Democratic Underground Latest Greatest Lobby Journals Search Options Help Login
Google

Painful task: ID'ing Guatemalan dead

Printer-friendly format Printer-friendly format
Printer-friendly format Email this thread to a friend
Printer-friendly format Bookmark this thread
This topic is archived.
Home » Discuss » Places » Latin America Donate to DU
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 05:50 AM
Original message
Painful task: ID'ing Guatemalan dead
Painful task: ID'ing Guatemalan dead

The Associated Press
Thursday, July 3, 2008
COCOP, Guatemala: Guatemala's 36-year civil war cost some 200,000 lives, mostly of Mayan Indians caught between government forces and rebels. Twelve years after peace was signed, forensic anthropologists are still hunting for the missing.

So far they have found 6,500 buried in mass graves around the country.

Each discovery and positive ID is a milestone for survivors who have spent decades with no formal recognition of their loved ones' deaths. Each confirmed death also entitles the bereaved to a $3,000 payment from the government.

As the bones are dug up, identified and handed over to family members for burial, many people relive the horrors as if they happened yesterday. Women dressed in traditional Mayan garb gather around the narrow, open coffins filled with aged bones. Some mourners weep.

Villagers in Cocop, 75 miles (120 kilometers) northwest of Guatemala City, were preparing for Good Friday on April 16, 1981, when soldiers moved in and killed 79 people.

Fifty-one of them were recently exhumed from a mass grave. According to forensic anthropologist Alfredo Angerman, about 45 of them were women and children.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/07/03/america/LA-FEA-Guatemala-Photo-Essay-Finding-the-Dead.php



Juana Brito cries at the burial of her brother who was killed in the 1981 massacre of 79 people by the Guatemalan Army at a mass burial in Cocop, Guatemala, June 9, 2008. Anthropologists from the Forensic Analysis and Applied Science Center (CAFCA) exhumed the remains of 51 of the 79 victims of the April 16, 1981 massacre, for a two year study before returning the remains to their families. 250,000 people disappeared or were killed during Guatemala's 36 year civil war between 1960 and 1996. (AP)



1 month ago: Villagers and relatives carry the coffins of people who were killed in a massacre by the Guatemalan Army in 1981 during a mass burial in the Cocop community in the village of Nebaj, Guatemala, Tuesday, June 10, 2008. Anthropologists from the Forensic Analysis and Applied Science Center (CAFCA) exhumed the remains of 51 people of the 79 who were killed in the April 16, 1981 massacre, for a two year study before returning the remains to their families. Guatemala's 36 year civil war killed and disappeared about 250,000 people between 1960 and 1996.



1 month ago: A Mayan Ixil woman puts a headscarf in the skeleton of her beloved --one of the victims of the Guatemalan Army's massacre of April 16, 1981-- before his burial, on June 9, 2008 in Nebaj, some 300 km northwest of Guatemala City. Fifty victims of the massacre, in which 76 people were killed, were buried in the small village of Cocop. According to a report backed by the United Nations, the civil war in Guatemala (1960-96) left 200,000 deaths or disappeareances and 669 massacres were carried out, most of which -626- were the state�s security forces responsibility.


~~~~~~~~~~~~

The few fascists in this country would have you believe this is some of the fallout when "shit happens" and people disrespect the will of the right-wing American Presidents and their desires concerning how they should live their lives in other countries, serving the interests of U.S. multinationals and politicians.

Many others disagree with this hellish outlook.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 06:22 AM
Response to Original message
1. More photos of Cocop, Guatemala:
http://cache.daylife.com.nyud.net:8090/imageserve/00Fe4qk2FwgTA/340x.jpg

1 month ago: Locals attend the burial of some of the victims of the Guatemalan Army massacre of April 16, 1981, in the cemetery of Cocop, in Nebaj, some 300 km northwest of Guatemala City on June 9, 2008. Fifty victims of the massacre, in which 76 people died, were buried in the small village of Cocop, where the killing took place...

http://cache.daylife.com.nyud.net:8090/imageserve/00qk1YH5sSaLO/610x.jpg

1 month ago: A Mayan Ixil family looks at the bones of their beloved --killed by the Guatemalan Army on the April 16, 1981 massacre in the community of Cocop-- while a forensic anthropologist (not in frame) prepares the coffin for his burial on June 9, 2008 in Nebaj, some 300 km northwest of Guatemala City...

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 03:56 PM
Response to Original message
2. This Associated Pukes lede is outrageous and offensive!
"...caught between government forces and rebels" --my ass!

What a goddamn lie!

The "rebels" did not massacre 200,000 of their own people! They were fighting the monsters who did!

These were government atrocities, with the direct complicity of Ronald Reagan, who should have gone to jail for it--as well as for the U.S. war on Nicaragua.

It turns my stomach to see these weasel words used to cover up who was responsible for this--the most horrendous war crime ever committed in the western hemisphere, in the modern era.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 06:56 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. I believe Rios Montt is still alive
he ran for president just a couple years ago. I don't know if I'd characterize the story as a cover up though. the war and atrocities of the army, auto defense forces, and rebels are pretty well known.

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 09:21 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Like any racist, fascist, right-wing idiot, he buried his conscience long ago.
He learned he does without it.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 09:37 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. he and other Guatemalan leaders are more responsible
than any US presidents for events that happened in Chapinlandia. people outside of the US can, you know, direct their own actions with or without US support, involvement, or intervention. whether it be Sudan, Rwanda, Burma, Zimbabwe or Colombia, Guate, El Salvador. give people credit or condemnation for their own actions without first looking to blame a "higher power"

p.s. thanks for providing the view from the right wing fascists. I would have never known.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 11:57 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. The Guatemala death squads were U.S.-funded and U.S. trained under Reagan,
and were a Reagan policy, directed from Washington DC, documented by Freedom of Information Act requests and the UN "truth and reconciliation" investigations in Guatemala.

And what would your interest be in white-washing well-documented Reagan and Bush complicity in torture and mass murder in Latin America? It takes two to tango, for sure. And the Latin partners in the tango were trained at the School of the Americas and massively funded and fully supported by the Reagan regime, as they are by the Bush regime in Colombia today. There have been nearly 40 murders of union leaders alone, this year alone, by the Colombian military and its rightwing paramilitaries (who together commit 92% of the murders of union leaders in Colombia, according to AI)--with the Bush regime providing $5.5 BILLION to arm these fuckwads, and fully supporting a government whose president and some fifty of his political cohorts (including relatives) are under investigation for ties to the death squads, drug trafficking, election fraud, bribery and/or other crimes. Some have already been prosecuted and are in jail. Some have been extradited to the U.S. on the least important charges, for Bush-DoJ help with the coverup (silencing them). The Bush regime furthermore helped provide immunity to Chiquita executives who paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to the rightwing paramilitary death squads who were helping Chiquita solve its "labor problem" by chainsawing union leaders and throwing their body parts into mass graves, as well as other kinds of torture and murder.

