coming to Guatemala to carry out humanitarian work in San Marcos. The announcement received a bit of coverage in the press back in November when Congress approved the move, but little now with the programmed deployment starting in February [there's now been an article in Prensa Libre 13-02-2007]. The US Ambassador James Derham described the reason for the initiative in a statement as:

"This humanitarian exercise provides the United States the opportunity to deploy and train Military Reserve and National Guard troops."

The Frente Nacional de Lucha called the arrival of US troops in Guatemala a threat to peace. They quoted Sandino Asturias, Centro de Estudios de Guatemala (CEG) who disputed how 'humanitarian' the intentions are:

"Para nadie es un secreto el interés geopolítico de los Estados Unidos en la región y en particular en Guatemala. Aquí lo grave es que en esencia se trata del uso del territorio guatemalteco para entrenar tropas militares extranjeras. Eso es una flagrante violación a la soberanía nacional. El hecho que lo disfracen de obras sociales y de infraestructura tiene aún otro objetivo perverso: el acostumbrar a la población a la presencia de las tropas norteamericanas y que de alguna forma ésta sea aceptable por el público en general."

Whatever the truth it's not hard to be cynical when this same programme of 'Nuevos Horizontes' is repeated all across the region each year since 1995: Dominican Republic, Peru, Nicaragua, Panama, El Salvador, etc. Given the timing- just in the run up to the elections, let's hope there's not a repeat of interference the US demonstrated in Nicaragua (according to the OAS) last year.

Background

Nuevos Horizontes/ New Horizons is an engineer humanitarian civic assistance exercise designed to give training to U.S. military units in civilian construction or medical care services. Participating U.S. troops build basic infrastructure (roads, bridges, schools, wells, etc.) and provide medical, dental and veterinary services. Information from a 'Civilian's guide to U.S. defence and security assistance to Latin America'.

From Guatemala to Colombia: The Regional Integration of Gold and Bullets is an article in ZNET by Sandra Cuffe that analyzes the role of militarization as a part of the control of territory, natural resources and people, and raises doubts about the so-called war on drug trafficking in mining districts.  A comparison is drawn between Plan Colombia and the current situation in the gold mining region of San Marcos, Guatemala.

More on US interference in the Nicaraguan election from Quest for Peace.



Photo: SOAW

It's also worth noting the irony that these humanitarian military manoeuvres are taking place while a US court is showing great 'humanity' jailing, on counts of trespass, peaceful protestors against WHINSEC (previously known as the School of the Americas) blamed for military-led human rights abuses across Latin America. Many graduates of the school trained in the US were from the Guatemalan military and are amongst those cited by various reports and legal actions for their responsibility in gross human rights violations.
View Article  UK Government on New CICIG (was CICIACS) Initiative

Photo of Geoffrey Clifton-Brown Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Cotswold, Conservative) | Hansard source

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what her policy is on the proposed International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala; and whether the UK plans to offer any support to this body.

Photo of Geoff Hoon Geoff Hoon (Minister of State (Europe), Foreign & Commonwealth Office) | Hansard source

The situation in Guatemala has improved since the signing of the Peace Accords in 1996, following 36 years of conflict. However, we continue to be concerned by the growth of organised crime, the activities of gangs and the widespread impunity which threatens the rule of law in Guatemala. We therefore very much support the creation of an International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala and are working closely with EU partners and the international community to help ensure its effectiveness.




Hey Geoff- you're beginning to sound a bit like a broken record :-) We'll be looking into what exactly the UK Government means when it says: "working closely..." and "help ensure its effectiveness". Sound a little like warm words without much substance- but when we identify what this 'substantially' means- we'll let you know.

The background to this was Guatemala's government signing an agreement (12-12-2006) with the United Nations creating a special commission to identify clandestine Guatemalan security groups and help the government dismantle them.

The new International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala will be led by a commissioner to be named by the U.N. secretary-general and will have an initial two-year mandate. You can see from this Reuters report.
View Article  Violence Against Women in Guatemala: Recent News
The Interamerican Commission on Human Rights has accepted to investigate a femicide case for the first time. More than a hundred letters were sent from a range of different organisations, urging the Commission to look into the case of 15-year old María Isabel Veliz. María Isabel was found dead on 18th December 2001 in an abandoned piece of land in Ciudad San Cristobal, zone 8 Mixco, Guatemala. It's been Maria Isabel's mother, Rosa Franco, who has taken the initiative after five years of being denied access to justice.

