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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-10-10 05:11 AM
Original message
Guatemala judge orders soldiers to stand trial for peasant massacre
Thursday, September 09, 2010

Guatemala judge orders soldiers to stand trial for peasant massacre
Andrea Bottorff at 10:51 AM ET

A Guatemalan judge ruled Wednesday that three soldiers charged in connection with a 1982 peasant massacre that left more than 260 dead will face trial. Of the 17 soldiers accused of committing crimes against humanity during the 1960-1996 Guatemalan civil war , three were captured in Guatemala and four others have been detained in the US by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for illegally concealing their past military service and involvement in the killings on US immigration forms. The charges against the soldiers are based on the findings of a Truth Commission investigation monitored by the UN and completed in the late 1990s, which uncovered vast human rights abuses . The trials are the first for massacre crimes committed during the civil war years.

Other officials have faced judicial proceedings for crimes committed during the war years. Last December, a retired Guatemalan colonel was sentenced to 53 years in prison for his role in the disappearance of eight indigenous Guatemalans during the 36-year civil war. In 2005, Guatemala formally apologized for the government-ordered peasant massacre that occurred in July 1982, where special forces soldiers are accused of killing 268 men, women and children of mostly Mayan descent in the village Dos Erres. Vice President Eduardo Stein made the acknowledgment in a small town north of Guatemala City, expressing remorse for the army's action that "wipe out an entire community." The apology came in response to an order from the Inter-American Human Rights Court, part of the Organization of American States , requiring an apology and payments to survivors totaling almost $8 million.

http://jurist.org/paperchase/2010/09/guatemala-judge-orders-soldiers-to-stand-trial-for-peasant-massacre.php
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-10-10 05:14 AM
Response to Original message
1. US Aided and Abetted Genocide in Guatemala
US Aided and Abetted Genocide
in Guatemala
Marin Interfaith Task Force on Central America, April 1999
by George Friemoth, MITF Board

In an explosive report released on February 25 by the United Nations' Historical Clarification Commission (CEH), the US government and several American corporations were accused of complicity in the genocide of nearly 200,000 Mayan people during Guatemala's bloody 36-year civil war.

The final 3,600-page CEH report clearly places the blame for most of the 200,000 deaths on the "racist" policy of the Guatemalan government and holds the country's military and paramilitary forces responsible for the actual killings, tortures and disappearances. However, it accuses the US of directly and indirectly supporting a "fratricidal confrontation" by providing sustained training, arms and financial aid. The US role peaked in the 1981-1983 period, but did not end until the peace accords were signed in 1996.

The report is based on the testimony of 9,200 people from all sides of the conflict. The three commission members had an international staff of 272 workers, who spent 18 months assembling the report and who made extensive use of declassified US documents. The CEH investigated 42,000 human rights violations, 29,000 of which resulted in deaths or disappearances. The most significant findings were:

* The Guatemalan army and its paramilitary forces (the infamous "Civil Patrols") were responsible for 93% of the crimes. Leftist guerrillas (Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity - URNG) were blamed for three percent of the crimes; four percent were unresolved. * There were 626 massacres that were attributed to the military and its allies and described as a "strategically planned genocide against the Mayan people." The URNG was blamed for another 32 massacres.

* The scorched earth operations, particularly in the early 1980's, resulted in entire villages being wiped out - men, women and children. "Special brutality directed against Mayan women, who were tortured, raped and murdered." Large numbers of girls and boys were victims of extremely violent killings.

* The Guatemalan government used a relatively small Marxist insurgency (the URNG) as an excuse for the "physical annihilation" of all of its political opponents, the vast majority of them unarmed civilians. The executions and forced disappearances of Mayan leaders "were not only an attempt to destroy the social base of the guerrillas," the report said, "but above all, to destroy the cultural values that insured cohesion and collective action in Mayan communities."