The close ties, political support, massive funding and training of Latin America fascist murderers by the Reagan and Bush regimes are indisputable. They are well-documented and well-known by those who bother to investigate the matter, but they have, indeed, been covered up, marginalized, under-reported, distorted and tossed into the corporate 'news' monopoly river of forgetfulness. I have pointed out an example of distortion--AP's coy phrasing that the TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND Mayan villagers who were slaughtered in Guatemala with Reagan's direct complicity were "caught between" the government death squads and the rebels. These genocide victims were systematically exterminated by rightwing death squads with full U.S. backing. They were not caught in some kind of crossfire. They were tortured and killed in a focused, determined, deliberate effort to eliminate the entire leftist opposition in Guatemala, and they damn near succeeded. It has taken almost three decades for the Guatemalan left (the organized poor) to recover.

Inordinate U.S. influence in Latin America--enforced with massive funding of rightwing political groups, massive military funding, direct U.S. military and CIA intervention, economic pressure and destabilization tactics, and U.S. corporate activities and influence--are responsible for these rightwing forces getting out of control. They do it with U.S. cover and U.S. agreement. It has been U.S. policy under Reagan and Bush. (And, as to Colombia, Clinton was no better.) So you yourself are engaging in distortion when you say that people outside the U.S. "can direct their own actions without U.S. support." You are using this truism to distort the truth of the matter that, no, they could not get so out of control, torturing and murdering TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND indigenous, without U.S. support. Committing atrocities like these is the price of U.S. support--then, in Guatemala (also Nicaragua, El Salvador and other countries), and today, in Colombia.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 12:28 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. the civil war and the death squads predate Reagan.
don't be naive.

"three decades for the Guatemalan left" to recover. Umm....I believe the war was over just about 10 years ago.

Things most certainly can get "out of control" without US influence or support. Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Burma, Congo, Sierra Leon some of which I already gave as examples, and all of which you have chosen to ignore.

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 06:15 PM
Response to Reply #7
20. You think the dead don't speak for generations? The mass killing may have stopped.
The impacts continue to this day. Lifelong pain and sorrow for relatives and descendants of 200,000 dead. The sheer loss of votes and citizen activists from such a large massacre. The ripping up of civil society that takes decades to repair. This means gangs, drugs, murders both gang related and political, anger and fear--all syndromes haunting Guatemala to this day. The destruction of democratic and civic institutions--retarding development, smashing the labor movement, entrenching vast corruption. Your cold assertion that "I believe the war was over just about 10 years ago" leaves out the enormous, unhealable human cost of such a massacre that reverberates throughout society for decades. Guatemala today--where FIFTY political murders occurred in the last election campaign--is a ravaged society, barely getting back on its feet. Its new progressive government is moving in the right direction. But it will liely take the rest of the century to create a healthy, viable country.

These horrors coincided with the Reagan regime, and were actively supported and funded by them. That there were crimes against the indigenous prior to Reagan, I have no doubt. But what Reagan was responsible for is reminiscent of the original Spanish genocide. Scars from such atrocities may never heal. Society may recover, with proper care and wise policies--not U.S.-dominated "free trade," mind you, and "the war on drugs" (the latter rejected by the voters in their recent election of a progressive president in Guatemala), but rather education, infrastructure development, land reform, fostering local manufacturing and culture, public services, good policing (not a "war"), public participation without fear, and Latin American economic integration (which is advancing so fast in South America). But Guatemala--rather like Vietnam--will continue to hurt for many years. The end of the killing is not the end of the war, if it happens on your soil.

The Reaganites and the Bushites kill and exploit--and support killing and exploitation by local rich elites--and the Democrats have been a mixed bag, and no one in the U.S. government has ever apologized or sought to recompense the societies that U.S. government policy has torn to pieces. Now they have done it to Iraq, and have their greedy hearts set on additional oil that they can steal, there and in this hemisphere--which can only be done with more killing.

You have to be blind not to see this side of U.S. policy. And, after listening to Obama's war speech the other day, it's clear that Afghanistan and Pakistan are next. War escalation. Endless war. More killing. Massive killing. Massive bombing. More torture. Against tribes, in this case, that no one has conquered in five thousand years. And lots more war profiteering--until the U.S. itself has been turned into the biggest "Banana Republic" on earth--looted, broken, ruined, just like the societies that our government has ravaged.

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 12:45 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Since you are the one on this thread who reads, and UNDERSTANDS, I thought you might want to see
this info. I just discovered, concerning the NAFTA effect with Mexico's effect on Guatemala. Wierd and unexpected.
Published on Friday, November 7, 2003 by AMERICAS.ORG
Deadly Déjà Vu - Guatemalans Watch in Horror as Ex-dictator Ríos Montt Attempts to Regain Power
by Kari Lydersen

~snip~
Castillo noted that Guatemala has directly suffered from NAFTA, the controversial North American Free Trade Agreement that was instituted in 1994, even though it doesn't technically include Guatemala. "There are very visible effects of globalization and neoliberalism," he said. " the U.S. has commercially flooded Mexico with cheap products like corn. So since Mexican farmers don't have a market there anymore, they flood our country with corn and sell it here at cheaper prices . So for many Guatemalans it's not even worth it to plant seeds anymore."

Castillo, 40, noted that it is ironic that now the U.S. government is speaking against Ríos Montt and his cohorts, considering that during the Civil War the CIA and other government entities actively supported the military and paramilitary death squads in their fight against supposed "communism."

In fact, on December 4, 1982, President Ronald Reagan met with Ríos Montt and described him as a "man of great personal integrity and commitment" who had been "getting a bum rap." Just three days later, forensic anthropologists discovered that Ríos Montt's military had slaughtered more than 300 people in the village of Dos Erres.

"Then the U.S. supported him, but now they don't," Castillo said. "It's a matter of what's convenient for them. During Guatemala's civil war, the U.S. helped perpetuate massacres there. Now the U.S. presence is more in the economic realm. These U.S. businesses and transnational businesses are looking for ways to exploit our country's natural resources, to make the poor poorer and the rich richer. This is globalization and free trade. It has very big effects on the community."

Along with the Mayan communities, the environment has also been taking a beating from the increased industrialization of the country by foreign investors. "If we don't respect the natural resources of the planet, we'll be destroyed," Castillo said. "Industry in Guatemala destroys the environment. There are mountains of trash everywhere, there are pesticides being used here that are banned in the U.S. The campesinos use them because they don't know any better."
More:
http://www.commondreams.org/scriptfiles/views03/1108-08.htm

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 12:54 PM
Response to Reply #8
10. More on Ronald Reagan's right hand in Guatemala:
Edited on Wed Jul-16-08 12:59 PM by Judi Lynn
General Rios Montt of Guatemala: Return of the evangelical tormentor?