The forensic report revealed that Maria Isabel had been sexually assaulted, had her skull crushed, showed signs of being strangled and had her feet tied with barbed wire.

This case is the first murder of a woman in the country to reach the Commission. It's hoped that the CIDH will issue a resolution recommending that, assuming the case remains uninvestigated by the Guatemalan authorities, it should be sent to the Interamerican Court.

This news coincided with a call by women's organisations in Guatemala denoucing the impunity in the country. They pointed out that of 2,796 murders of women in the last few years, only 20 have gone to court and got a conviction.

The following in Spanish is from the Guatemalan Human Rights Commission weekly news report:

"Mujeres integrantes de 12 organizaciones sociales analizaron, en la sede de la CSJ, la problemática que se tiene en el proceso de investigación, aseguraron que en estos años ha habido avances, pero no los esperados; aún falta mucho para terminar con la impunidad, sentenció Giovanna Lemus, de la Red de la No Violencia.

En lo que va de este año han muerto de forma violenta 485 mujeres, 825 han sido violadas y 10 mil 84 han sufrido agresiones físicas por parte de sus esposos, parejas o ex convivientes.

“Es evidente que el número de asesinatos supera la capacidad del Estado, pero pedimos a las autoridades del ramo que no se dediquen a dar una mala imagen de las víctimas para justificar su incapacidad”, añadió Lemus.

Las organizaciones pidieron al Gobierno que asigne el presupuesto para poner en práctica programas de prevención. El Instituto de Estudios Comparados en Ciencias Penales (IECCP) expuso la falta de coordinación entre la Policía Nacional, el Ministerio Público y el Organismo Judicial, lo cual origina que no se resuelvan los casos de crímenes violentos contra mujeres.

En el análisis se detalla que la carencia de procedimientos científicos, de pruebas de ADN, de laboratorios, de presupuesto y de personal, entre otros, hace que los procesos queden impunes.  Ya que de cada 100 casos que se llevan en la provincia, sólo dos se resuelven efectivamente, mientras que en la capital se logran resolver sólo tres. Ese tipo de estadística demuestra que estamos en una completa impunidad”, explicó Marco Antonio Canteo, coordinador del área de investigación del IECCP."

Violence against women was the subject of a rare article in The Economist (16-11-2006) about Guatemala. One of the first articles in the UK to mention to the 10th anniversary of peace accords:

"Ten years after the signing of the peace accords that ended the war, many people say that the country does not feel much more secure. In a year's time, Guatemala will hold a general election. The country urgently needs new political leadership and a change of direction."

UPDATE: This news from El Periodico or Siglo XXI (25-11-06)

"En el marco del Día Internacional de la No Violencia Contra las Mujeres, la Coordinadora 25 de Noviembre, que aglutina a diversas organizaciones e instancias de mujeres en el país, le exigieron a la Corte Suprema de Justicia (CSJ) que se agilice la administración de justicia en los casos de violencia contra dicho género, que se cumplan las sentencias contra los responsables de las muertes violentas y que los jueces y magistrados se apeguen al cumplimiento de las leyes y procedimientos."



A recent episode, 5th November 2006, of Libre Encuentro (hosted by Guatemalan business supremo Dionisio Gutierrez) tackled the issue of violence against women: "Seguridad Ciudadana Y Situación De Violencia En El Pais". The programme featured a discussion between leading Guatemalan campaigners: Norma Cruz, Directora Fundación Sobrevivientes; María Eugenia Morales de Sierra, Procuradora de los Derechos Humanos en Funciones; Carmen Aída Ibarra, Fundación Myrna Mack.
View Article  US Empire Building: The Central American Workshop


Army Day in Guatemala City in the 1990's. Guatemala, like many other Latin American countries, received significant amounts of military aid from the US throughout the 1980's (see below). PHOTO: Wrath of God

Iraq and the Middle East continues to dominate the media's attention on US foreign policy. However, to any seasoned Latin America watcher the parallels between current US foreign policy in the Middle East today with that in Latin America, and in particular Central America, in the 1980's are striking. Arguably, not since the Iran Contra scandal has this link been so apparent.

Every now and then there are very symbolic moments that cut through the black out and hint at this equivalence. I remember one such poignant moment hearing the reporting of one of the first US casualties in the Iraq war: Jose Gutierrez. Jose had lost his parents in the 36-year civil war in Guatemala. He survived life on the streets in Guatemala City, and later arrived in the US after a two-thousand-mile trek through Mexico, joining the US military. The irony that one of the first US victims in Iraq was Central American, was entirely lost on the vast majority of Western media.

