Showing posts with label international law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label international law. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Indigenous organizations denounce proposed mining moratorium

In a televised program broadcast from outside Tahoe Resources’ conflictive Escobal mine project, President Otto Pérez Molina announced a proposed two-year moratorium on the granting of new mineral mining licenses. A similar moratorium put in place under the Colom presidency was lifted under the Molina administration, allowing for the issuance of roughly 100 exploration and exploitation licenses during the last year and a half. The President and Minister of Energy and Mines, Erick Archila, took care in assuring the public and Tahoe executives in particular, that the decision would not impact the Escobal project, approved for mineral exploitation in April of 2013.

He also explained that the purpose of the moratorium is to allow the government to pass reforms to the 1997 Mining Law. In a groundbreaking legal action filed in July 2012, this same law was denounced by the Western Peoples Council (CPO) as unconstitutional, as it fails to fulfill national and international mandates that require the State to consult with indigenous people regarding policies that will significantly impact their territories. In March, 2013, more than eight months after the action was filed, Guatemala's highest court upheld the Mining Law, rejecting the CPO appeal.

Indigenous and campesino organizations denounced the latest moratorium as a political show intended to calm widespread resistance to harmful mining projects, while pushing through reforms that do nothing to address the real issues including the lack of respect for communities' right to consultation on projects that impact their lives, livelihoods and territories.

Read NISGUA's translation of the declaration from the Western Peoples' Council and the Departmental Assembly of Huehuetenango below. See the original Spanish version here

THE ORIGINAL PEOPLES HAVE NEVER ASKED FOR A MORATORIUM; A DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENT SHOULD BE CONSISTENT WITH THE RESULTS OF THE GOOD FAITH COMMUNITY CONSULTATIONS

The announcement of the President of the Republic of Guatemala to present a law initiative to the Congress of the Republic to decree “a two year moratorium on the granting of additional licenses for mineral mining” in the country, while starting the debate for a new Mining Law in the legislative branch, is neither novel nor substantive for the Original Peoples of Guatemala. The current president’s predecessor, Mr. Alvaro Colom Caballeros, had already put this into practice.

To bring back a moratorium on the granting of mining licenses is more evidence of the hasty and improvised attitude of the current government in lifting the moratorium previously in place.

Furthermore, after the Original Peoples presented a legal action of unconstitutionality against the current Mining Law, the Executive Branch carried out two desperate actions: a) the suspension of the moratorium put in place by the previous president, and b) the presentation of a new initiative to reform the Mining Law.

The suspension of the first moratorium brought the massive granting of un-consulted licenses for mining in indigenous territories, while the Mining Law reform initiative demonstrates the lack of patriotic interest in protecting national sovereignty. This Machiavellian initiative makes clear that the  recently announced proposed moratorium would be repealed in the case of reforms to Mining Law Decree 48-97, or if a new law is created.

The moratorium law initiative - “suspension of the granting of licenses” - will not immediately go into effect as it must be read in the plenary, sent to the Commission of Energy and Mines for analysis and then sent back to Congress for discussion.

This initiative is a “smoke screen and a total show” that seeks to placate community resistance and conflicts as a result of the imposition of the mining model in the country. This proposal is contradictory because during the last year and a half the Executive has granted roughly 100 mineral mining licenses.

The people have not asked for a moratorium on community consultations; the people have demanded that the government respect the decisions of the good-faith community consultations that have overwhelmingly rejected this model of death disguised as mining activity.

Guatemala does not need to plunder the country in order to generate its own development. Mining activity is not the only alternative nor is it a priority for an integral development model.

Huehuetenango, July 2013

DEPARTMENTAL ASSEMBLY OF HUEHUETENANGO  -ADH-
MEMBERS OF THE WESTERN PEOPLES' COUNCIL  -CPO- 


Thursday, June 20, 2013

NISGUA's genocide trial coverage: the complete collection

While we await the next steps of the genocide trial, we are honored to provide an accessible archive of the daily coverage we provided from day 1 of the trial. Please read and share this historic collection.


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Speculation around genocide trial restart; Ríos Montt back under house arrest

Guatemalan civil society reacted to the May 20 annulment of the genocide trial verdict through public actions, marches and vigils overwhelmingly rejecting the decision. On May 24, an impromptu march that some activists reported to be the largest in recent history organized in the name of memory in Guatemala. An estimated 5,000 people filled the streets of the capital to denounce impunity and call for justice. Supporters throughout the world also organized solidarity protests outside Guatemalan embassies to echo the message: Yes, it was Genocide. Sí Hubo Genocidio.


