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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!asuvax!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: Andrew Lang <lang@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: Press realese no.7
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.141716.18141@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 14:17:16 GMT
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- /* Written 4:40 pm Jan 22, 1993 by codehuca@nicarao.apc.org in igc:carnet.alerts */
- /* ---------- "Press realese no.7" ---------- */
- PRESS RELEASE NO. 7
- CODEHUCA
-
- WHEN THE NIGHT IS NOT NIGHT ANYMORE? - AND THE MORNING HAS NOT COME
- YET
-
- Central America is going through a complex transition process.
- Now, 5 years after the Esquipulas II agreement pacification and
- democratization processes with different results and a few common
- components have been developped.
- A clear and permanent authority of the military institution over
- the political systems in most Central American countries has passed
- to a progressive debilitation of its control and direct power over
- these systems. This phenomenon goes hand in hand with a
- fortification of the civil society.
- In countries like Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala this
- transition has had as a backdrop - with different reach and depth -
- especially in the dialogue and negociation between the governments
- and the insurgent forces.
- As is logical with such a complex phenomenon, it produced different
- readings. Among them, we underline two: one we can qualify as
- oficial, seen the fact that it largely synthesizes the consensual
- vision of the governments of the region, and the other one can be
- found in the popular movements and of Human Rights sectores of the
- region.
- The official one is caracterized by its overestimation of the real
- advances made in the Central American political process.
- There has been a spread of joy, proclaiming peace and that
- democracy is the system that governs the region. The local and
- international scenery has been saturated by these ideas.
- The silence of guns has been planned - with scarce analysis since
- then - like unequivocal signal of the arrival of a new age of peace
- and democracy.
- But things are not so clear at all. The real, hard, daily facts
- tell a different history to most Central Americans, to their
- organizations and those of human rights.
- In many ways peace has not been reached. If we consider it in an
- integral and extended way: peace as synonim of unlimited respect
- for human rights; peace has never been so far away as in these
- days, that governments in the region respect economic, social,
- cultural, civil and political rights of the people. But even if we
- were less demanding and define the concept less strict, we would
- have to conclude that there still remains a possibility.
- In Guatemala the war goes on. The economic and social situation is
- getting worse and we cannot see at the horizon tangible results of
- a dialogue and negociation process that relied on a limited and
- calculated support of the militaries.
- El Salvador, on the other hand, is in between hope and doubt. When
- they reach a real depuration of the army and the true fulfillment
- of the other accords in the Chapultepec Peace Accord, they will be
- able to start elaborating a positive analysis that serves the
- peace.
- Three years after the humiliating military occupation, is it
- possible to talk about peace in Panama? This only to mention three
- cases.
- Democracy. What is democracy?
- If we look at it superficially and consider democracy as being the
- same as electoral processes, we have to conclude today that there
- is democracy in Central America. But if we are not conform with
- this concept and delve into it a bit more we can sustain that
- democracy is effective participation of mayorities in decisions
- that influence their life, their destination, their rights; than
- the situation changes. Than there still is a lot to do in this
- region regarding democracy.
- Therefore, we believe that it is wrong to affirm that an essential
- component of the transition process is democracy. In some countries
- it generated democratic forms that can be filled with contents or
- left empty.
- Impunity and intolerance, two elements that keep on dominating
- Central American societies and that are reflected in thousands and
- thousands of denunciations of human rights violations, received
- yearly by our regional commission, and which point out the real
- margen of democracy and peace; democracy and peace that the
- governments of the isthmus proclaim to have.
- With this reality, the different organizations who make up the
- human rights movement in the region have to assume the commitment
- to unite themselves and to coordinate their activities.
- Division and lack of cooperation add up difficulties to an effort
- that in itself is already titanic and complex.
- The beautiful utopia of building a true democratic and pacific
- Central America is a task for all people. The organizations that
- struggle in different human rights areas, under different political
- and socio-economic structures, can and have to join forces in all
- areas.
- CODEHUCA, with its 14 years of struggle and hope, offers the best
- of itself in the necessary and broad effort for Central American
- unity during these difficult years of doubt and transition.
-
-