Posted: August 01, 2003
by: Editors Report / Indian Country Today


The nightmare that was Guatemala in the 1980s is returning. Twenty years after hundreds of massacres were conducted against Maya communities; many of the same people who ordered and committed the violence last week took over Guatemala City. General Efrain Rios Montt is back, wanting the presidency after 20 years. A wave of fear swept over Guatemala that has not been felt in over a decade.

Just before the time of the 1980s massacres, the Maya highlands teemed with thousands of relatively harmonious agricultural villages. In the relative peace of the mid-1970s, hopeful improvements were occurring in village cooperatives where Indian farmers could be guaranteed better prices and access to credit. However, a residual non-Indian guerrilla movement was moving into the Mayan mountains, and the Guatemalan Army of the day declared a brutal, pre-emptive war on Indian people.

The rationale of the Guatemalan Army generals was to terrorize the Indian population into submission, and to massacre it at the slightest contact with the revolutionary (Marxist-led) guerrillas. As the guerrilla movement trailed through indigenous Maya mountain villages, the Army swept behind, conducting the most horrific of massacres against tens of thousands of men and women, elders and children. A holocaust-in-progress emerged, a state-operated genocidal war against Maya villagers of such terroristic proportions that the trauma of that time still hangs over the country like a veil of shame and pain.

Not so the thought of shame, however, for General Efrain Rios Montt, the main living author and perpetrator of the policy that terrorized and eradicated over 600 Maya communities. Of those years of massacre, which actually mark from 1978 (Panzos municipal massacre, Kekchi country), to the late 1980s and even beyond, the worst and most brutal season of killing came during the 1982-83 military dictatorship of the evangelical General Efrain Rios Montt.

Once denied a presidency gained legitimately at the polls (1974), General Rios Montt conducted a military coup on the Guatemalan presidency in March 1982. The U.S.-trained general, born-again with the Church of the Verb, a California-based evangelical denomination, unleashed the worst wave of killings in the country's history. Some 20,000 died at the hands of his death squads and the policy of scorched earth against Maya people, which would ultimately claim 200,000 lives, was perpetrated with brutal exactitude.

As a former coup-de-etat conspirator, Rios Montt had been barred by the Guatemalan Constitution from seeking the presidency, that is, until July 14, when a Guatemalan Supreme Court decision overturned the 1985 constitutional ban. Rios Montt's goal is now to run for the presidency in November. The current president, Alfonso Portillo, is a cohort and former prot?g? of Rios Montt's, while his own son, is a senior army general. The moment is ripe for a Rios Montt return to power and, as a warning that terrified the country, last week the general unleashed his forces on the city. Death squads and well-ordered militias scoured the city, beating political opponents and journalists, causing serious social and political chaos.

In 1983, then U.S. president Ronald Reagan praised Rios Montt highly for his great work on behalf of democracy. This is part of the history, forgotten here, remembered there, of how the U.S. in years past has propped up bloody dictators. The Guatemalan army received substantial U.S. military aid throughout those years. Not only Rios Montt, but also most of the top echelon of generals in the Guatemalan military under Rios Montt were trained at the U.S. School of the Americas, then concentrated in Panama.

It is most unfortunate that it was this group precisely who coordinated the military horror sweeps in the Indian countryside. Horrendous and directed terror characterized the campaign - beheadings, live-burnings of large groups of people tied together, the forced killing of relative against relative, much rape - and evidenced a deeply inhuman psychological mandate. Even seasoned human rights observers had great difficulty sustaining intense scrutiny, as the brutality against women and children was so repugnant.


The Maya village population was not only subjected to broad sweeps by armies backed by helicopter gunships, which targeted whole villages as "enemy encampments" and marked them for annihilation. These direct attacks were reinforced by a broad network of local army-organized militias empowered to kill at random over long periods of time. Many of these militias were purposely recruited from the ranks of evangelical members, who were prone to target and brutalize traditional spiritual leaders and Catholic workers. Recently residents of just 12 Mayan villages which were massacred by Rios Montt's troops in 1982 - over 1,200 people were killed - have filed a complaint against Rios Montt in Guatemala. The general claims immunity but the eyewitness testimony in the case is heart wrenching.

Deposed by a broader military junta after nearly two years in power, Rios Montt in the ensuing 20 years has built a sizable political base among the country's radical and military right wing. The general has developed his own political party, the ultra-right National Republican Front, of which he is chairman for life. He is now the president of the Guatemalan National Congress and often speaks throughout Guatemala, part evangelical minister, part nationalistic prophet, and very much the aging caudillo hungry for his lifetime crowning shot at political power. The evangelism resonates in a country beseeched for centuries by every religious tendency in the world, from Mormon missions to Jehovah's Witnesses and on to dozens of other increasingly bizarre sects. Church of the Verb - old hippies turned military boosters via a "brother" general - actually helped justify years of horrible injustice. "God gives power to whomever he wants," Rios Montt once raved. "And he gave it to me."

This push from the extreme right wing in Guatemala is partly fueled by the international climate set by the war on terrorism. It is not lost on Rios Montt and the Guatemalan generals that the Bush Administration rewards police power and military action. Important Bush Administration insiders such as UN ambassador John Negroponte, John Poindexter, Eliot Abrams and Otto Reich, all tainted in the Contra war and other foreign policy adventures and misadventures, have favored good relations with General Rios Montt.

For those who wonder "why they hate us," Rios Montt, his training and his backers during the years of massacre, provide ample answer that the history of this great American nation is checkered; there is a past to critique and understand; there is much to improve upon, as there are many avenues to a more encompassing, people-supporting foreign policy.

More:
http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1059765879

On edit, emphasis added.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 01:01 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. well, at least the Guatemalans know and UNDERSTAND who is responsible
I believe I posted yesterday that Rios Montt and other Guatemalan leaders share the majority of the blame.


"Recently residents of just 12 Mayan villages which were massacred by Rios Montt's troops in 1982 - over 1,200 people were killed - have filed a complaint against Rios Montt in Guatemala."


and the "why they hate us" comment is not pertinent. I don't believe there is any great anti-American sentiment and never experienced it to any great degree.


Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 01:16 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. They're bright enough to associate genocide with the President who funded it,
trained the officers, and supplied it, not the U.S. citizens themselves, with the exception of the criminal class, the right-wing Republicans.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 01:27 PM
Response to Reply #12
13. I believe they are bright enough to realize the war was not Reagan or any other
president's making. repression of the indigenous population has occurred for 500 years and is on going. No US president is responsible for that.

I repeat, Guatemalans know where the responsibility lays. it need not be laid at the feet of a dead president. there are people still alive and walking free, hint hint, who are much more responsible for past tragic events in Guatemala.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 02:47 PM
Response to Reply #13
14. There are PUPPETS still alive, hint hint wink wink nudge nudge, thank you.
This particular puppet was beloved also of Pat Robertson and Jerry Fallwell and that other twisted bigot and pervert, Jesse Helms.