"The truth is told, justice was sentenced. Yes it was genocide."
See more photos from the May 24 march via CPR Urbana

While public opinion on the genocide trial annulment has been expressed in the media and on the streets, the answers to the legal questions necessary to clarify the future of the trial are only slowly being untangled.

Following the decision of the Constitutional Court (CC) to annul trial proceedings after April 19, the Guatemalan Supreme Court faced the challenge of composing a three-judge Appelate Court to carry out the CC decision. Possibly fearing a black mark on their record and the condemnation of the multitudes of national and international bodies calling for an end to impunity in Guatemala, at least 61 judges excused themselves from the case.

Finally, on May 27 the Appellate Court was formed and rapidly carried out the CC decision to annul the trial. Shortly thereafter, Judge Yassmin Barrios excused all three members of her presiding tribunal from future genocide trial proceedings, the inevitable outcome of having already issued a verdict.

On June 4, the Appellate Court assigned the case to the First High Risk Crimes Court "B", made up of Judges Irma Jeannette Valdés Rodas, María Eugenia Castellanos and Sara Griselda Yoc Yoc. The tribunal has presided over other high profile cases for justice including the conviction of Pujujiles gang members for the 2010 murder of Maya artist and community leader, Lisandro Leonardo Guarcax González, and 32 other victims. Judge Irma Jeannette Valdés Rodas also led the tribunal responsible for the conviction of ex-general Pedro Pimental for his involvement in the Dos Erres massacre.

While news reports quickly spread that the trial would not resume until April 2014, an official restart date for the genocide trial has not been determined. The First High Risk Crimes Court "B" has only confirmed their case list extends through March 2014.

Ríos Montt was transferred to the Military Hospital on May 13, after spending only 3 nights in prison. He stayed in the hospital until the early hours of June 12, when he was ordered to return home under house arrest, as he was ordered in January 2012. José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez, who was acquitted of all charges, is back in police custody and remains in the Military Hospital, according to Guatemalan newspaper El Periódico.

Meanwhile, Ríos Montt and Rodríguez Sánchez' lawyers continue to argue that the former generals should be granted amnesty. However, Article 8 of the National Reconciliation Law, passed as part Guatemala's 1996 Peace Accords, invalidates amnesty in the cases of genocide, torture and forced disappearance. Regardless, the defense lawyers continue to claim the law cannot be applied retroactively - that is to say that  it cannot be applied to crimes committed in 1982 and 1983. The lawyers originally made the case for amnesty in December 2012, and were denied by Judge Miguel Ángel Gálvez. Naturally the defense appealed, and now it's up to the Constitutional Court to make a final ruling. Ramón Cadena, expert in international law, declared in his testimony on day 15 of the genocide trial: "Genocide can't be forgiven, it can't be granted amnesty."

Friday, May 31, 2013

Rubén Herrera Released from Prison!


Rubén Herrera and Cecilia Mérida moments after Rubén was liberated.
Yesterday, Rubén Herrera, unjustly imprisoned since March 15 for his resistance to the Cambalam hydro-electric project, was released from custody and cleared of all charges in one of two legal processes against him. The second process (176-2011) dating back to 2009, was provisionally closed at the request of the Public Prosecutor's office. Judge Miguel Gálvez of Guatemala City's High Risk Court “B” agreed with the prosecutor's assessment that the evidence against Herrera was imprecise and contradictory, and granted the prosecution a six month time frame to build a better case or present closing arguments. 

Beginning with Herrera's first hearing in Santa Eulalia, Huehuetenango, the Public Prosecutor's office has maintained that the case lacks evidence linking Herrera to the crimes. Despite these arguments the presiding judge in Santa Eulalia, at the request of co-plaintiffs Ecoener Hidralia Energía/Hidro Santa Cruz S.A, ordered the case forward. 

At the beginning of trial proceedings on Thursday, the Public Prosecutor reiterated its request to provisionally close both cases against Rubén Herrera citing a lack of evidence linking him to the accusations. What followed was an unusual scene, during which the lawyers at the prosecution table argued against each other. Lawyers for co-plaintiff Hidro Santa Cruz denounced the Public Prosecutor's “surprising” request and “passive attitude”, and requested that Judge Gálvez proceed to trial. Joining the Hidro Santa Cruz's legal team was a familiar face from the genocide trial, César Calderón, defense attorney for former director of military intelligence José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez. 