When George W. Bush was elected in 2000, it gradually dawned on me that a number of key US administration's officials and advisers were veterans of Ronald Reagan's Central American policy in the 1980's. Every now and again a John Negroponte would pop up on the news here and an Otto Reich there. These were people with more than a passing interest in the patronage of anti-Communist governments in El Salvador and Guatemala and anti-Communist insurgents in Nicaragua (see box).

According to Greg Grandin, New York University Professor of Latin American history, the links between the current Bush administration's revolution in foreign policy and Reagan's hard line in Central America are even more profound than the simple recycling of personnel.

"It was Central America, and Latin America more broadly, where an insurgent New Right coalesced, as conservative activists used the region to respond to the crisis of the 1970's, a crisis provoked not only by America's defeat in Vietnam but by a deep economic recession and a culture of sceptical antimilitarism and political dissent that spread in the war's wake. Indeed, Reagan's Central American wars can best be understood as a dress rehearsal for what is going on now in the Middle East."

Grandin continues: "It was in these wars where the coalition made up of neo-conservatives, Christian evangelicals, free marketeers, and nationalists that today stands behind George W. Bush's expansive foreign policy first came together. There they had near free rein to bring the full power of the United States against a much weaker enemy in order to exorcise the ghost of Vietnam- and in so doing, begin the transformation of US foreign policy and domestic culture."1

Specific echoes between Latin America and the Middle East are numerous. They include how the US has: supported for dictatorial regimes implicated in genocide (compare Saddam Hussein with Efrain Rios Montt); used the 'War on Terror' (illicit drugs, arms, immigration and organised crime) as the pretext for US military intervention on a grand scale (e.g Plan Mayan Jaguar [Guatemala], Plan Colombia, Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom [Afghanistan]); introduced neoliberal economics to the benefit of key US economic interests (CAFTA, Iraq, Afghanistan).

US experience in Central America seems to be increasingly seized on by desperate US officials and advisers as Iraq unravels. US Vice President Dick Cheney told the US electorate in the campaign for reelection in 2004 that El Salvador, with 50 percent of its population below the poverty level, was a model for what his administration hoped to achieve in Iraq. William Kristol, editor of the conservative Weekly Standard, appeared on TV to hail Central America as an "amazing success story" for US foreign policy. Pentagon officials have reportedly turned to the "Salvador option," (reported in Newsweek in January 2005, see also Craig Murray blog), which meant relying on local paramilitaries to impose order. As journalist Robert Kaplan put it recently: "Fifty-five Special Forces trainers in El Salvador accomplished more than did 550,000 soldiers in Vietnam."

When Senator Trent Lott argued in favour of the 1998 "Iraqi Liberation Act," which made the removal of Saddam Hussein official US policy (passed unanimously by the Senate), he reminded his colleagues of the success of the Reagan Doctrine and US patronage of the Nicaraguan Contras. "We supported freedom fighters in Latin America willing to fight and die for a democratic future". With Daniel Ortega's recent election in Nicaragua the comparisons between US foreign past and present, have started to make the headlines. Now more than ever, Central Americans with first hand experience of the US imperial workshop, as Grandin puts it, should be heeded.



1. "Empire's Workshop: Latin America, The United States, and the rise of the new imperialism" by Greg Grandin is published by is published by Metropolitan Books.



The Revolving Door

-Elliott Abrams, Bush's current deputy national security adviser in charge of promoting democracy throughout the world;
-John Negroponte, former UN ambassador, envoy to Iraq, and now intelligence czar;
-Otto Reich, secretary of state for the Western Hemisphere during Bush's first term;
-John Poindexter, convicted of lying to Congress, conspiracy, and destroying evidence in the Iran Contra scandal during his tenure as Reagan's national security adviser, was appointed by Rumsfeld to oversee the Pentagon's stillborn Total Information Awareness programme.
-John Bolton, ambassador to the United Nations and an arch-unilateralist, served as Reagan's point man in the Justice Department to stonewall investigations into Iran-Contra.



US Military Support For Guatemala

For the first time since military aid to Guatemala was suspended in 1990, $3.2 million in non-lethal military aid resumed flowing in March 2005. The administration released aid that had been frozen “in the pipeline” since 1990 over the Guatemalan military’s involvement in human rights abuses, including the murder of U.S. innkeeper Michael Devine (John J. Lumpkin, “U.S. Resumes Military Aid to Guatemala,” Associated Press, March 24, 2005).

