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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Guatemala Human Rights Update Dec 14, 1992
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.082951.23297@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 08:29:51 GMT
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-
- /** reg.guatemala: 137.0 **/
- ** Topic: HRU#50 Dec 14, 1992 **
- ** Written 6:25 am Dec 22, 1992 by ghrc in cdp:reg.guatemala **
-
- GHRC/USA Human Rights Update*
- PEACENET Version #50
- December 14, 1992
-
-
- CASE UPDATES
-
- ATTORNEY GENERAL FILES APPEAL TO REVOKE AMILCAR MNDEZ' LIBERTY
- On November 23, acting Attorney General Edgar Tuna Valladares
- filed an appeal before the court, attempting to overturn Judge
- Juan Francisco Prez Mu$oz' recent decision to grant provisional
- liberty to Amilcar Mndez, director of the Council of Ethnic
- Communities Runujel Junam (CERJ). (See Peacenet Update #46).
- Popular organizations and CERJ leaders have reported that
- judicial officials are being pressured to revoke Mndez'
- provisional liberty.
- Mndez is accused of supplying a pamphlet bomb (an explosive
- device that causes a shower of pamphlets) to two CERJ members who
- were arrested for supposedly intending to distribute Guatemalan
- National Revolutionary Unity (URNG) propaganda. He stood trial
- on November 22 and was granted provisional freedom on the grounds
- that the evidence to convict him was insufficient. Mndez
- reported that since the trial, however, seven more charges have
- been leveled against him, accusing him of threatening civil
- patrollers.
-
- CAMPESINOS OF CAJOL~ STILL WITHOUT LAND Five-hundred families
- from Cajol , Quezaltenango, who were evicted several months ago
- from the Pampas de Horizante finca (ranch or plantation), still
- have nowhere to live. The fincas the Institute of Agrarian
- Reform (INTA) has offered the campesinos (peasants or farmers),
- being smaller than sixty-one acres, do not fulfill the
- campesinos' requirements. Enrique Ortega Taracena, the president
- of INTA, said the government would buy an adequate finca to give
- to the families of Cajol , and the campesinos would pay for the
- land within a period of ten years.
-
- JUDGE LILIAN V~SQUEZ THREATENED WITH ARREST A warrant for the
- arrest of Judge Lilian V squez, the former governor of Izabal,
- was issued by the Sixth Criminal Court. The charges against her
- include contempt for the executive branch of the government
- (specifically, President Serrano), a violation of article 142 of
- the Penal Code.
- V squez had reported to the Guatemalan Congress that she had
- been dismissed from her post as governor because she did not
- endorse the construction of Las Escobas port, which would be used
- to receive toxic waste. President Serrano reportedly called the
- governor's office to tell V squez not to interfere in affairs
- that were already decided. According to V squez, Serrano also
- told her that her only job was to follow orders. V squez had
- also reported to Congress that a nephew and a cousin of President
- Serrano's had taken possession of the documents of the Choc"n
- Machacas finca, a national reserve, and planned to evict six-
- hundred families from the land (see Peacenet Update #48).
-
- DRUG DEALERS FREED The First Court of Zacapa, claiming a lack of
- evidence, freed five members of the cuartel de Zacapa drug ring.
- Residents of Zacapa are concerned for the safety of several
- people who reported the activities of the drug ring. Zacapa
- residents said it was strange that the drug dealers were freed on
- lack of evidence, since they were arrested and found to be in
- possession of military equipment shortly after they had killed
- three people. The dealers had also confessed to thirty-one
- assassinations.
-
- EXTRAJUDICIAL EXECUTIONS
-
- On December 8, city bus driver WALTER GODINEZ JUAREZ (43) was
- shot to death when several unidentified men whom he was driving
- in a Mercedes Benz van opened fire on him with a machine gun.
- The attack occurred at approximately 7:00 P.M., at the entrance
- of La Aurora international airport in Guatemala City. The
- vehicle was carrying several other passengers, who were not
- injured.
-
- OTHER HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS
-
- JOURNALIST WOUNDED BY SOLDIERS OMAR CANO HERRERA, a journalist
- with the daily newspaper Siglo XXI, suffered a broken nose and
- bruises when he was attacked by an angry mob of soldiers and
- people involved in illegal tree-tapping and logging. The attack
- occurred in a gum tappers' camp called Paso Caballos, as Cano
- Herrera was investigating the illegal felling of trees in the
- Maya biosphere in El Petn. Cano Herrera said two specialists
- from the National Council of Protected Areas (CONAP) and an
- employee of the Institute of Anthropology and History were also
- assaulted.