If Rios Montt weren't a burned out old buggerer now, if he still had some clout, you can be sure he'd be flying back and forth to Washington. As it is, Republican sleazebot, Rep. Jerry Weller married Rios Montt's creepy daughter, Zury. Maybe they're hoping all the survivors will have died off by the time their offspawn grows up and they will have a whole new "human rights violater" to set loose on the world, with no one left to protest, or die in the effort.



What God hath wrought.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 02:54 PM
Response to Reply #14
15. he does still have clout
he ran for president and still has lots of support. I don't hear about him flying back and forth to Washington though. just another meaningless outburst on your part.


what does his daughter or her children and future children have to do with Rios Montt's atrocities in Guatemala??

Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 03:23 PM
Response to Reply #15
16. Yep, I looked for more info. Looks as if he still wields a lot of evil control.
How silly you'd imply his daughter wouldn't be serving the same filthy forces that drove her father to do such evil things to helpless people. Interesting.

From a quick search:
Meanwhile, Ríos Montt formed his own political party, the ultra-right National Republican Front, appointed himself chairman for life and rules with an authoritarian rigidity. He has regularly toured the country giving speeches that blend neo-fascist politics with his feverish brand of evangelical Christianity. His children have advanced along with him. His son, Enrique Rios Sosa, is the head of finances for the Guatemalan army, while his daughter Zury Rios serves as vice-president of the National Congress.

Attempts to bring Ríos Montt to justice have failed. Nobel laureate and Mayan human rights advocate Rigobertu Menchu sought to have Spanish courts indict Ríos Montt on charges of genocide in 1999, but in 2000 the Spanish high court bowed to US pressure and ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to prosecute him for crimes committed outside of Spain. Early this year, however, the court reversed itself slightly, allowing charges against Ríos Montt to proceed for crimes committed against Spanish citizens.

In June 2001 Center for Legal Action on Human Rights based in Guatemala City filed a complaint against Ríos Montt on behalf of the residents of 12 Mayan villages which were destroyed by Ríos Montt 's troops between March and December of 1982. More than 1,200 people were murdered in those raids on the remote mountain villages. Although Ríos Montt maintains he has legislative immunity from prosecution, the case continues to percolate through the courts, backed by dozens of graphic and heart-wrenching depositions from Mayan villagers.

Later that year, the general got in trouble once again for his role in a more run-of-the-mill legislative scandal. His party secretly re-wrote tax laws governing the sale of alcohol and beer at the behest of the liquor industry. The secret meetings were caught on tape. Charges of political corruption were brought against Ríos Montt and 24 of his fellow FRG party legislators. Then the legislature, under the control of Ríos Montt, passed a measure giving the lawmakers immunity. The immunity grant was initially struck down by the Guatemalan Supreme Court. Two days later a fusillade of gunfire ripped through the home of the chief justice of the court. The charges against the general were dropped once again.

This is the same court that has now given Ríos Montt the green light to run for the presidency. But now the chief justice is Guillermo Ruiz Wong, a childhood friend of the general, and Ríos Montt publicly bragged about having four judges in his pocket. He was right and that's all he needed.

So far the Bush administration has maintained a coy distance about the prospects of Ríos Montt becoming president of Guatemala. In June, the State Department publicly announced that it would prefer to deal with a less tarnished figure.

"We would hope to be able to work with, and have a normal, friendly relationship with whoever is the next president of Guatemala," said state department spokesman Richard Boucher last month. "Realistically, in light of Mr. Ríos Montt's background, it would be difficult to have the kind of relationship that we would prefer."

This was hardly a stern condemnation of the war criminal and Ríos Montt doesn't seem the least worried about such low-grade sniping from Colin Powell's office. The general understands how Washington works. After all, he has old friends in the Bush inner circle, including UN ambassador John Negroponte, John Poindexter, Eliot Abrams and the repellant Otto Reich.

So could Ríos Montt, even with his grim resume of torture and assassination, be elected president of Guatemalan? The country is mired in poverty, its democratic institutions are frail and the government is plagued by official corruption. The current government, headed by Ríos Montt protégé Alfonso Portillo, recently instituted an unsavory program of "compensating" former members of civil self-defense patrols the paramilitary forces responsible for massive abuses during the Ríos Montt's infamous "Beans and Bullets" counterinsurgency campaign. In Guatemala, many observers see this as a smart way to buy votes in advance of the election from the general's natural constituency.

And it's still not safe to publicly criticize Ríos Montt and his allies for crimes committed 20 years ago. In 1998, Bishop Juan Gerardi Conedera, the head of the Catholic Church's human rights office, had his skull crushed with a concrete block two days after he had submitted his report on the abuses of the Guatemalan Army. He was succeeded by Bishop Mario Ríos Montt - the general's brother. Big country, small world.

Still many people don't forget and can't forgive. On a recent campaign swing through the Mayan highlands, where so many perished at the hands of Ríos Montt's death brigades, villagers pelted the general with stones.

Even so, it would be dangerously ill advised to count the general out now that he has just gotten back into the game.

"The last word on the general who's maintained his presence in the country's political life for 20 years since the coup has yet to be said," warns Hector Rosada, a political analyst from Guatemala City. "He has an incredible ability to be born again, and he's very good at operating from the trenches. He retreats, digs in, waits as long as it takes, and then emerges once again."
More:
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Articles7/StClair_Rios-Montt.htm

You'd better adjust to seeing a future in which right-wing goblins are going to be pushed farther and farther away from civilized society, until the world no longer even remembers them. They have had control through their greed and determination to seize power any way possible, and have meted out suffering beyond telling upon the good people of the world everywhere.

There will be an end to all that true evil wielded by walking maggots, and I'm hoping it will be in both our lifetimes.






Fascists surely chose scum for heroes.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 03:46 PM
Response to Reply #16
17. I doubt his daughter will massacre many Mayans
he is a congressman right now in Guatemala.


"You'd better adjust to seeing a future in which right-wing goblins are going to be pushed farther and farther away from civilized society, until the world no longer even remembers them. They have had control through their greed and determination to seize power any way possible, and have meted out suffering beyond telling upon the good people of the world everywhere.

There will be an end to all that true evil wielded by walking maggots, and I'm hoping it will be in both our lifetimes."


ok, well, I'll continue to keep plenty of garlic around and always wear a cross just in case the world isn't rid of this evil within the next 50 years or so.



Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 04:16 PM
Response to Reply #17
18. Yeah, you bet. n/t
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 05:12 PM
Response to Reply #11
19. LOL!
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 07:24 PM
Response to Reply #19
21. what's so funny?