The House of Representatives went a step further, lifting the ban on regular IMET (training in combat, tactics, war fighting strategy, and technical skills), maintaining in place only the ban on FMF (Foreign Military Financing, which generally pays for weapons and equipment).

Guatemala and Indonesia had been the only two countries specifically restricted from receiving IMET; the House also loosened restrictions on Indonesia (Expanded-IMET courses on non-combat subjects including civil military relations had been permitted for Guatemala since the Peace Accords were signed in 1996). However, the Senate disagreed, and the final version of the bill maintained the bans on regular IMET and FMF for Guatemala. [Source: Washington Office on Latin America]
View Article  Guatemala-Belize Mentioned in Parliamentary Question
The Belize-Guatemala territorial dispute was mentioned in Parliament (07-11-2006):

Photo of Chris Ruane Chris Ruane (PPS (Rt Hon Peter Hain, Secretary of State), Office of the Secretary of State for Wales, Vale of Clwyd, Labour) Hansard source

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what help and assistance her Department has given to the Belize Government in their border dispute with Guatemala.

Photo of Ian McCartney Ian McCartney (Minister of State (Trade & Investment), Foreign & Commonwealth Office) Hansard source

Belize and Guatemala signed an "Agreement on Framework for Negotiations and Confidence Building Measures" in relation to their territorial dispute on September 2005. Regular negotiations, facilitated by the Organisation of the American States (OAS), have been taking place and are currently focussing on maritime issues.

The UK is strongly supportive of this OAS-facilitated process and since 2002 has spent over£3.5 million from the Government's Global Conflict Prevention Pool to fund associated confidence building measures. We have supported a variety of projects including: the OAS office in the adjacency, or border, zone which promotes interchange, verifies any cross border incidents and diffuses tensions; a language exchange project bringing together Ministers, officials and civil society from both sides; and a project improving commercial linkages which has resulted in a partial scope free trade agreement. We very much hope that negotiations, supported by these confidence building measures, will allow both sides to resolve this dispute.

We have also provided some bilateral support to Belize on this issue through the Bilateral Programme Fund disbursed by our High Commission in Belmopan.


View Article  European Parliament Debates Rios Montt Arrest Warrant
European Parliament debated this afternoon (26-10-2006) a resolution on the proceedings against Rios Montt. There were a whole series of separate points to the motion put forward- one of which was:

"The European Parliament urges the Guatemalan institutions fully to cooperate and do everything in their power to shed light on the human rights violations and to ensure that those responsible are brought to justice and that the findings of the investigations are made public, as called for in the international arrest warrant issued by the Spain Audiencia Nacional on 7 July 2006 against Jose Efraín Rios Montt, Oscar Humberto Mejía Víctores, Angel Anibal Guevara Rodriguez, German Chupina Barahona, Pedro Garcia Arredondo and Benedicto Lucas Garcia, all of whom are accused of crimes of genocide, torture, terrorism and illegal detention."

The motion for the resolution had be put forward by the following MEPs:

       –    Charles Tannock and Bernd Posselt, on behalf of the PPE-DE Group
       –    Pasqualina Napoletano and Luis Yañez-Barnuevo García, on behalf of the PSE Group
       –    Marios Matsakis, on behalf of the ALDE Group
       –    Raül Romeva i Rueda and Alain Lipietz, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group
       –    Willy Meyer Pleite and Marco Rizzo, on behalf of the GUE/NGL Group

You can watch the debate on a video from this page. You need to click on the time next to where the debate on Rios Montt is mentioned about half way down.

You can read this official EU overview of the EU's relations with Guatemala here.

The International Federation for Human Rights has just put out the following press release about the debate (in Spanish).

The following is a press release from the Greens about the debate:

COMUNICADO DE PRENSA - Estrasburgo, 26 de octubre 2006

Extradición de Rios Montt (Guatemala)

VERDES/ALE EXIGEN FIN A LA IMPUNIDAD EN GUATEMALA
Hoy se adoptó en la plenaria del PE una resolución de urgencia sobre la orden internacional de extradición a ex-dictadores y ex-militares guatemaltecos. Sigue la intervención de Raul Romeva, MEP de la IC-V.
 