- According to CONAP specialists, similar incidents occurred
- last year. A group of soldiers under the command of a lieutenant
- Ramos told lumber contrabandists that a delegation of CONAP
- members and Treasury Police were going to conduct an inspection
- in the Maya biosphere. In June, the contrabandists, assisted by
- members of the army, destroyed one of the inspection team's
- vehicles, and in October they set fire to a CONAP camp in the
- same location where the recent attacks occurred. Spencer Ortiz,
- the head of investigations for CONAP, who was also attacked,
- declared that "indisputably, the soldiers, the contrabandists,
- and the woodcutters work together."
- The print media and national grass-roots and human rights
- organizations vehemently protested the attack on Cano Herrera.
- The National Council for the Defense of Journalists' Human Rights
- (CNPDHP) said in a communique that the organization
- deplored the illegal detention and physical and psychological
- tortures Cano suffered at the hands of his aggressors, "criminal
- loggers who acted with the support and complacency of the
- national authorities present." The CNPDHP asked the Guatemalan
- government to end the abuse of power, impunity, and aggression
- against the national press.
-
- WIDESPREAD TREE FELLING Congresswoman Arabela Castro reported
- that since Decree 72-92 went into effect, authorizing the sale by
- public auction of wood found cut and abandoned in El Petn, a
- large number of trees are being cut in the Maya biosphere. The
- Union of Petn Gum Tappers also criticized Decree 72-92, which is
- causing illegal tree felling in El Petn to continue.
-
- WORKERS DEMAND BENEFITS Salom Por"n Figueroa, Secundino
- Paniagua, and Rugo Carballo, members of the Pecuaria Guatemalteca
- Company's (PEGUSA) ad hoc workers committee reported that the
- company has not paid them the benefits it owes them. The company
- closed down on September 1, and workers are expecting their
- benefits to be canceled. The members of the ad hoc committee
- have asked the Ministry of Labor to intervene to resolve their
- demand.
-
- CAMPESINO LEADER TARGET OF ABDUCTION ATTEMPT Damian Bail, the
- leader of the campesinos of Cajol (see Case Updates) reported
- that unidentified individuals tried to abduct him on December 12
- as he was walking near the center of Guatemala City.
-
- CONGRESSMAN THREATENED Congressman MIGUEL ANGEL MONTEPEQUE,
- secretary of the Guatemala Reform Party (PREG) is being
- threatened, intimidated, and coerced, his party reported. PREG
- said these threats are related to Dr. Montepeque's recent public
- denouncements of corruption and abuses of power by some civil
- servants and government employees.
-
- OTHER INFORMATION
-
- RIGOBERTA MENCH~ RECEIVES NOBEL PRIZE Rigoberta Mench# invited
- Monseigneur Quezada Toru$o -- mediator of the peace talks between
- the URNG and the Guatemalan government -- to the Nobel Peace
- Prize award ceremony, held in Oslo, Norway on December 10.
- Monseigneur Quezado Toru$o, in his capacity as mediator, and
- Commandant Rolando Mor n, of the URNG, attended the ceremony.
- Delegates of the Guatemalan government were absent. Mench# said
- she hoped to be able to maintain a dialogue with President
- Serrano.
- Meanwhile, the Secretary General of the United Nations,
- Boutros Boutros-Ghali, named Mench# UN "ambassador of good will"
- for 1993, the International Year of Indigenous Peoples.
-
- OIT EXPERTS CONFIRM WORK SITUATION Members of a special mission
- of the International Organization of Labor (OIT), headquartered
- in Geneva, met with Guatemalan Congressman Ren Ra!z Hern ndez,
- the president of the Congressional Commission of Labor and Social
- Security. During the meeting it was pointed out that Guatemala
- had ratified only twenty-four of the one-hundred-seventy-three
- international labor agreements adopted by the OIT. During their
- stay in the country, OIT experts will request information on
- workers rights violations.
