Search
This Month
November 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30
Year Archive

When the Mountains Tremble (clip)

War on Democracy - Guate cut

Bilingual education in Guatemala

For more videos about Guatemala and social justice issues click here.

Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 

www.flickr.com
Guatemala Solidarity Network UK's photos More of Guatemala Solidarity Network UK's photos
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.


 

Welcome, Guatemala Solidarity Network (GSN) based in the United Kingdom supports the people of Guatemala who continue to struggle for change after centuries of oppression, violence, racism and exploitation.

You can receive a daily digest of the GSN blog by email.

Enter your email address here:

Delivered by FeedBurner


You can keep in touch with all the news and views on Guatemala in many, many blogs and sources of information here via Pageflakes.

View blog reactions

Creative Commons License

Global Voices Online - The world is talking. Are you listening?

Subscribe to Guatemala Solidarity Network: the blog

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Subscribe in Rojo

Add to Google

Add to netvibes

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add Guatemala Solidarity Network: the blog to Newsburst from CNET News.com