I was referring to not having experienced anti-Americanism in Guatemala. I wasn't referring to you.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 12:48 PM
Response to Original message
9. I got y'r U.S. involvement in Guatemalan genocide right here! "Ronald Reagan's Bloody 'Apocalypto'"
Ronald Reagan's Bloody 'Apocalypto'

By Robert Parry
December 17, 2006

~snip~
Reagan's Arrival

Ronald Reagan's election in November 1980 set off celebrations in the well-to-do communities of Central America. After four years of Jimmy Carter's human rights nagging, the region's hard-liners were thrilled that they had someone in the White House who understood their problems.

The oligarchs and the generals had good reason for optimism. For years, Reagan had been a staunch defender of right-wing regimes that engaged in bloody counterinsurgency against leftist enemies.

In the late 1970s, when Carter's human rights coordinator, Patricia Derian, criticized the Argentine military for its "dirty war" – which included tens of thousands of "disappearances," tortures and murders – then-political commentator Reagan joshed that she should “walk a mile in the moccasins” of the Argentine generals before criticizing them.

After his election in 1980, Reagan pushed to overturn an arms embargo imposed on Guatemala by Carter because of its ghastly human rights record. Yet even as Reagan was moving to loosen up the military aid ban, the CIA and other U.S. intelligence agencies were confirming new Guatemalan government massacres.

In April 1981, a secret CIA cable described a massacre at Cocob, near Nebaj in the Ixil Indian territory. On April 17, 1981, government troops attacked the area, which was believed to support leftist guerrillas, the cable said.

According to a CIA source, "the social population appeared to fully support the guerrillas" and "the soldiers were forced to fire at anything that moved." The CIA cable added that "the Guatemalan authorities admitted that 'many civilians' were killed in Cocob, many of whom undoubtedly were non-combatants."

Despite the CIA account and similar reports, Reagan permitted Guatemala's army to buy $3.2 million in military trucks and jeeps in June 1981. To permit the sale, Reagan removed the vehicles from a list of military equipment that was prohibited by the human rights embargo.

Confident of Reagan’s sympathies, the Guatemalan government continued its political repression without apology.

According to a State Department cable on Oct. 5, 1981, Guatemalan leaders met with Reagan's roving ambassador, retired Gen. Vernon Walters, and left no doubt about their plans. Guatemala's military dictator, Gen. Fernando Romeo Lucas Garcia, "made clear that his government will continue as before – that the repression will continue."

Human rights groups saw the same picture. The Inter-American Human Rights Commission released a report on Oct. 15, 1981, blaming the Guatemalan government for "thousands of illegal executions."

But the Reagan administration was set on whitewashing the ugly scene. A State Department "white paper," released in December 1981, blamed the violence on leftist "extremist groups" and their "terrorist methods," inspired and supported by Cuba’s Fidel Castro.

Yet, even as these rationalizations were sold to the American people, U.S. intelligence agencies in Guatemala continued to learn about government-sponsored massacres.

One CIA report in February 1982 described an army sweep through the so-called Ixil Triangle in central El Quiche province, an area where descendants of the ancient Maya were lived.

"The commanding officers of the units involved have been instructed to destroy all towns and villages which are cooperating with the Guerrilla Army of the Poor and eliminate all sources of resistance," the report stated. "Since the operation began, several villages have been burned to the ground, and a large number of guerrillas and collaborators have been killed."

The CIA report explained the army's modus operandi: "When an army patrol meets resistance and takes fire from a town or village, it is assumed that the entire town is hostile and it is subsequently destroyed."

When the army encountered an empty village, it was "assumed to have been supporting the EGP, and it is destroyed. There are hundreds, possibly thousands of refugees in the hills with no homes to return to. … The well-documented belief by the army that the entire Ixil Indian population is pro-EGP has created a situation in which the army can be expected to give no quarter to combatants and non-combatants alike."

Rios Montt's Coup

In March 1982, the violence continued to ratchet up when Gen. Efrain Rios Montt seized power in a coup d’etat. An avowed fundamentalist Christian, he was hailed by Reagan as "a man of great personal integrity."

By July 1982, Rios Montt had begun a new scorched-earth campaign called his "rifles and beans" policy. The slogan meant that pacified Indians would get "beans," while all others could expect to be the target of army "rifles." In October, he secretly gave carte blanche to the feared “Archivos” intelligence unit to expand “death squad” operations.

The U.S. embassy was soon hearing more accounts of the army conducting Indian massacres. But the political officers knew that such grim news was not welcome back in Washington and to report it would only damage their careers.

So, the embassy cables increasingly began to spin the evidence in ways that would best serve Reagan's hard-line foreign policy. On Oct. 22, 1982, the embassy sought to explain away the mounting evidence of genocide by arguing that the Rios Montt government was the victim of a communist-inspired "disinformation campaign."

President Reagan picked up on that theme. During a swing through Latin America, Reagan discounted the growing evidence that hundreds of Mayan villages were being eradicated.

On Dec. 4, 1982, after meeting with Rios Montt, Reagan hailed the general as "totally dedicated to democracy" and declared that the Rios Montt government was "getting a bum rap."

On Jan. 7, 1983, Reagan lifted the ban on military aid to Guatemala and authorized the sale of $6 million in military hardware. Approval covered spare parts for UH-1H helicopters and A-37 aircraft used in counterinsurgency operations.

State Department spokesman John Hughes said political violence in the cities had "declined dramatically" and that rural conditions had improved too.

In February 1983, however, a secret CIA cable noted a rise in "suspect right-wing violence" with kidnappings of students and teachers. Bodies of victims were appearing in ditches and gullies. CIA sources traced these political murders to Rios Montt's order to the "Archivos" in October 1982 to "apprehend, hold, interrogate and dispose of suspected guerrillas as they saw fit."

Sugarcoating

Despite these grisly facts on the ground, the annual State Department human rights survey sugarcoated the facts for the American public and praised the supposedly improved human rights situation in Guatemala. "The overall conduct of the armed forces had improved by late in the year" 1982, the report stated.

A different picture – far closer to the secret information held by the U.S. government – was coming from independent human rights investigators. On March 17, 1983, Americas Watch representatives condemned the Guatemalan army for human rights atrocities against the Indian population.

New York attorney Stephen L. Kass said these findings included proof that the government carried out "virtually indiscriminate murder of men, women and children of any farm regarded by the army as possibly supportive of guerrilla insurgents."

Rural women suspected of guerrilla sympathies were raped before execution, Kass said. Children were "thrown into burning homes. They are thrown in the air and speared with bayonets. We heard many, many stories of children being picked up by the ankles and swung against poles so their heads are destroyed."

Publicly, however, senior Reagan officials continued to put on a happy face.

On June 12, 1983, special envoy Richard B. Stone praised "positive changes" in Rios Montt's government. But, in reality, Rios Montt’s vengeful Christian fundamentalism was hurtling out of control, even by Guatemalan standards. In August 1983, Gen. Oscar Mejia Victores seized power in another coup.

