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View Article  Update On Justice Campaign For Trade Unionist Pedro Zamora


This is a video from the campaign led by the International Transport Workers Federation. You can see more background information from their website- which has a special section on the campaign for justice for Pedro Zamora.

Pedro Zamora, General Secretary of the Guatemalan STEPQ dockers' union was shot 20 times by multiple assailants who ambushed him and his children on Monday, January 15.  After firing 100 shots, one walked up to the wounded Zamora and shot him at point blank range in the face. Three-year-old Angel was wounded in the attack.  Zamora's last act had been to push the children to the floor to try and protect them. Since the murder, the five surviving leaders of the STEPQ union have received telephoned death threats, that they are subject to surveillance. Their families are also being threatened.

You can see more photos from the delegation to Guatemala in February here on Flickr.
View Article  Will Bush Eat Humble Pie Or American Pie In Guatemala?


To begin this post here's George Bush getting some practice in at being contrite- this could have served him well before his Latin American trip. The Mayan cleansing to be carried out in Iximche has ran and ran, as have the crosses held aloft by students in Guatemala City. Bush as sinner or 'el Diablo', has captured the public's imagination.

On the day that George Bush will touch down in Guatemala- the agenda for that one hour meeting and dinner with Oscar Berger is doubtless rather full- though no surprises if it turns out to be empty on contrition. Foreign Minister, Gert Rosenthal, hinted they might be discussing ethanol production- but if this interview in Siglo XXI is anything to go by- sounds like policy on the fly:

¿Cuáles son las expectativas del Gobierno?
Es tener una buena visita bilateral y pasar revista a todos los temas. Ellos traen una iniciativa que nos interesa, que es diversificar el mercado energético para elevar la participación de los biocombustibles, llámese etanol. El país tiene posibilidad de ser un importante proveedor, con base en la caña de azúcar. Es una iniciativa conjunta entre Estados Unidos y Brasil.

¿Ellos qué ofrecen?
Brasil tiene tecnología, y Estados Unidos está dispuesto a comprarnos etanol.

¿Cuánta capacidad de producción tendría Guatemala?
No tengo idea.

Here's a better idea from the Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala (Nisgua) just in case both are prepared to bear their soul a little: they could make a joint declaration to advance the legal cases against General Efrain Rios Montt and members of his military high command. They can't say there's a shortage of information on this one.

Nisgua points out:

"President Bush's tour of Latin America is intended to reestablish U.S. influence in the region, but serious conflicts remain between the image the Bush Administration is trying to portray this week and its actual policies over the past six years. In Guatemala, the Administration has been supporting the physical harassment and suspension of civil rights in rural communities under the guise of the Drug War, pushing for Congress to increase training and funding of the deeply corrupt security forces, and limiting economic opportunities and access to affordable medicines through the DR-Central American Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA).

While international arrest warrants for Rios Montt and his military high command have been in effect in the U.S. since last year, the Bush Administration has yet to publicly acknowledge the warrants or show support for legal initiatives in Guatemala. Given the strategic importance of Guatemala's relationship with the U.S., any message from President Bush supporting anti-impunity efforts and the prosecution of Rios Montt would have a strong impact on the ground in Guatemala."

But hey, the onus doesn't rest solely with Berger to make a move here. What are the odds of a contrite Bush making a Clinton-style apology for US involvement in these crimes? It's worth reminding ourselves today of what Clinton said in 1999:

"It is important that I state clearly that support for military forces or intelligence units which engaged in violent and widespread repression of the kind described in the report was wrong," Clinton said, reading carefully from handwritten notes. "And the United States must not repeat that mistake. We must, and we will, instead continue to support the peace and reconciliation process in Guatemala."

This report from Robert Parry at the time- tracks the journey that led up to that moment the last time a sitting US President visited Guatemala. The Clinton administration had declassified scores of the secret U.S. documents in the late 1990s- the Peace Accords had not long been signed and the Historical Clarification Commission had just reported. It feels a world away now.

Background

Apologizing of course is not with out controversy, William Blum pointed out that: "the word "sorry" did not cross the president's [Clinton's] lips, nor did the word "apologize", nor the word "compensation". For other views on the significance of this moment see:

Beatriz Manz "The Legacy of a Coup: A Guatemalan Village Perspective" - Center for Latin American Studies
National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 11 - U.S. POLICY IN GUATEMALA, 1966-1996 - declassified during Clinton's time in office.

Then there's this on Bush's track record on apologizing from Robert Parry's report on that V-E Day speech on May 7 2005:

"Bush's troubling message was that the only real U.S. mistake in the Cold War was not to aggressively challenge the Soviet Union right after the defeat of Germany, even if that meant vastly more bloodshed. Bush also expressed no regret for some of the most egregious U.S. actions in the Cold War, such as complicity in genocide in Guatemala, state terrorism in Chile or the fearsome death toll in the Vietnam War."

Finally, for family precedents, Dubya's dad is quoted as saying the following in 1988 as Vice President:

"I will never apologize for the United States of America. I don't care what the facts are."
 

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.

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