Diez años después de firmarse los Acuerdos de Paz en Guatemala, país con el que la UE está negociando un acuerdo de asociación y que pretende conseguir un puesto en el Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU, el Acuerdo global sobre Derechos Humanos sigue sin implementarse. Y ello es preocupante en uno de los países que más ha sufrido en términos de dictaduras, genocidios y crímenes de lesa humanidad. Pero más preocupante aún es la impunidad casi absoluta de la que gozan quienes fueron los principales responsables de estos hechos, algunos de los cuales siguen ostentando cargos de alta responsabilidad en las instituciones guatemaltecas.

Sin embargo, cuando el pasado 7 de julio de 2006 el Juzgado Central de Instrucción Número 1 de la Audiencia Española decretó una orden internacional de detención contra varios ex-dictadores y ex-militares guatemaltecos, se reabrió la esperanza de que se hiciera finalmente justicia.

Así, ante la total inhibición del sistema judicial guatemalteco, la Audiencia Española asumió, en base al principio de justicia universal, la responsabilidad de contribuir a acabar con la impunidad.

Ante esta iniciativa, por tanto, cabe reclamar a las autoridades guatemaltecas que cooperen plenamente haciendo todo lo posible para la clarificación de las violaciones de los Derechos Humanos que tuvieron lugar en Guatemala y para que quienes son explícitamente mencionados en la orden internacional de detención, así como en la presente resolución, sean detenidos y entregados a la justicia para ser adecuadamente juzgados.

Así mismo, teniendo en cuenta que muchos de los responsables de estos hechos gravísimos en la historia de Guatemala han estado enriqueciéndose y acumulando bienes y capital en bancos locales e internacionales, es necesario también que las entidades bancarias concernidas colaboren en el retorno de dichos bienes con objeto de que estas personas asuman también sus responsabilidades civiles y financieras.

Finalmente, Europol e Interpol deberían poner todos los medios necesarios para proceder a la detención y extradición a España de las personas mencionadas con objeto de ser adecuadamente juzgadas.
View Article  What's Guatemala's Place In The New Order in Latin America?

What's going on in Latin America? The lead up to the vote for the seat on the UN Security Council in October should usually be an uncontested foregone conclusion. However, now it's evident there's a power struggle afoot on the continent and the Security Council election is but one example. Venezuela under Hugo Chavez, is flexing its muscles and the US under George Bush seems to be getting increasingly agitated.

On the face of it, it's a straight contest between Guatemala and Venezuela for a seat on the UN Security Council for two years. If Latin American and Caribbean countries fail to reach a consensus by Oct. 16, the issue will be decided by a secret vote in the U.N.'s 192-member General Assembly. Behind the scenes, it's apparent that this is just another expression of the new political order in US-Latin American relations.

Dr. Jose Luis Rocha, a Nicaraguan academic from Universidad Centroamericana, recently said in London about the Nicaraguan elections, that they've become ostensibly an election between Chavez (supporting Daniel Ortega- FSLN) and Bush (supporting Eduardo Montealegre- ALN). For me there are obvious parallels with the tussle for the Security Council. Warning bells ring when Central America's more powerful neighbours interfere so blatantly in Central American affairs because, to be frank, there's a history of this kind of thing happening.

New York University professor Greg Grandin in his new book, "Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism," examines how U.S. foreign policy in Latin America has served as a model for U.S. actions in the Middle East and beyond. It certainly worth considering Grandin's thesis of how the U.S. has interfered in Central America using it as a kind of workshop- CAFTA is perhaps the latest case in point. Grandin states:

"What happened is that the United States, in -- well, and not just in El Salvador, in Guatemala and Nicaragua, turned Central America into one of the last killing fields of the Cold War. And this is why Central America has such a pull on the imagination of the neo-cons, is that it occurred simultaneously with the end of the Cold War."

Coming back to the Security Council elections, who knows what will happen? According to recent press reports, Guatemala Foreign Minister, Gert Rosenthal, has said:

"Right now we do not have enough support to win but enough to keep campaigning" (Reuters) Rosenthal has also said: "In some countries I have to admit the U.S. has come on too strong in its opposition to Venezuela. We would be happier if they would not promote our cause so much because we would like to be our own promoter.''

Whatever the situation with the votes- the election is proving to be divisive. So why shouldn't Guatemala, a founding UN member that's never sat on the UN Security Council, have its turn in 2007-8?

What's interesting is that certain international groups like the Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA), seem to be prepared to disbar Guatemala from the Security Council on the basis on its heinous human rights record. Guatemala's human rights record over the last 30 years is certainly heinous, but the list of countries who similarly should be disbarred from participation in UN institutions on that basis is fairly lengthy.