- BOMB EXPLODES IN HOSPITAL A powerful bomb exploded on December 2
- in the regional hospital of Zacapa. No one was reported injured,
- but hospital patients had to be evacuated.
-
- REPORTERS PROTEST In spite of a November 30 march in which
- journalists submitted a list of requests to the Guatemalan
- government, President Serrano has launched an attack on the
- press. The Secretary of Presidential Public Relations has been
- conducting a publicity campaign, accusing the journalists of
- lying, lacking respect for the President, and being
- "destabilizers." Reporters responded that, with such statements,
- the President was demonstrating the disdain he feels for the
- people whose mission is to inform the nine-million inhabitants of
- Guatemala.
- Reporters in different communications media in Guatemala
- City wore black arm bands as a sign of mourning and protest for
- the statements President Serrano and other government officials
- have made against journalists.
- The National Council of Journalists' Defense (recently
- created and composed of the most important press organizations in
- the country) in a show of solidarity with the guild that has been
- continually attacked, said that freedom of the press has been won
- at the cost of blood and that "the press reflects the reality of
- the country, which is chaotic, and is not responsible for and
- does not invent those facts."
-
- SANTIAGO ATITL~N MASSACRE COMMEMORATED On December 2, residents
- of Santiago Atitl n commemorated the December 2, 1990 army
- massacre of thirteen indigenous citizens of their community. As
- a result of the massacre, the people of Santiago Atitl n
- requested the withdrawal of the army and the National Police and
- created their own security committee, an accomplishment they
- celebrated by carrying the torch of peace from Guatemala City to
- Santiago Atitl n.
-
- MARCH TO PROTEST REPRESSION On December 10, leaders of grass-
- roots organizations and the Union of Popular and Labor Action
- (UASP) marched to protest the increase in government repression
- against popular groups. The protest marked the first of a series
- of peaceful demonstrations that will take place during the
- International Year of Indigenous Peoples. The protest also
- coincided with International Human Rights Day and the awarding of
- the Nobel Peace Prize to Rigoberta Mench#.
-
- INDE WORKERS MARCH Approximately 1500 workers of the National
- Institute of Electricity (INDE) marched through the main streets
- of Guatemala City to Congress to protest the announced increase
- in the price of electrical energy service.
-
- TRANSPORTATION IN PETN Since late November, the Association of
- United Transportation Workers of El Petn (ATUC) has been
- blocking the passage of trucks carrying petroleum toward the
- Transversal del Norte highway. The workers' aim is to pressure
- the petroleum company operating in the region to pay the
- municipalities royalties and a tax for extracting crude oil from
- the subsoil in El Petn. The president of the fuel company,
- Emilio Sosa Le"n, has refused to negotiate with the transport
- workers.
-
- GROUPS CRITICIZE ARMY The Groups Arising From Repression and
- Impunity denied the army's statements that the existence of
- clandestine cemeteries reflects the barbarities committed by the
- guerrillas. A spokesman of the groups said the accusations were
- "false and slanderous, to try to cover up the proof of genocide"
- committed by the army.
-
-
-
-
- The Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA monitors the human
- rights situation in Guatemala and provides information to various
- constituencies in the United States and to a limited extent
- abroad. Information in the Guatemala Human Rights Update is
- compiled from a variety of international sources, including the
- Comisi"n de Derechos Humanos de Guatemala/Mexico (Guatemalan
- Human Rights Commission/Mexico), Americas Watch, Amnesty
- International and Inforpress. Information is also gathered from
- reports and alerts from groups in Guatemala, including the
- Archbishop's Human Rights Office, the Council of Ethnic
- Communities Runujel Junam (CERJ), labor unions, the University
- Students Association (AEU), the Conference of Religious of
- Guatemala (CONFREGUA) and the Mutual Support Group of Relatives
- of the Disappeared (GAM).
-
- * Every two weeks, two PEACENET Updates are combined to form the
- Guatemala Human Rights Update, which is mailed first class to
- hundreds of organizations and individuals. That publication
- includes all the information in the PEACENET versions--with
- infrequent addenda and corrections--and a list of suggested
- actions. To subscribe to the Guatemala Human Rights Update send
- $30 (yearly subscription) to GHRC/USA at: 3321 12th Street NE,
- Washington DC, 20017. Or call (202) 529-6599 or fax (202) 526-
- 4611 for more information.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.guatemala **
-
-