The US Role
Commission chairman Christian Tomuschat, a respected German lawyer and human rights expert, stated that the US was responsible for much of the bloodshed. "The United States government and US private companies exercised pressure to maintain the country's archaic and unjust socioeconomic structure." He noted that the CIA and other US agencies "lent direct and indirect support to some illegal state operations." The support consisted of advising, training, arming and financing the overall operation.
The commission listed the American training of the Guatemalan officer corps in counter-insurgency techniques, including torture, as a key factor "which had a significant bearing on human rights violations during the armed confrontation." The US Army School of the Americas (SOA) in Fort Benning, Georgia, was singled out for its role.

Specifically named was Guatemalan Military Intelligence (Ml) as the primary organizer of illegal detentions, torture, forced disappearances and executions. The report noted that most Ml officers were graduates of the SOA and maintained close and frequent contact with their US counterparts. Attempting to absolve himself, Mario Merida, former chief of Ml and one-time Minister of Interior, said "It was a war between the United States and the USSR. We should never have gotten involved." Guatemalan President Arzu and others argue that Guatemalans were merely victims of a civil war and that the country was used by the US as a surrogate Cold War battleground.

United Fruit and Coca Cola In 1954, the United Fruit Company (now known as Chiquita Banana) pressured the US government to stage a ClA-directed coup that overthrew President Jacobo Arbenz. This action put an end to the first democratically elected president in Guatemalan history and set in motion the civil war that followed.
In the 1970's and 1980's, a US-owned bottling company licensed by Coca-Cola waged a war against Guatemalan trade unions, in which scores of people were killed by the military. The CEH report cited other cases of transnational intervention and human rights violations.

The Guatemalan and US governments should acknowledge once and for all their respective roles in the carnage. President Clinton took the first steps by authorizing the release of some classified documents, contributing to the funds for the commission's work and, in a recent trip to Guatemala, apologizing for the US role in the war. He said he would do everything he could, given funding limitations, to help in rebuilding the country. The URNG ex-guerrillas offered an official apology to the Guatemalan people. Last December, President Arzu apologized for the government's role in the war and called for a national forgiveness campaign.

More:
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Human_Rights/USGenocideGuatemala.html
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-10-10 05:30 AM
Response to Original message
2. Guatemalan Ex - Soldiers on Trial In Landmark War Case
Guatemalan Ex - Soldiers on Trial In Landmark War Case
By REUTERS
Published: September 8, 2010
Filed at 11:14 p.m. ET

GUATEMALA CITY (Reuters) - Three former soldiers will go on trial for the 1982 massacre of more than 250 people, a judge ruled on Wednesday in the first such court case in Guatemala for crimes committed in its dark civil war past.

Human rights investigators and victims' family members have accused 17 soldiers, nine of them elite Special Forces, of entering the hamlet of Dos Erres in northern Guatemala and killing unarmed peasants after accusing them of supporting leftist guerrillas.

A United Nations-backed Truth Commission found the troops killed babies by throwing them against tress or bashing in their heads with hammers and then dumping their bodies into a well. The troops then proceeded to rape and murder the rest of the inhabitants over several days.

Only three of the accused soldiers have been apprehended in Guatemala and will go on trial next week, the judge said. Four others are in custody in the United States after immigration officers found they lied in their applications for U.S. citizenship and Guatemala requested their extradition.

While some military officials have been jailed for individual war-era crimes, this is the first time members of the armed forces will stand trial for a massacre.

"The magnitude of this case is what makes it so important," a lawyer for the victims' relatives, Edgar Perez, told Reuters. "It was the complete elimination of a village in a demonstration of the government's scorched earth policy."

Guatemala's 1960-1996 civil war pitted a succession of right-wing governments against leftist insurgents, and led to nearly a quarter of a million deaths. The truth commission said the armed forces carried out over 80 percent of human rights abuses during the conflict.

More:
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2010/09/08/world/international-uk-guatemala-trial.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
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