You can't help feeling (and Rosenthal certainly seems to) that the real reason counting against Guatemala in the eyes of UN members is its backer, the U.S. So how's this particular story of interference in Central America likely to pan out?

According to the Security Council Report (14-08-2006):

"Both Venezuela and Guatemala seem to have a very strong core of base support, probably ensuring that both command a "blocking third"-meaning that the other will not be able to get the necessary two-thirds majority. Normally in contested elections, commitments begin to waiver, especially once a few rounds of voting begin to establish a trend.

However, at this point, it seems that the increasing polarisation of the contest for the Latin American seat may instead have the effect of reinforcing the base support commitments of each candidate. A protracted stalemate is therefore possible.

There are precedents involving over 30 rounds of voting and with no result even by the end of December. And there are also precedents for the emergence of a third candidate, either as a compromise to break the stalemate, or as an opportunist able to take advantage of the situation."

Whoever wins the seat- it's tempting to think that the election would not be as divisive if Venezuela stuck to promoting Venezuela, and Guatemala was left to promote Guatemala.
View Article  Feedback From Inter-Parliamentary Union Trip To Guatemala
Wayne David MP, (PPS (Rt Hon Adam Ingram, Minister of State), Ministry of Defence, Caerphilly, Labour), has just made the following intervention in a Westminster Hall debate comparing the political situation in El Salvador and Guatemala. He headed up a delegation under the auspices of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU).

He is markedly down beat about the political situation in Guatemala citing land evictions, violence against women and a weak criminal justice system. Sound familiar? It's interesting that he refers to a briefing from Amnesty International who have just released (18-07-2006) updated figures on the ever increasing violence against women in Guatemala.

Here's his contribution from TheyWorkForYou.com:

Photo of Wayne David Wayne David (PPS (Rt Hon Adam Ingram, Minister of State), Ministry of Defence, Caerphilly, Labour) | Hansard source

I shall also try to brief. I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Cynon Valley (Ann Clwyd) on securing this debate and on her consistent work over many years. She has championed human rights even when it has not been popular to do so and when it has been at great cost to herself.

I want to refer briefly to a visit that I made to central America under the auspices of the Inter-Parliamentary Union when I led a delegation. It was a good example of the effective work that the IPU can do on the ground to serve human rights. That visit occurred in the early part of June to two countries in central America: Guatemala and El Salvador. Visiting two countries was a useful experience in itself because we could develop a regional perspective and we saw the contrast between two neighbouring countries in central America.

In El Salvador, we found a relatively stable, democratic process. The two parties, the Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional and the ARENA party, which had been at war during the 1970s, 1980s and early part of the 1990s, were pursing a peaceful democratic process and had laid down their arms. The ARENA party was in government and the FMLN was in opposition, and we thought that there was genuine determination across the political spectrum to make the peace accords of the 1990s work effectively. Of course, we saw great problems in the country—land issues, high criminality and widespread poverty—but there was great optimism and that came across clearly from everyone we met.

To be blunt, the situation in Guatemala was quite different. The country was less prosperous with less business confidence, widespread corruption and high criminality, particularly from the "maras" gangs. It was pointed out that more people in Guatemala lose their lives through crime than died during the civil war of the 1980s and 1990s. Before we went to Guatemala, the delegation had graphic briefings from Amnesty International. Its two basic concerns were the ongoing land disputes and the high level of evictions. It was concerned about the human rights abuses and the way in which peasants and rural workers in particular were being treated.

Secondly, Amnesty International was concerned about the violence against women. I would like to read an excerpt from one of its reports that graphically shows the appalling situation in Guatemala. A mother, referring to her daughter, said:

"My 15-year-old daughter Maria Isabel was a student and worked in a shop in the holidays. On the night of 15 December 2001, she was kidnapped in the capital. Her body was found shortly before Christmas. She had been raped, her hands and feet had been tied with barbed wire, she had been stabbed and strangled and put in a bag. Her face was disfigured from being punched, her body was punctured with small holes, there was a rope around her neck and her nails were bent back. When her body was handed over to me, I threw myself to the ground shouting and crying but they kept on telling me not to get so worked up."