Despite the power shift, Guatemalan security forces continued the killings.

When three Guatemalans working for the U.S. Agency for International Development were slain in November 1983, U.S. Ambassador Frederic Chapin suspected that “Archivos” hit squads were sending a message to the United States to back off even mild pressure for human rights improvements.

In late November 1983, in a brief show of displeasure, the administration postponed the sale of $2 million in helicopter spare parts. The next month, however, Reagan sent the spare parts. In 1984, Reagan succeeded, too, in pressuring Congress to approve $300,000 in military training for the Guatemalan army.

By mid-1984, Chapin, who had grown bitter about the army’s stubborn brutality, was gone, replaced by a far-right political appointee named Alberto Piedra, who was all for increased military assistance to Guatemala.

In January 1985, Americas Watch issued a report observing that Reagan's State Department "is apparently more concerned with improving Guatemala's image than in improving its human rights."

Death Camp

Other examples of Guatemala’s “death squad” strategy came to light later.

For example, a U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency cable in 1994 reported that the Guatemalan military had used an air base in Retalhuleu during the mid-1980s as a center for coordinating the counterinsurgency campaign in southwest Guatemala – and for torturing and burying prisoners.

At the base, pits were filled with water to hold captured suspects. "Reportedly there were cages over the pits and the water level was such that the individuals held within them were forced to hold on to the bars in order to keep their heads above water and avoid drowning," the DIA report stated.

The Guatemalan military used the Pacific Ocean as another dumping spot for political victims, according to the DIA report. Bodies of insurgents tortured to death and live prisoners marked for “disappearance” were loaded onto planes that flew out over the ocean where the soldiers would shove the victims into the water to drown, a tactic that had been a favorite disposal technique of the Argentine military in the 1970s.

The history of the Retalhuleu death camp was uncovered by accident in the early 1990s when a Guatemalan officer wanted to let soldiers cultivate their own vegetables on a corner of the base. But the officer was taken aside and told to drop the request "because the locations he had wanted to cultivate were burial sites that had been used by the D-2 during the mid-eighties," the DIA report said.

Guatemala, of course, was not the only Central American country where Reagan and his administration supported brutal counterinsurgency operations and then sought to cover up the bloody facts.

Reagan's falsification of the historical record became a hallmark of the conflicts in El Salvador and Nicaragua as well as Guatemala. In one case, Reagan personally lashed out at a human rights investigator named Reed Brody, a New York lawyer who had collected affidavits from more than 100 witnesses to atrocities carried out by the U.S.-supported contras in Nicaragua.

Angered by the revelations about his contra "freedom-fighters," Reagan denounced Brody in a speech on April 15, 1985, calling him "one of dictator Ortega's supporters, a sympathizer who has openly embraced Sandinismo."

Privately, Reagan had a far more accurate understanding of the true nature of the contras. At one point in the contra war, Reagan turned to CIA official Duane Clarridge and demanded that the contras be used to destroy some Soviet-supplied helicopters that had arrived in Nicaragua.

Clarridge recalled that "President Reagan pulled me aside and asked, 'Dewey, can't you get those vandals of yours to do this job.'"

To manage U.S. public perceptions of the wars in Central America, Reagan also authorized a systematic program of distorting information and intimidating American journalists. Called "public diplomacy" or "perception management," the project was run by a CIA propaganda veteran, Walter Raymond Jr., who was assigned to the National Security Council staff.

The project's key operatives developed propaganda “themes,” selected “hot buttons” to excite the American people, cultivated pliable journalists who would cooperate, and bullied reporters who wouldn't go along.

So, when the Reagan presidency came to an end, not only did U.S. officials who sponsored and encouraged war crimes escape accountability, they became highly respected figures in Washington. In the 1990s, the Republican congressional majority pushed to have scores of buildings and other facilities named after Reagan, including National Airport in Washington.

Modern 'Apocalyptos'

An honest accounting of what actually happened under Reagan's presidency became a political taboo in the United States. Even when hard evidence surfaced about those human rights crimes, the information was quickly brushed aside and forgotten.

On Feb. 25, 1999, for instance, a Guatemalan truth commission issued a report on the human rights catastrophe that Reagan and his administration had aided, abetted and concealed.

The Historical Clarification Commission, an independent human rights body, estimated that the Guatemalan conflict claimed the lives of some 200,000 people with the most savage bloodletting occurring in the 1980s. Based on a review of about 20 percent of the dead, the panel blamed the army for 93 percent of the killings and leftist guerrillas for three percent. Four percent were listed as unresolved.

The report documented that in the 1980s, the army committed 626 massacres against Mayan villages. "The massacres that eliminated entire Mayan villages … are neither perfidious allegations nor figments of the imagination, but an authentic chapter in Guatemala's history," the commission concluded.

The army "completely exterminated Mayan communities, destroyed their livestock and crops," the report said. In the northern highlands, the report termed the slaughter a "genocide."

Besides carrying out murder and "disappearances," the army routinely engaged in torture and rape. "The rape of women, during torture or before being murdered, was a common practice" by the military and paramilitary forces, the report found.

The report added that the "government of the United States, through various agencies including the CIA, provided direct and indirect support for some state operations." The report concluded that the U.S. government also gave money and training to Guatemalan military units that committed "acts of genocide" against the Mayas.

"Believing that the ends justified everything, the military and the state security forces blindly pursued the anticommunist struggle, without respect for any legal principles or the most elemental ethical and religious values, and in this way, completely lost any semblance of human morals," said the commission chairman, Christian Tomuschat, a German jurist.

"Within the framework of the counterinsurgency operations carried out between 1981 and 1983, in certain regions of the country agents of the Guatemalan state committed acts of genocide against groups of the Mayan people,” Tomuschat said.

In other words, the Reagan-supported Guatemalan security forces had conducted many apocalyptos against the descendants of the Mayas whose torment five centuries earlier was fictionalized in Mel Gibson's box office blockbuster.

Like their ancestors in the movie, these Mayas had their communities surrounded and attacked, albeit with more efficient weapons and vastly more lethality. As in the movie, young women were dragged off to be raped, but in the 1980s, the attackers were more interested in killing everyone in the village rather than enslaving them.

If anything, the actions by Ronald Reagan's allies were more ruthless, more bloodthirsty and more barbaric than the actions of Gibson's fictionalized Mayan city-state.

Instead of a crazed priest hungry for human sacrifices to appease the gods, the Reagan-era slaughters were justified by well-dressed politicians and bureaucrats back in Washington eager to score some geopolitical points against their Cold War adversaries in Moscow.

During a visit to Central America, on March 10, 1999, President Bill Clinton apologized for the past U.S. support of right-wing regimes in Guatemala.

