Archive for November, 2006

Wednesday, 6th December- food at 6.30pm, talk at 7.30pm (Café prices apply)

Venue: La Ruca, Gloucester Road, Bristol

Meet Guillermo Chen, director of the Fundaciòn Nueva Esperanza, Guatemala

On the 10th anniversary of peace in Guatemala, Guillermo Chen, director of the Fundaciòn Nueva Esperanza talks about how an inspiring cultural education project is giving hope to the continuing struggle for justice, indigenous rights and identity in Guatemala.

˜Education for indigenous children is the only way to combat intolerance, build a lasting peace and improve quality of life for our communities’


This December marks the 10th anniversary of the signing of Peace in Guatemala. The 1996 peace accords brought an end to a bloody 36-year conflict, in which 200,000 people, (the majority indigenous Mayans) died or ˜disappeared’.

The peace accords set out a framework for transforming Guatemalan society through principles of democracy, equality and respect. The reality is that the government has made little progress. Violence and human rights abuses in Guatemala are rife and the justice system is incompetent. Inequalities of land distribution, wealth and access to education are increasing.

Progress has been left to the inspiring and courageous work of civil society organisations.

The Fundaciòn Nueva Esperanza is one such organisation. It has developed a unique philosophy to educate children of Mayan Achi descent to participate and contribute to society whilst maintaining their threatened language, traditions and cultural values.

Ffi; Contact Stuart on 07791 034138

Voluntary donations requested

For the tech junkies among you, Xeni Jardin, co-editor of Boing Boing (one of the world's most popular blogs) is currently out and about and posting from Guatemala. She's been posting on an electic range of issues and topics, including: violence against women campaigning, filesharing in Guate, and making tortillas…

It's also worth flagging up the Appropriate Infrastructure Development Group who get a mention on Xeni's blog and Xela Teco which is “a new micro manufacturing enterprise concerned with the fabrication, installation and repair of low cost environmentaly sound infrastructure improvements. Xela Teco is located in Quetzaltenango Guatemala, and aims to serve NGOs and the general populace in the greater Quetzaltenango region”.

By Michael Fernandez


As we approach the ten year anniversary of the signing of the peace accords in Guatemala, the question of what has actually changed since then has obviously arisen. From reading articles, opinion pages, and indeed talking to countless people who have lived their entire lives in the country, the general consensus seems to be 'very little,' and most would agree that the Guatemalan government has completely failed to implement the agreements reached back in December 1996. Evidence of this failure is everywhere: the scourge of impunity that continues to prevail in Guatemala – nowhere more evident than in the lack of progress in the genocide case against Ríos Montt and his high command; the glaring inequalities and extreme poverty in a country where an estimated 75% of the population live below the poverty line; and the continuing violence and intimidation against those struggling to improve the human rights situation and bring social justice to Guatemala.  

My time working as an international accompanier in Guatemala with ACOGUATE has given me the opportunity to see first hand the lack of progress since 1996, and indeed how many of the original causes for the outbreak of the internal conflict back in 1960 are still prevalent to this day. While many accompaniers spend their time living in communities and accompanying witnesses involved in the genocide case, I was asked to form part of the so-called 'short term' team, which accompanies other individuals, communities and organisations that are under threat due to their work or their struggle for justice. The main case I have been involved in, that of the sacked farm workers of the Finca Nueva Florencia, is clear evidence of how land and labour rights are continuously denied to the campesinos of Guatemala, and how the power of the large landowners in the country continues unabated.  

In March of 1997, less than three months after the signing of the peace accords, 38 families of the Finca Nueva Florencia formed a union to negotiate with the landowners for better pay and working conditions. This was in large part due to the fact that, despite the wealth of OTTMAR SA, the company that owns this mainly coffee producing plantation, workers received less than ‚¤2 per day. Just one week later, in violation of article 209 of the Code of Work, all members of the union were sacked. Ever since then members of the union have been fighting for compensation for salaries not paid since that date and for their reinstatement. Despite 13 decisions in the courts in favour of the sacked workers, including two the Constitutional Court, the conflict is yet to be resolved, and the landowners have been able to continually delay and block any court rulings with countless appeals and motions.  

Many of the union members have left, simply unable to fight for so many years, while a systematic campaign of intimidation and reprisals from the landowners has been waged in an attempt to force the remaining eleven members to give up. For the four families who continued living in their houses on the plantation in particular, the hardships have been devastating: their electricity and water have been cut off; their children have not been allowed to attend the school on the plantation or use the playground; they have been denied access to the farm's health clinic, with children being refused vaccinations despite the fact that the vaccinations were a government programme; they are not allowed to cut firewood on the plantation; letters have been sent to all the landowners in the area urging them not to give the sacked workers employment; and security guards have been installed to harass and intimidate them.

Since May of this year the intimidation has been particularly severe. On the 11th May, with OTTMAR claiming not to have the funds available to pay the sacked workers their compensation, the courts awarded two parts of the plantation to the union. Faced with the prospect of losing very profitable land, the landowners stepped up their campaign of intimidation, with a massive increase in the number of armed guards, dressed in military uniform. Shots were fired outside the houses of the families living on the plantation, a particularly horrific experience for their very young children, and the brother of the main union organiser was held with rifles pointed at him for simply cutting weeds. The workers also received notice that the guards had been ordered to shoot them if they entered the coffee plantations on the farm. Accusations have been made to the Office of Public Prosecution (Ministerio Público), but as yet, no investigation has been made into these intimidations.  

In the face of all this, the union members approached ACOGUATE about the prospect of international accompaniment. Since then we have been visiting them at least every two weeks in an attempt to show the landowners that there is international attention on this case, in an effort to dissuade them from further intimidation, and as an act of solidarity, offering the union members vital moral support. The effects of our presence have been noted, and according to the union members the level of intimidation, in particularly the gunshots in front of their houses at night has diminished. However, the intimidation does continue, and while shots being fired at your house once a week is better than every night, it is still an unacceptable situation.

I feel extremely privileged to have been able to visit and get to know the sacked workers of Finca Nueva Florencia. Their stories of hardship and tales of injustice have been truly eye-opening, and reflect many of the wider problems of Guatemala. I have been continually amazed, however, by their courage, conviction and determination to see this struggle through to the end, and this too is a reflection of the efforts of countless numbers of people and organizations throughout Guatemala. They retain hope and are now at a critical stage in their case. With the landowners running out of motions and appeals to block the case, the workers may soon get the land they are owed. The process is far from complete, however, and many obstacles remain, but the hope that is now there shows that through the efforts and sacrifices of courageous individuals and the hard work of numerous organisations and civil society working together, changes can be made.  

The fact of the matter, however, is that it should not require so much suffering and so many years of struggle to achieve justice. In a clear demonstration of how the peace accords have not been implemented, the Guatemalan state, by allowing the case to last for nearly 10 years, has completely failed in its duty to uphold its own laws, and to ensure the economic security of its people. Ten years is far too long to wait for justice, and it is too long to wait for the implementation of the peace accords, which once provided Guatemalans with real hope. It is time now for the Guatemalan government to bring about serious changes in the country, end the culture of impunity and ensure that land and labour rights are respected in accordance with the law.


Background Information

Amnesty International USA has really informative section on its website about the land rights issue in Guatemala. The section includes video testimony from many of the key actors on the issue in Guatemala.

Including: researcher Sebastian Elgueta who explains AI's main concerns regarding Guatemalan land rights; Juan Tzib who talks about how the current Guatemalan laws affect campesinos (rural workers); Ingrid Urizar who talks about the difficulties campesinos face accessing the courts; and Daniel Pascual who talks about the current government's policy of evictions.

Event: Hands Across The Ocean

| November 27th, 2006

You are invited to an evening of inspiring conversation with guest speakers on Tuesday 5th December at 7-9pm at Latin American House Association, Priory House, Kingsgate Place, London, NW6 4TA.

Speakers include:

* Guillermo Chen, Director of the Fundación Nueva Esperanza, which provides bilingual education (Spanish and Maya Achi) in Rabinal, Guatemala.
* Jules Wilkinson, Guatemala Solidarity Network
* Carol Herbert, mother of two adopted children from Guatemala, who would like to propose the creation of a young persons group in the UK for children eight years old and over of Guatemalan birth

Refreshments will be provided – older children are welcome.

For further details contact: Carol Herbert carolinah61 [at] hotmail.com or 020 8209 1078.

Rabinal, Guatemala in Pictures

| November 26th, 2006
Photo: Erik ++

In the week before Guillermo Chen of Fundación Nueva Esperanza (FNE) visits the UK it seemed appropriate to share these great photos of life in Rabinal by Erik Hungerbuhler, where FNE works. You can see more of Erik's photos of Rabinal here.

This film 'The Short Life of Jose Antonio Gutierrez' is an interesting documentary following the story of a Guatemalan caught in the crossfire – literally and metaphorically. Here's a review of the film from Rotten Tomatoes.

“José Antonio Gutierrez was one of the 300,000 U.S. Army troops sent to Iraq in March 2003. A few hours after the war began, he also became the first American soldier to be killed. The nightly news eulogized him as a Guatemalan boy who wanted to be an American and serve his country.

Heidi Specogna's remarkable documentary, The Short Life of José Antonio Gutierrez, reveals another powerful, poetic story that resonates in the lives of hundreds of thousands of emigrants searching for survival today. With two photos of José Antonio-one as a child orphan, and one in full military dress-Specogna embarks in search of the story between the pictures. She finds the people who knew him; she also finds thousands of emigrants who are repeating José Antonio's odyssey from the world of the poor to the realm of the rich. They tell their own stories of surviving desperately poor conditions and making harrowing journeys to the U.S.A. in the hope of finding a better, more livable future.

What emerges is not only the story of a war hero but a portrait of the socioeconomic conditions that shaped José Antonio's life. In The Short Life of José Antonio Gutierrez, one man's story becomes a sobering chronicle of the brutal world we live in today.”