We had the opportunity to raise such issues when we were in Guatemala during a long discussion with President Oscar Berger. Naturally, his responses were unsatisfactory from our perspective. What came across clearly to us in Guatemala was that although the political will might have existed among decent people to get to grips with such problems, the political or civil infrastructure was not in place to do so. The police in Guatemala suffer from widespread corruption and the judiciary is both corrupt and inept. Many of the large property owners do not feel that they have a stake in the country; in fact, many live in Miami and visit the country only occasionally.

Above all else, we did not find the same commitment to democratic politics in Guatemala as we found in El Salvador. That is largely for historic reasons. During the civil war in El Salvador, it was recognised that neither side could win—neither the left nor the right, neither the FMLN nor the ARENA party. A historic compromise was therefore reached, with both sides laying down their arms and making a genuine commitment to the peace accords and the democratic process. That did not happen in Guatemala. There the army won, and democratic politics suffered as a consequence. What political parties exist in Guatemala have shallow roots. To build up respect for human rights and to crack down effectively on criminality, there is a need to enforce democracy and the political process. That is one of the lessons that we learned, and one aspect of our international work that we must continue to pursue.

In conclusion, the example of our visit to central America shows clearly the worth of the IPU. Parliamentary democracy has a central role to play in promoting human rights. The IPU, as the international manifestation of parliamentary democracy, therefore has a crucial role to play. One the of the most telling moments that I experienced in El Salvador was when one of the members of the assembly who belonged to the left-wing FMLN said to me, "Mr. David, at one time my colleague"—he pointed to a friend of his from the ARENA party—"and I were literally trying to kill each other in the civil war. Today, although we have political differences, we are nevertheless friends in the legislative assembly." That better than anything else illustrates the importance of parliamentary democracy and the work of the IPU.

View Article  Marlin Mine: A Summary Report On The Gold That Doesn't Glitter
Vincent Castagnino has written a report in Spanish on the Marlin Gold Mine in San Marcos, Guatemala -"Minería de metales y derechos humanos en Guatemala. La mina Marlin en San Marcos". The production and distribution of the report was supported by Peace Brigades International in Guatemala and financed by Trocaire in Ireland.

The report's 35 pages are a really good summing up of the historical background, legal context and ultimate effects of the establishment of the Marlin Mine by Canadian multinational Glamis Gold. Vincent Castagnino has interviewed many of the key players for this report, including: Monseñor Álvaro Rammazzini Imeri, Bishop of San Marcos, Jorge Antonio García Chiú, Vice Minister at the Ministry of Energy and Mines; and Magali Rey Rosa, from Colectivo Madre Selva.

Two key conclusions of the report are:

-to reform the law around mining, in particular the amount of money that comes back to the Guatemalan state (more than 1% of profits)
-that the affected local communities should be carefully consulted and given key decision making powers in such developments

For more information, there is also a really good recording in Canada of Juan Tema from Sipakapa speaking at an event in May 2006 organised by Maritimes-Guatemala Breaking the Silence Network.

Below is a map from Colectivo MadreSelva showing mining developments and areas of poverty in Guatemala.



Zones of poverty in Guatemala and the mining concessions (2004)
1 Attachments
View Article  UK Government: "Encouraging" Guatemala on Peace Accords
This December it will have been ten years since the Peace Accords (Acuerdo de Paz Firme y Duradera) were signed in Guatemala after 36 years of civil war. As a campaigning group in the UK, we have always been really interested in what the UK government's view is on the issue of bringing the perpertrators of genocide in Guatemala during the civil war to justice.

In a recent exchange with the government, Tom Levitt MP asked two questions on the human rights situation in Guatemala. A GSN member followed up the responses by asking Tom Levitt MP if he could get clarification from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office on a number of points. Mr Levitt got the following response (24-06-06) from Lord Triesman as the Minister responsible for Latin America.



His response contained the rather worrying typo that only 20,000 people were killed or disappeared rather than the 200,000 cited by the UN CEH report in 1999.

When the UK government says "they [Guatemala government] have accepted responsibility for atrocities, apologised and arranged compensation". Of course, as with all government- speak there is a grain of truth in this, with, for example, the setting up of the National Compensation Programme (Programa Nacional de Resarcimiento). But the process of compensation has yet to have reached anywhere near fruition- and is starting to lose its way. Certainly this is not enough to warrant Lord Triesman's rosy assessment.



The central point remains: the Peace Accords were signed nearly ten years ago and the Guatemalan government has never accepted, nor apologised for, nor arranged compensation for the crime of genocide. Because of this, but certainly not solely because of this, the cases against the perpertrators of genocide who remain in Guatemala, have avoided just punishment for their crimes. You need look no further than the latest debacle where Rios Montt was shielded from the Spanish investigation into his responsibility for genocide crimes last week (30-06-06), by the Guatemalan Constitutional Court.

