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Guatemala |
Guatemala's history from colonization and eradication of the advanced Maya
civilization by the Spanish to the
bloody civil war, which still continues today, forms the background for the life
and work of Rigoberta Menchú Tums. The following text was taken from the
Protestant church Community in Mutterstadt, Germany. It is divided into the
following sections:
Other texts:
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Guatemala
today
Guatemala was
once like Peru a rich, fertile and civilized country, the land of the
Mayas. The Mayas were masters of astronomy and mathematics. In the 16th
century their calendar was far more accurate than the Gregorian one
used in Europe. The Mayas were able to work out the course of celestial bodies and knew the best time to sew and harvest the land. Like the
Incas, the Mayas also had a well-functioning agricultural system and
hunger was unknown, until the Spanish arrived and enslaved the Mayas in their
search for gold. Today, the agricultural situation in Guatemala is
just as deplorable as in Peru.
Life expectancy
in Guatemala is 41 and one child in 5 dies before its 4th birthday, one
in ten before its first and only one child in 3 lives to celebrate its
15th birthday. Descendents of the Spanish form the ruling minority in Guatemala.
Forming only 2.1% of the population, these descendents own 70% of arable
land and are in charge of the military. 70% of Guatemala's population
are South American Indians. They live in the northern provinces near the
boarder to Mexico. The Indians continue to be driven from their land
today. They have no documentation proving that they are the rightful
owners of the land. The Indians regard the land as mother earth
providing the people with plenty to eat. Their ancestors are also buried
under this earth meaning that expulsion from their land means much more
than just an economic disaster...
Peaceful
attempts by Indians to protest their right to land have been met with
violent massacres on several occasions. The strength of the army was
increased fourfold between 1973-1988, when young Indians were forced
into joining the army brutally to hunt down and exterminate their own
kind as "misguided communists". To get a brief insight into
just what expulsion and fight against resistance meant, I will attempt
to provide a short summary of that experienced by Rigoberta Menchú,
who, despite everything, decided to fight:
Felipe died in
the Finca as they sprayed the plantation from the air while people were
still working in it. The pesticide didn't agree with him. Nicolas died
two years later from undernourishment, also in the Finca. Someone sent
Rigoberta's mother a cardboard coffin in which she buried her son. She
was unable to attend work on the day of her son's burial and the
supervisor threw her out. Rigoberta was eight years old. 18 years later
her youngest brother, Petrocinio, who was 16 years old catechist and
village secretary, was kidnapped by soldiers. The soldiers tortured him
for days, cut off body parts including the soles of his feet and scalped
him before eventually dousing him in petrol and burning him alive in
front of his family. Her father was burned alive during occupation of
the Spanish embassy in 1979. Her mother was kidnapped in 1980,
repeatedly raped, mutilated and beaten to death...
A total of 22
languages are spoken among the natives. Set against this background
their achievement in setting up a joint organization called Comite
de Unidad Campesina (CUC) in 1978 is made all the more impressive. Most
Indians do not speak Spanish and most of them have never been to school.
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Counter Insurgency
and the "scorched earth" policy
Uprisings occurred ever since independence at the beginning
of the 19th century. In 1944 a "Revolutionary Movement" gained power
to the great concern of large landowners and several large north American
companies (incl. United Fruit Company). These companies felt that their
interests were being endangered and intervened in Guatemala together with the
CIA. In 1954 they managed to put a military dictatorship in place with General
Castillo Armas as President. President Ydogoras was elected in 1958 but fell
from power after being forced out by the military. Until 1978 the fight against
resistance was based on "selective repression", that is, the
disappearance of individuals, especially the leaders of civil movements and
trade unions etc.
Under the military dictatorship of Lucas Garcia
(1978-1982) and Rios Montt (1982-1983) a stage-by-stage counter insurgency plan
drawn up by the CIA was implemented. This was an open war against the civil
population and is now described in history books as the "scorched earth
policy". The army caused a mass exodus of people into neighboring countries
(especially Mexico) by carrying out mass shootings and pyres, by cruelly
torturing people and by completely destroying and burning down some 440 Indio
villages. The horrors committed are almost unimaginable: The stomachs of pregnant
women were cut open, and the heads of children were smashed against rocks...
"The results" of the military repression
between 1978-1986: 150 000 killed, 46 000 disappeared, 300 000 orphans. These
figures are "very high" even for Latin America. Counter insurgency
measures also included the setting up of so-called "model villages",
where Indians lived in a sort of safety zone, surrounded, controlled and
monitored by the military.
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On
the road to peace
As a result of huge international pressure,
the military was forced into introducing plans towards democracy in
1986. And so it was that for the first time since 1963 a civilian
president came to power. Unfortunately, hardly anything changed and the policies
and activities of those really in power continued. Before resigning, the
military government granted an amnesty for all human rights violations
carried out during their reign between 1983-1986. The subsequent
civilian governments left it at that. This means that to this day no
cases have been subject to criminal investigations - it also means that
further murders are, for all intents and purposes, being sanctioned.
Murderers do not have to fear punishment of any description.
Despite all this, Indians and some of the
poor Ladinos have been able to organize themselves under great
sacrifice. They offered resistance to the large landowners supported
from abroad, multinational capital and the well-equipped military. There
have been several agreements since 1993 with the government. These agreements
and help from the UNO have paved the way for 20,000 refugees to return
from exile (mostly from Mexico). The best that those returning can
expect is a piece of land in a freshly cleared part of the rainforest.
In addition to this, the so-called "civil patrols", armed and
made up of forced recruits to terrorize the Indian population, are still
active.
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Guatemala...
...is
referred to as the land of eternal spring because of its mild
climate. The third largest country in Central America, it
boarders Mexico, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador.