"For the United States, it is important that I state clearly that support for military forces and intelligence units which engaged in violence and widespread repression was wrong, and the United States must not repeat that mistake," Clinton said.

But the story of the Reagan-supported genocide of the Mayan Indians was quickly forgotten, as Republicans and the Washington press corps wrapped Reagan's legacy in a fuzzy blanket of heroic mythology. The atrocities inflicted on actual Mayan descendants just a quarter century ago are now less real to many Americans than the abuses suffered by the fictional Mayas in Mel Gibson's made-up story of five centuries ago.

More:
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2006/121606.html
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-16-08 07:42 PM
Response to Reply #9
22. It is very difficult for me to read this history of horror in Guatemala under Reagan,
Edited on Wed Jul-16-08 07:44 PM by Peace Patriot
because I was so oblivious to it while it was happening. I knew that some bad things were happening there, but I had no idea of the scale and the sheer horror of it. I was more aware of Nicaragua and El Salvador, and, of course, opposed Reagan and very much wanted him to be impeached for the war on Nicaragua, which had been expressly forbidden by Congress. But I'm just staggered by my ignorance of the vast war crimes in Guatemala. It is perhaps a measure of how corrupt the corporate press corp was by that time that someone like me--a political activist--was largely unaware of what was taking place in Guatemala.

I said, above, that no one in the U.S. government even apologized. That's not true. As this article states, Clinton did:

During a visit to Central America, on March 10, 1999, President Bill Clinton apologized for the past U.S. support of right-wing regimes in Guatemala.

"For the United States, it is important that I state clearly that support for military forces and intelligence units which engaged in violence and widespread repression was wrong, and the United States must not repeat that mistake," Clinton said.


Clinton, however, went on to fund "Plan Colombia"--a policy not unlike Reagan's policy in Guatemala, but under a different guise. Instead of "anti-communism," we now had the "war on drugs"--but the purposes were the same: killing poor people, the indigenous, leftist political activists, union organizers, human rights workers, journalists. And now the Bushites have taken to calling the leftist guerrilla fighters in Colombia--who have been fighting a civil war there for 40+ years--"terrorists." The massive killing of, and brutality against, innocents--with billions in U.S. taxpayer funding for war/police state profiteers--is justified and disguised by each change of terms. In truth--according to all human rights groups--it is the Colombian government and closely associated rightwing death squads who are responsible for most of the killing of innocents in Colombia. Who are "terrorists"?

Clinton's emphasis in Latin America was more on "free trade"--slow killing of the poor, as opposed to just outright shooting them. But in Colombia, he, like Reagan, is guilty of having massively funded murderers and torturers.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-17-08 03:14 AM
Response to Reply #22
23. This article will explain why we heard SO LITTLE about what was happening:
"The Press Has Blood on Its Hands"
- in Guatemala
A FAIR / CounterSpin interview with Allan Nairn
from Extra! May / June 1999 - Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR)



More than 200, 000 Guatemalan civilians were killed or disappeared during 36 years of civil war ending in 1996, according to a report from the Guatemalan Historical Clarification Commission released in February. The nine-volume, 3,500-page report found that U.S. assistance was a key factor in human rights violations during the armed conflict. Yet Guatemala's human rights ordeal has been almost invisible in U.S. press coverage.
FAIR's CounterSpin (3/4/99) talked about press coverage of the report and of Guatemala with Allan Nairn, who reported extensively from that country in the early 1980s-a period, according to the report, when the Guatemalan government was carrying out genocide against Mayan community.
*

CounterSpin: Since the report's release, we've seen several articles and columns that, while they acknowledge the U.S. involvement in these human rights violations, seem to spend as much or more time congratulating the U.S. for its role in releasing the documents that aided the commission. Even a piece by Kate Doyle from the nonprofit National Security Archives (New York Times, 3/1/99) begins, "Along with a certain degree of shame, the U.S. can take pride in the report released last week." What do you make of that?

Allan Nairn: The Archives and Kate have done excellent work, but that's an outlandish statement. It's as if someone went into your house, burned it down, killed your family, took some notes, and then a decade after the fact they come up to you and say, "By the way, would you like to see the notes?" And you're supposed to say, 'Well, thank you very much."
These are crimes against humanity: torture, genocide. Even if you presume that this U.S. administration is taking a different approach than the previous ones, if they were to own up to this and behave appropriately after the fact, they would initiate prosecution. But of course they wouldn't do that, because that would involve prosecuting not just low-level officials, but people like Elliott Abrams, secretaries of state, presidents.

CS: In a Wall Street Journal piece from March 3, "Guatemala's Troubles Weren't Made in the U.S.A.," Mark Falcoff from the American Enterprise Institute comments on the tendency to exaggerate the foreign role in Guatemala. Is this common in the media, and was this common throughout the '80s?

AN: The U.S. role in Guatemala was about as extensive as can be. It started with an invasion by the United States in which the CIA overthrew a democratically elected government in 1954 and put the military in power and began Guatemala's nightmare. It continued in '63-'64 with the establishment of a chain of security agencies throughout Latin America that were established by the AID Public Safety Program and the CIA.

In the late '60s, in the provinces of Zacapa and Izabal in Guatemala, U.S. Green Berets actually went into the field to assist the Mano Blanca death squads established by the Guatemalan army as they killed some 10,000 Guatemalan civilians.

In '82 and '83, as Gen. Rios Montt was sending military sweeps into the northwest highlands, annihilating by their own count 662 rural villages, Reagan went down, embraced Rios Montt, said Guatemala was getting a bum rap on human rights. The U.S. military general attaché at the time told me the sweep strategy was in large part his idea, and that he was working hand in hand with Gen. Benedicto Lucas to carry it out. It's hard to overstate the U.S. role, because the U.S. role was so extensive.

To get back to your question about the press, the big corporate press in the U.S. was not covering the U.S. role at all. They were barely covering the fact that the mass killings were taking place in Guatemala. The New York Times, for example, would run a couple of Guatemala pieces every few months. That was about the rhythm of their coverage in the early '80s.

The first time they devoted a single prominent piece to a massacre was when a particular massacre happened in the mid-'80s, which they blamed on the guerrillas. The guerrillas did do some massacres, according to the truth commission. The truth commission blamed them for 3 percent of the atrocities, as against 93 percent for the army. But it turned out, this one that the Times blamed on the guerrillas later turned out to actually have been done by the army.

If this had actually been covered as it was happening, if it had been on the front page day after day as the 662 rural villages were leveled and their inhabitants raped and tortured and burned in front of their families, this would not have been able to happen, because the public would not have stood for this. So the press also has blood on its hands, together with the U.S. government, because any competent reporter who went down could see it. In '82 the Guatemalan bishops issued a pastoral letter saying the assassinations had reached the point of genocide. This was out there, it was just not reported, so the killing continued.More:
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Media_control_propaganda/Press_BloodHands_Guat.html
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-17-08 03:26 AM
Response to Reply #22
24. Who knew the N. Y. Times was connected to overthrowing Arbenz in 1954!
The New York Times Comes Clean, Sort Of ...