You can read the report from Fergal Keane on the BBC posted at the time of his death. I'd also recommend reading Arte-Sano's blog post on the film who went to see it at the Latin American Film Festival in San Francisco. Here's a taste:

“Lo más triste e irónico de su história es que José no murío abandonado en las calles de Guate de niño, ni de ninguna enfermedad o adicción, no murio en ninguna pandilla o por la violencia común ni siquiera por la misma policia o el ejercito, ni murio durante la guerra civil en nuestro país. Ni siquiera cruzando Mexico hacia los EEUU, como tantos emigrantes mueren cada día, ni en las calles de Los Angeles como “homeless” o en alguna prisón gringa, no. Es más ni siquiera murio en un enfrentamiento con el “enemigo” en Iraq; ironicamente lo mato “fuego amigo” o “Friendly Fire” como dice el reporte oficial…”

This is just a quick heads up about the Human Rights Watch Film Festival which is co-presenting three films with Discovering Latin America Film Festival between 23 November and 3 December:

* The Dignity of the Nobodies by Pino Solanas (Documentary, Argentina, 2005)
* Innocent Voices by Luis Mandoki (Feature film, Mexico 2004) – Actually about El Salvador
* What is it Worth? by Sergio Bianchi (Feature film, Brazil 2005)
Detail and showing times are below.

Visit www.discoveringlatinamerica.org for full details.

Congratulations to Dominga Vasquez (Guatemalan women's rights activist with FUNDAMAYA) and Helen Woodcock (Peace Brigade's international UK volunteer) who have won the International Service Award for the Defence of the Human Rights of Women.

They have won the award jointly with Nizaam (Cookie) Edwards, Provincial Coordinator of the KZN Network on Violence Against Women and Intersect Coalitions in South Africa.

The following information is taken from the PBI UK website and the Protection Line website.

“Ten years after a brutal thirty year conflict in Guatemala, the human rights situation is at a critical condition: in 2005, there were an estimated 224 attacks against human rights defenders, as documented by The National Human Rights Movement's Protection Unit, with the same patterns evident in 2006.

These are the treacherous conditions in which Dominga Vasquez works to promote the rights of women and indigenous people. Public appreciation of her hard work was recognized when she was elected as the first female Indigenous Mayor of Solola. When performing her Mayoral duties, Dominga applies Mayan vision and traditional approaches to conflict-resolution in order to bring peace and unity to Guatemala to improve the lives of women there.

PBI began accompanying Dominga in her efforts in February 2005 and it was through this partnership that she met Helen Woodcock. As part of the PBI team, Helen provides an international protective accompaniment to Dominga, putting her own personal safety at risk. The physical presence and support of international volunteers such as Helen empowers human rights activists to defend their rights without fear of violence or reprisals. Peace Brigades International nominated this brave partnership for the award.”

In April 2005 Amnesty International issued an urgent action after there was grave concern for Dominga Vasquez's life. FUNDAMAYA forms part of the coalition Frente Nacional contra la Mineria, National Front against Mining, which campaigns to raise awareness of the potential environmental damage caused by mining and the negative impact on indigenous communities living close to mines. Carlos Humberto Guarquez who also received death threats, is FUNDAMAYA's representative to the coalition.

Women human rights defenders under attack: 25 years of fighting to defend human rights

Amnesty International UK and Peace Brigades International will be celebrating Peace Brigades International's 25th anniversary at an event dedicated to the work of women human rights defenders, and the central role they play in the struggle for human rights and justice.

Dominga Vasquez will be talking at the event; along with Kopila Adhikari who works for Advocacy Forum against illegal detention and extra-judicial killings, in Kathmandu, Nepal; and Berenice Celeyta, is president of Nomadesc (Association for Social Research and Action); a non-governmental organisation dedicated to working with marginalised and oppressed communities in Colombia.


The event will be held on: 6th December, 6.00pm at Human Rights Action Centre, 17 – 25 New Inn Yard, London EC2A 3EA. Entry is free and you can book from AI UK's website.



UPDATE – Event confirmed in Manchester:

Human rights award acknowledges work of Indigenous Guatemalan woman and Manchester human rights defender.

Saturday 9th December 2006 (12.00 – 1.30pm) at: The Friends Meeting House, Mount Street (Behind Central Library).

Accused of terrorism during a campaign to raise awareness about the rights of Indigenous communities, Guatemalan Human Rights activist Dominga Vasquez is also the first woman in 500 years to hold the position of Indigenous Mayoress. She is visiting the UK to collect the International Service Human Rights award.

Hear this hugely inspirational woman, who, in the face of death threats, intimidation and racism, continues her work for justice and human rights in Guatemala. Don't miss the chance both to hear Dominga speak and to welcome this amazing woman to Manchester. Speaking with Dominga will be Helen Woodcock, Manchester resident and joint recipient of the International Service prize, who has recently spent over a year in Guatemala with Peace Brigades International, providing accompaniment for Dominga and other workers for human rights and social and environmental justice threatened with violence as a result of their work.

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.

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| November 19th, 2006