Official
name: Republic of Guatemala
Capital:
Guatemala
Area:
108.889 km2
Population:
approx. 10 million (over 50% of whom are Maya Indians)
Official
language:
Religion:
Roman Catholic
Illiteracy:
Approx. 40% |
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The Maya were the most advanced urban
civilisation in the pre-Columbian Americas. They invented the
concept of "zero" centuries before it was
independently formulated in India, and measured the solar year
with an error of only 17.28 seconds. Having flourished for two
millennia in an area of 3,255,000 sq.km, they were first invaded
by Spain in 1527, but put up such fierce resistance that the
capital of their last kingdom to fall, Itza at Nojpeten, was not
captured until 1697. Had the Maya not been decimated by European
diseases such as chicken pox and measles, some historians
believe the Spanish conquest might have ended in total defeat.
According to Roderick Conway Morris, "One of the greatest
crimes perpetrated against the Maya was the destruction of their
thousands of books, spearheaded by the Franciscans, who - while
preaching harmony and brotherly love - presided over a
scorched-earth policy, backed up by the threat of the physical
extinction of any who dared to resist it. So complete was the
friars' success that only four books in Maya script survived."
More recently, the Guatemalan civil war
began when the CIA toppled the democratically-elected government
in 1954. The US-backed right-wing military juntas which followed
have had one of the worst records of political repression, human
rights abuses, and atrocities in recorded history. After
opposition groups began organising among Indians in the
countryside, the military responded with death squads and a
scorched-earth "counterinsurgency" strategy that
destroyed over four hundred ancient Mayan villages, displaced
one million people, and left a hundred thousand unarmed Indians
dead. Hundreds of mass graves across the country contain the
remains of massacred civilians.
[Global
Vision, www.global-vision.org/interview/menchu.html] |
[Seitenanfang]
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Report from Amnesty
International 1996 concerning Guatemala (Excerpts)
A Pattern of Systematic Human Rights
Violations
Amnesty International continues to document
a disturbing pattern of human rights violations in Guatemala.
Extrajudicial executions, disappearances, torture, death
threats,
harassment and intimidation persist. The violations have been
directed at many sectors of society including: trade unions and
popular organizations, human rights defenders, journalists,
students, religious personnel, those attempting to investigate
past human rights violations, witnesses, former refugees and
displaced people returning to their lands and street children.
Of particular concern is the alarming level of threats and
attacks that have been reported against human rights defenders
during the year. Some have been the subject of verbal or written
death threats as a result of their work. Others have been
attacked and killed.
The perpetrators of these human rights
violations are mainly the police and military and army-created
civil patrols. In addition and citing the rise in urban crime,
the government reportedly promoted the creation of new civilian
self-defense squads to be armed and trained by the military.
Both these and other new vigilante-style groups, also apparently
working with official complicity, have allegedly engaged in
social cleansing, killing members of youth gangs and others
involved in petty crime. These new death squads have also been
implicated in human rights violations against those perceived as
being opponents of the government, reportedly disguising the
attacks as common crimes to escape official accountability.
There has been little progress in
clarifying the tens of thousands of past abuses. Those
responsible for human rights violations continue to benefit from
almost total impunity. In August, the United Nations (UN)
Subcommission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of
Minorities expressed deep concern at the impunity enjoyed by the
perpetrators of human rights violations and at the inability of
the judicial system to bring intellectual and material
perpetrators of such acts before the courts. The Subcommission,
reflecting reports and statements by MINUGUA, the United Nations
Mission in Guatemala and Mónica Pinto, the UN Special Expert,
found that the majority of the violations breached the rights to
life, integrity and personal security, and that state agents
were either directly implicated or had failed in their duties to
assure these rights to its citizens.
To date, none of those responsible for the
deaths of thousands of people during the late l970s and early
l980s at the height of the army's counter-insurgency campaign,
have been brought to justice. During 1995, independent forensic
groups undertook further exhumations at sites where large-scale
extrajudicial executions had been reported during this period.
Several hundred remains were uncovered, but Amnesty
International knew of no case where official bodies undertook
investigations to determine how the victims died nor who was
responsible. Instead, family members, witnesses and human rights
defenders involved in the exhumations were themselves threatened
and harassed. |
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On October 5th 1995, 26 soldiers opened fire on 200 returning refugees in the
village of Xaman in Alta Verapaz killing 11 and injuring 30 others. In February
1996, police officers drove out several hundreds of farmers in San Lucas Toliman
in the Solola region, three of whom were seriously injured and a further 25 are
officially termed as "missing". Criminal proceedings are not expected,
even if the perpetrators are known. On the 29th of December 1996 a peace
agreement was signed between the government (President Arzu) and a coalition of
differing armed and unarmed organizations belonging to the URNG (Unidad Revolutionaria Nacional
Guatemalteca). The signing of this agreement means that differing conventions
come into force on:
 | The resettlement of refugees |
 | The establishment of a "Truth
Commission" |
 | The identity and rights of indigenous
peoples |
 | Social economic aspects and agricultural
issues |
Another part of the peace agreement is that the
differing guerrilla organizations have to decommission their weapons within the
next 2 months. They then want to come together to form a legal party called
"The United Revolutionary Party" (PRU). A further bitter pill: On the
18th of December, shortly before the signing of the peace agreement, the Guatemalan
government passed another bill granting an amnesty to all those who "during
the course of the conflict" committed crimes against human rights. In the
language of the Mayas the words peace process means "unite, but
always with great happiness"; in these words the Indians express a way of
looking at life rather than a cold business term.
[Taken from: http://members.aol.com/PfrJung/guatema.htm,
Prot. Kirchengemeinde Mutterstadt]
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