By Robert Parry

WASHINGTON -- At esteemed newspapers, such as The New York Times, placement of a story is a carefully weighed message to the reader about the relative importance to attach to the news. So is phrasing about guilt when the paper is assessing responsibility for crimes. If an enemy is called to account, the wording can be explicit. But if the culprit is an ally, the phrasing gets fuzzy, often sliding into a passive tense that disconnects who has done what to whom.

"Words are regularly transformed in the service of the powerful," observed media critic Edward S. Herman in an analysis entitled "Word Tricks & Propaganda" < Z Magazine, June 1997>. But the Times may have taken these techniques to new heights in the June 7 Saturday editions.

Two stories were separated by 11 pages, though they connected to the same horrendous topic, the slaughter of an estimated quarter million people by the sadistic Guatemalan army, a military that has dominated the Central American country since the CIA sponsored and directed a coup in 1954 to oust a democratically elected government.

Though natural side-bars, the stories were not even cross-referenced. One dealt with the bloody results of the coup (without mentioning the CIA or the U.S. government once); the other was a bloodless account of how The New York Times assisted the CIA (without mentioning the ensuing butchery once).

On page one was a grisly account of how Guatemalans have begun the painstaking process of excavating the hundreds of mass graves that dot the Guatemalan countryside. Though the army's role in the mass murders was not in doubt, the Times chose indirect phrasing that blurred the blame: "More than 100,000 people were killed during the 36-year conflict in Guatemala," stated the article by correspondent Larry Rohter. "Another 40,000 disappeared and are presumed dead."

The army's brutality was also indiscriminate, wiping out whole families. In Rio Negro, a grave site was excavated uncovering the skeletons of more than 100 children as well as 80 women. Another grave containing the army's victims was found inside a 16th century church in San Andres Sajcabaja, along with military gear and pornographic playing cards.

Outside the village of San Martin Jilotepeque, soldiers filled a deep well with their victims. "Relatives of those missing here have been suspicious since the early 1980s of the well and the foul odors that have often wafted from it, but like thousands of others in this country of 10.5 million, they were unable to act," Rohter reported.

The article also described some of the army's grotesque practices, including how executioners entangled their victims with ropes to force them to strangle themselves. Another account explained how soldiers raped young girls in front of their parents as a coercive technique.

Rosa Moreno said that on Dec. 12, 1981, soldiers broke down the doors to her family's home and beat her father. To stop his resistance, the soldiers sexually assaulted his 10-year-old daughter -- Moreno's sister -- until her father surrendered. He was taken away never to be seen again by his family.

Though the mass-grave story was a startling admission about the horror that swallowed Guatemala for more than four decades, the Times article filtered out any reference to the CIA's role in ousting the government of Jacobo Arbenz in 1954 and putting the army into power. There was also no mention of President Reagan's renewed support for the Guatemalan army in the early 1980s as the counter-insurgency terror devastated rural Indian communities.

But even more disconnected was the Times editorial decision to tuck away an important side-bar to the page-one story. Off on the edge of page 11, next to the religious news and national briefs, there was a single-column story that helped explain how the CIA orchestrated the 1954 coup with the help of the Times's publisher, Arthur Hays Sulzberger. Only a diligent Saturday morning reader would have found it.

More:
http://www.consortiumnews.com/archive/story35.html
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-17-08 10:44 AM
Response to Reply #24
25. We have to learn to read corporate 'news' differently, don't we? Start on p. 57.
Look for the smallest, least noticeable articles. Imagine them to be blazing headlines (which they should be, but are not). Read between the lines. Explore the black holes of missing information, and the razzamatazz of disinformation. Unspin the spin. And, above all, bolster ourselves with alternative news sources.

Many people began to read corporate 'news' this way--often via the internet (for alternative sources, and analysis)--during the leadup to the Iraq War, because they were so aghast that we seemed to be doing Vietnam all over again, and almost nothing you read about it in the U.S. "paper of record"--the NYT--was true. Nor in the Associated Pukes, nor Robo-Rooters, nor the Washington Pist, nor the snooty, kultchud NPR, nor BlairBC. I remember reaching via the internet all the way to Russia (can't remember the web site now--it's not there any more--something like www.iraqwar.ru) to find alternative information and views. One of the things I discovered along the way was corporate 'news' MONOPOLIES. I'd go to the Sydney Morning Herald and read the same crap that was being published here--all from the Associated Pukes.

What a lesson in the propaganda we are subjected to! The Bush Junta may turn out to be an inadvertent boon to democracy--bitter irony though that may be--by being such outrageous liars that the outrageous collusion of the corporate press in their lies has become so much more apparent to so many more people (especially Americans). That's probably why these fascist fuckwads installed 'TRADE SECRET' code, owned and controlled by Bushite corporations, throughout the U.S. voting system. Cuz what they were doing was so fucking outrageous--Vietnam II--that they knew we would find out. We did. 70% of the American people now oppose the Iraq War and want it ended. They had to find a way to thwart that overwhelming anti-war majority, and then (s)elect a more presentable president--a really cool guy--who would say, "Oh, oops! It's not that the Iraq War was wrong--it's that it was the wrong war" (--Barack Obama, this week).

(Really, I was just appalled at his speech. The naked shilling for the war profiteers sent me into tumults of despair, even though I knew it was coming.)

Our mistake, as a people, started back then--with our blindness to Reagan's war crimes in Guatemala. No internet, I guess. That was part of it. Most people just didn't know. Our mistake, as to the Democratic Party, began back then as well. The Democrats in Congress made a big fuss over Nicaragua, because they had forbidden it, but it was a fuss "full of sound and fury/ signifying nothing" (no consequences to Reagan). And they ignored Guatemala, which was actually much worse. Nicaragua was a war. Guatemala was EXTERMINATION. Reagan's impunity for that crime was the harbinger for Bush II's impunity for slaughtering a million Iraqis.

Blind! We were blind! But no more! Now we have to figure out how to retrieve our vote counting system from these bastards.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
DU AdBot (1000+ posts) Click to send private message to this author Click to view 
this author's profile Click to add 
this author to your buddy list Click to add 
this author to your Ignore list Thu Dec 26th 2024, 08:14 AM
Response to Original message
Advertisements [?]
 Top

Home » Discuss » Places » Latin America Donate to DU

Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.1 Copyright 1997-2002 DCScripts.com
Software has been extensively modified by the DU administrators


Important Notices: By participating on this discussion board, visitors agree to abide by the rules outlined on our Rules page. Messages posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums are the opinions of the individuals who post them, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Democratic Underground, LLC.

Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals |  Store  |  Donate

About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.

© 2001 - 2011 Democratic Underground, LLC