Yeh ok you guys already know this. But our point here in the UK, is that the UK government has been careful to avoid describing the mass killings in Guatemala in the 1980s as genocide; it prefers the more generic term 'human rights abuses' in Guatemala (see Lord Triesman's response above, but also Douglas Alexander's response to Tom Levitt in Parliament).

We have, perhaps because of this, had difficulty in getting the All Parliamentary Party Group on Genocide Prevention to even consider Guatemala as part of its remit. We will continue to push the UK government for clarification on this point.
View Article  UK Government's View on Human Rights in Guatemala
Thanks to a GSN member, John Hampson, for asking his MP to make the following parliamentary question:

Photo of Tom Levitt Tom Levitt (PPS (Rt Hon Hilary Benn, Secretary of State), Department for International Development, High Peak, Labour) Hansard source

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what assessment he has made of the likelihood of bringing to justice those responsible for mass killings in Guatemala in the 1980s; and if he will make representations to the government of Guatemala on this matter.

Photo of Douglas Alexander Douglas Alexander (Minister of State (Europe), Foreign & Commonwealth Office) Hansard source

The signing of the Guatemalan Peace Accords in 1996 brought an end to 36 years of conflict. The Peace Accords provided a blueprint for the Guatemalan authorities to pursue a process of social reforms, including the capacity to bring those responsible for human rights abuses to justice.

Though we have noted the progress made by the Guatemalan government in implementing the Peace Accords, that progress is slow and there is still much to be done. Many perpetrators of human rights violations continue to escape justice due to a weak judicial system.

The United Kingdom will continue to encourage the Guatemalan government to implement in full the 1996 Peace Accords, which covers improvements to the Guatemalan Judicial System. We will continue to monitor the efforts made by the Guatemalan authorities to bring those responsible for human rights violations to justice.

Photo of Tom Levitt Tom Levitt (PPS (Rt Hon Hilary Benn, Secretary of State), Department for International Development, High Peak, Labour) Hansard source

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what recent assessment he has made of (a) human rights and (b) the rule of law in Guatemala.

Photo of Douglas Alexander Douglas Alexander (Minister of State (Europe), Foreign & Commonwealth Office) Hansard source

The Human Rights situation in Guatemala has improved since the signing of the Peace Accords in 1996, following 36 years of conflict. However, we continue to be concerned by the growth of organised crime, the activities of gangs, called maras, and widespread impunity which threaten the rule of law in Guatemala. We are also concerned by attacks on human rights defenders and the increase in violence against women.

Our Embassy in Guatemala City works closely with human rights organisations and will continue to press the Guatemalan authorities to implement in full the 1996 Peace Accords, investigate reports of human rights abuses thoroughly and tackle impunity.

GSN member John Hampson who has worked hard on lobbying for justice in the genocide cases in Guatemala, comments on the response from the UK Goverment to Tom Levitt's question:
 
"This question was more specifically about the 'mass killings in the 1980s' and the 'likelihood of bringing to justice those responsable.' This was more in line with what I was asking him to ask, even though the word genocide wasn't specifically used. The government's answer was predictably vague, refering to 'those responsable for human rights violations' instead  of refering to the 'mass killings'."

UPDATE: John has been working hard to get Guatemala included in the list of countries that within the remit of the All Party Parliamentary Group on genocide prevention.Currently that list includes: Darfur, Burma, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo, Zimbabwe, Armenia, and Cambodia. But not Guatemala. We are looking to work with the Aegis Trust to see that Guatemala is not left off the list.

While the UN-recognised genocide (see CEH excerpt below) took place for the most part in the 1980's, justice has never been achieved for the victims. The campaign is still very much on to see that justice is carried out in Guatemala, where the intellectual authors of these crimes are tried before a court of law. In June and July this year witnesses will be called to give evidence in Guatemala to the commission set up following the successful legal action brought by Rigoberta Menchu before the Spanish Constitutional Court.

Here is the conclusion of the Commission for Historical Clarification (CEH).

"122. In consequence, the CEH concludes that agents of the State of Guatemala, within the framework of counterinsurgency operations carried out between 1981 and 1983, committed acts of genocide against groups of Mayan people which lived in the four regions analysed. This conclusion is based on the evidence that, in light of Article II of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment