Archive for the Guatemala Category

With winter (our summer) approaching in Guatemala, many of the
communities affected by Hurricane Stan in October 2005 are worried that
the work of rebuilding is going too slowly. Articles are starting to appear in the Guatemalan press that reinforce this worry that communities are still all too vulnerable to winter flooding.

Recently the following video was posted on the internet by guatemalago.org of what it was
like in Panajachel when Stan struck last year. The pictures are very
sobering, and help bring home to those who were not there, what it was
like for those Guatemalans who felt the full force of the hurricane and
its consequences.

       

Print Friendly

KILLER'S PARADISE – This World Series

First shown: THURSDAY 4 MAY 2006 at 2100 BST on BBC Two 

You can now watch it online here

Olenka Frenkiel investigates the mystery of murdered women in
Guatemala. Who shot dead a beautiful young law student, Claudina
Velasquez in August last year? Claudina's father tries to find out in a
country where the number of women murdered is soaring.
 
In
2005, 665 women were killed – 25% up on the previous year, 10 times the
rate in the UK, and not one killer caught. With no fingerprint or DNA
database, no crime or victim profiling and no forensic science, killers
go free and witnesses do not talk. Is it a system designed to protect
the guilty? Or is it simply incompetence?

You can read the article by Olenka Frenkiel that accompanies the documentary and also post your comment on the film here.

For more background, see previous blog post on this.

Update (June 9th): There was an article called investigation into the case of Claudina Velasquez in Guatemalan newspaper El Periodico published recently. Interestingly a member of the public (Raúl Hercules) made the following comment and referred to the above BBC documentary:

“El caso de Claudina fue presentado en un documental canadiense y transmitido en canales de varios países de Europa, entre ellos la BBC. En el documental se ve a la familia de la joven víctima peleando por ser escuchados ante los oídos sordos de los fiscales e investigadores. El documental evidencia como la escena del crimen es contamida por los mismos investigadores y como no parece haber interés en dotar de capacitación y recursos para encontrar y condenar a los culpables.

La periodista del documental le pregunta al presidente Berger por resultados en esclarecer crimenes como el de Claudina y otras mujeres asesinadas en brutales circunstancias y éste le dice que todo está cambiando y que hay mejores y si la periodista no lo ve asi es porque es su opinión. No hay peor ciego que el que no quiere ver.

Ojalá que logremos cambiar esta realidad y que en nuestro país los asesinos no caminen en nuestras calles con impunidad. La reacción de la gente fue de disgusto e incredulidad al ver como nuestro país sigue sumido en una barbarie que no se toleraría en otros lares y nuestras autoridades hacen siguen sumidas en una “realidad.”

A sign that it's had some impact on the debate on femicide within Guatemala?

Print Friendly

You can now hear Rosemary Burnett's interview that was broadcast on
Radio Scotland a few weeks ago as part of the 'A Journey' series.
Rosemary talks about her experiences as an accompanier in Guatemala
supporting human rights defenders.


powered by ODEO

GSN member Rosemary Burnett, talks her about
her work as an international accompanier in Guatemala on Radio
Scotland
.
She describes how she got involved, the plight of the witnesses to the
genocide in Guatemala in the 1980s and everyday life volunteering in
ACOGUATE, the Guatemala Accompaniment Programme. Rosemary has written
about her experiences in a book Disent angling the Knots, you can get
a copy from here
.

“Mark Stephen talks to people about
personal journeys which have had a
profound effect on their lives.
This week Mark meets Rosemary Burnett,
the Programme Director for
Amnesty
International in Scotland
. In October 2003, Rosemary left
Edinburgh, and her life there, to travel
to Guatemala where she lived
and worked for a year as an International
Accompanier
.”
Print Friendly

The second in the series from 'Entremosle a Guate'. This time looking at Guatemala's emergency services, first the firemen and women and then the prison system.

“Segundo episodio del programa periodístico “Entrémosle
a Guate”. El programa cubre a la mujer bombera voluntaria Claudia Ortiz
y el estado de las cárceles en Guatemala.

La producción está a cargo de Atitlán Producciones y Caminos del
Asombro productores. Presentado por Harris Whitbeck y dirección de Ana
Carlos.”

       

Print Friendly

Condi Rice, U.S. Secretary of State talks about US policy towards Latin America.

“Inoculation Strategy in Nicaragua”, “When we were able to pass CAFTA it made a huge difference to the stabilization of Central America”.”Trade assistance, caring about the poor, the message has sometimes been just about growth and not about the concerns of the poor.” “Working with responsible governments [not Venezuela].”

At about 38 minute in, you can see Rios Montt's son-in-law, Congressman Jerry Weller take the floor with a question on narcotics.

Print Friendly

This is a one of a great series of documentaries on Guatemalan culture by Guatemalans on Tinaamit Te Ve. If you interested in traditional Guatemalan textiles this is well worth watching. It only has subtitles in Spanish though. Below is the introduction to this video:

“En San Pedro La Laguna, existe un grupo de mujeres cuyo nombre es Ixchel que significa dios del tejido que trabajan sobre la cultura del tejido. Estas mujeres ensenan como se pueden hacer cosas muy bonitas con productos tan simples que cualquier persona lo puede conseguir, como darle color a los productos usando frutas, verduras, etc. Estas mujeres ensenan como fabricar telas tipicas, guipiles, etc.”

       

Print Friendly

Post by Wendy Tyndale


The first thing they do is to remove the people, their houses, crops, trees and animals. Then they begin to break open the mountain until they reach the rock that contains the gold, silver and other minerals of great value. To do all this they use big machines, explosives and all that is necessary to take away our resources.

A leaflet of the Front for Life in San Marcos, Guatemala, describes to people in the municipalities of San Miguel Ixtahuacán and Sipacapa what the presence of a giant mining company in their region means. It explains that in order to process the rock an enormous quantity of water is needed – 250,000 litres an hour – so that another consequence of this activity will be a shortage of water in the area. Worse still, the cyanide used in the process will poison the water supply, the people and animals that drink it and the crops that are irrigated with it. It will also pollute the air.

So, asks the Front for Life, what will be left for us from the open pit mining? The grim answers it gives are based on the experience of people in Honduras and elsewhere: Harm to our health, more poverty, mountains destroyed and soil contaminated, conflicts among people, polluted water and, in addition to all of this, corruption.

Our life, the life of our families and of future generations are worth much more than all the gold and silver in the world, says the Front and, reflecting the spirituality of many of the movement’s members: Let us remember that we are not the owners of the land but only the stewards of it. NO TO MINING!

The people who live in the areas that have been selected for mining activities in the department of San Marcos are Mayan: Mam in San Miguel and Sipakapense in Sipakapa. For several years they had been concerned about people who were arriving from outside to buy land using deception, coercion and promises of development for the communities. But it was only in 2003 that the motives of these strangers became clear when a company was installed in the region to mine gold in villages of San Miguel and Sipakapa.     

Alarmed and dismayed, the local people began to take action.  Encouraged by the Bishop of San Marcos, Alvaro Ramazzini, they have formed a coalition of indigenous and Catholic organisations to organise protests. A protester was killed in Los Encuentros, Sololá on 11 January this year as peasant farmers tried to hold up a truck carrying equipment to the mine and Ramazzini has received a series of death threats as a consequence of his support.

The company that is developing the Marlin mine in San Marcos is Montana Exploradora de Guatemala S.A., a subsidiary of the Canadian multinational, Glamis Gold Ltd. that has also been managing the San Martín mine in Honduras for several years. In Honduras children have been suffering from skin diseases and loss of hair and a report commissioned by Caritas-Honduras documented high levels of water contamination. Supported by the Honduran Cardinal Oscar Andrés Rodríguez, the communities around the mine have been protesting since 2002.

The history of Canadian mining companies even in their own country leaves little room for optimism. Fewer than 20 Canadian indigenous communities have managed to negotiate agreements with the companies whose activities have left thousands of abandoned mines in indigenous territories, many of them leaking toxic waste into the water supply.

The Guatemalan government gave a concession to Montana without informing the local people, let alone consulting them. This clearly violates Convention 169 of the ILO on the Rights of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of which Guatemala became a signatory in 1996. The company will only leave one per cent of its profits in Guatemala (50 per cent for the Government and 50 per cent for the municipalities affected). Forests will be cut down and huge craters left which will lead to a high risk of landslides. Already armed patrol guards have been preventing the local people from going to visit other communities and even from working in their own fields. And San Marcos is not the only place in Guatemala where all this is taking place: exploration is also going on in the Petén, Quiché and Alta Verapaz.

At the beginning of December last year, the Ministry of Mines and the Environment held the First National Mining Forum in which environmentalists, the private sector, the World Bank and the UNDP as well as the Canadian Embassy participated. The Vice-Minister for Mines and Energy, Carolina Roca, declared that the National Forum was the beginning of a process of agreements that would improve the climate of governability in Guatemala and assure the investors of a favourable context for their investment. However, social and environmental movements in Guatemala dubbed the event as propaganda and held their own Alternative Forum of Resistance to the Mining of Metals. Peter Van de Veer of the World Bank believes that more consultation by the government will be necessary, as local opposition will risk investors pulling out but the protest movement fears that consultations will come too late.        

The reform of the Mining Law of 1997 is on the agenda of the Guatemalan Congress but the debate is polarised between those who want the mining companies to pay 10 rather than one per cent of their revenue to Guatemala and those who wish to scrap any payments whatsoever, in order to be more competitive on the international market.   

The Constitution of the Republic and the Peace Accords signed in December 1996 to end 30 years of civil conflict commit the Guatemalan Government to protect both the people of Guatemala and the country’s natural resources. Following a thousands-strong march on 1 April in San Marcos led by Bishop Ramazzini, the Vice President of Guatemala, Eduardo Stein, said that there might have to be a temporary postponement of mining activities. But are we not witnessing once again the power of multinational corporations to overrule national laws, to violate national interests and to disregard the most elemental rights of the people who get in the way of their relentless quest for profit?


Sources:

¢    Leaflet of Frente por la Vida, San Marcos (undated but sent to me by Movimiento Trabajadores Campesinos of San Marcos 3rd week in April 2005)
¢    Inforpress 10 December, 2004
¢    Canadian solidarity movement La mineria canadiense en el mundo, February 2005 (sent to me by MTC not further identified)
¢    Comunicado de los pueblos mayas Sipakapense y Mam, y de organizaciones sociales comprometidas con el altiplano marquense , San Miguel Ixtahuacán, noviembre 2003
¢    Internacional Indian Treaty Council, 17 January 2005: Guatemala: mining, repression and local development needs.

Print Friendly


This source for this information is the 
Washington Office on Latin America:

Clandestine Powers: A 1973 graduate of the military
academy (Escuela Politécnica), Otto Pérez Molina (born 01/12/1950) is
said to be one of the prominent leaders of 'El Sindicato'.
From 1992 to 1993, Pérez Molina served as head of the Army Intelligence
Directorate (D-2). In 1993, he led the group of military officers who
opposed then- President Elías Serrano’s auto-golpe (self imposed coup).
In the aftermath, he replaced Francisco Ortega Menaldo as
head of the Presidential General Staff (EMP). This sequence of events
sparked an intense rivalry between the two men that continues to this
day. Perez Molina was head of the EMP when Jorge Carpio Nicolle was assasinated.

Pérez
Molina has played a complicated role in Guatemala. Appointed Inspector
General of the Army (Inspector General del Ejército) in 1996, Pérez
Molina was the Guatemalan military’s representative at the negotiations
of the Peace Accords between the guerrillas and the government. Two
years later Pérez Molina went to Washington, DC to head the Guatemalan
delegation before the Inter-American Defense Board. He was forced into
retirement at the beginning of the Portillo administration. Pérez
Molina has been implicated in a number of human rights violations.
According to the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala
(ODHAG), there is evidence that links the EMP with the 1994
assassination of Judge Edgar Ramiro Elías Ogaldez.

General Héctor Alejandro Gramajo, who served as Defense Minister from January 1987 to May 1990, once described this strategy more crassly, stating:

You
needn’t kill everyone to complete the job…. We instituted Civil
Affairs, which provides development for seventy percent of the
population, while we kill thirty percent.

He has also been implicated in the murder of guerrilla leader Efraín Bámaca.
According to press accounts, a detailed document delivered to the U.S.
Embassy in 1996 revealed that Bámaca’s fate was weighed by military
leadership. The document stated that it was Pérez Molina, then head of
theEMP, who ordered two of his officers to make Bámaca disappear.

Pérez Molina’s role as a leader of the network of current and retired military officers known as the El Sindicato has put him in the company of men, such as Gen. Roberto Letona Hora,
who have been accused of corruption. Peréz Molina fiercely criticized
the Portillo administration for undue political influence of
ex-military officers connected to military intelligence.

On
February 24, 2001, Pérez Molina formed the Patriot Party (Partido
Patriota, PP). In March 2002, Pérez Molina and his political allies,
including the presidential candidate of the National Unity of Hope
(Unidad Nueva Esperanza, UNE) Álvaro Colom, led a march of about 3,000 demonstrators through the capital to demand the resignation of President Portillo and Vice President Francisco Reyes López because of their alleged funneling of state resources into bankaccounts in Panama.

In
2003, the Patriot Party banded together with the Reform Movement
(Movimiento Reformador, MR) and the National Solidarity Party (Partido
de Solidaridad Nacional, PSN) to form the Great National Alliance (Gran
Alianza Nacional, GANA) coalition. On November 9, 2003, Pérez Molina
was selected a deputy to the Guatemalan Congress for GANA.

According to Fundacion Myrna Mack,
Perez Molina has been fortunate that Berger needed party political
backing, which perhaps gave the Patriot Party a better showing at the
polls as part of GANA. Perez Molina was Commisioner for Security, but
left after disagreements, ostensibly for Berger's contact with Rios
Montt.

According to the Interior Ministry, Perez Molina has been an assassination target with three others,
for his role in apprehending Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, a Mexican drug
trafficker. He escaped from prison in Mexico in January, 2001. In March, 2005, wanted posters and a $5 million cash reward has been offered for his arrest from the DEA – http://crime.about.com/od/wanted/a/chapo_reward.htm

Perez Molina is currently preparing his campaign in the Guatemalan presidential campaign for 2007 with the Patriot Party. You can read his biography in Spanish on their website.

Print Friendly