During the three hours that followed, the defense team representing Herrera argued the two separate cases, demonstrating both the political nature of the charges, the questionable behavior of representatives of the judicial system in Santa Eulalia, and the lack of concrete evidence against Herrera. 

In the 2012 case (65-2012), Judge Gálvez dismissed the charges outright. The case was permanently closed citing the fact that none of the testimonies provided by witnesses and victims in the case file even mention Rubén Herrera. In the 2009 case, Gálvez upheld the request from the Public Prosecutor to provisionally close the case stating that the accusations and arrest warrant were based on “two or three flimsy declarations”. Throughout the hearing, Judge Gálvez referenced his belief that social conflict in Barillas is the result of a lack of respect for international law protecting communities' right to consultation. 

In response to the provisional closure of the 2009 case, Cecilia Mérida, Rubén's life partner, stated that it will allow them more time to continue to disprove the allegations against Rubén; and more time to prove that he has been falsely accused by the company in order to undermine popular resistance to the hydro-electric project. Throughout the duration of his imprisonment, Herrera, Mérida and the Departmental Assembly of Huehuetenango (ADH) have continued their struggle in defense of territory in the face of rising repression and criminalization. Rubén declared soon after his release: "In prison I learned that it doesn't matter where you are, you can continue to fight.”

While the 2012 case against Rubén is closed, three of the 11 men unjustly imprisoned for eight months for their peaceful resistance to the Cambalam project continue to be linked to the same the May 1, 2012 incident and continue to await the permanent closure of their case. Likewise, 20 additional individuals still have arrest warrants pending against them related to the same event. 

Dozens of supporters packed the courtroom yesterday in support of Rubén and the struggle for communities' right to self determination. More than 2,800 people from the international community demonstrated their solidarity by signing the petition demanding Rubén's release and the end to persecution of community leaders, which was delivered to Guatemalan authorities last week

Supporters filled the seats and lined the aisles in support of Rubén.
The role of international solidarity continues to be important for the individuals, communities and organizations defending the right to consultation, particularly as criminalization of peaceful protest continues to intensify in Guatemala. In the words of the ADH: “In a very special way, we want to thank the show of solidarity with our cause. We are confident that this solidarity encourages and strengthens us to continue fighting.”


 NISGUA works closely with the Departmental Assembly of Huehuetenango (ADH) in their efforts to promote self-determination and alternative visions of development in the highland department of Huehuetenango. The ADH receives international human rights accompaniment from NISGUA through the ACOGUATE project and participated in NISGUA's 2010 tour.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

NISGUA in NYC with the Association for Justice and Reconciliation: Listen live to our special event



Live transmission of event in NYC with the AJR. Tramission will begin at approximately 7:15pm EST, May 30, and last for one hour.

Transmisión en vivo de la actividad en la ciudad de Nueva York con la AJR. Transmisión de 1 hora, 30 de mayo, empezando a las 7:15pm EST (aproximadamente).

Alternate link: here

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

AJR Declaration to the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues

The Association for Justice and Reconciliation addressed the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York City today. We are honored to provide the exclusive English translation of the declaration. Read the Spanish version here.

 Association for Justice and Reconciliation
Declaration to the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, 12th Session
New York, NY, May 22, 2013

Brothers and sisters of the indigenous peoples of the world and members of the Permanent Forum:

We, as indigenous peoples, stand on the threshold of a new era of shared struggle. In this spirit, we come to ask that the Assembly recommends to the state of Guatemala that justice for our people prevails and that a strong foundation be built to construct new, more just, and harmonious relations for all.

On May 10, Guatemala set an example for the world by being the first country to emit a sentence for genocide against a former head of state in a national court.  We, the plaintiffs and members of the Association for Justice and Reconcilation, have seen this process as an opportunity to recuperate the truth that has been denied to our families and to Guatemalan society in general. It is an opportunity to confront the past and address the root causes of the discrimination we suffer as indigenous peoples in Guatemala today.

However, the sentence has just been annuled by the highest court in the country. This takes place in a context where business elites and groups linked to the military who carried out the extermination rejected the sentence and sought to create terror by encouraging social polarization and calling for society to deny the truth. What happened this week in Guatemala is not coincidence, but part of a political structure that denies us justice. We have spent 12 years preparing evidence and arguments, dealing with all manner of obstacles. The moment we begin to move forward, the legitimacy of judicial processes is questioned and we hear officials threatening lawyers and judges. Despite all of this, our cause does not end here.

Today, more than ever, it is imperative we continue to demand justice and face the past to ensure acts of genocide never again take place in Guatemala and the Guatemalan state respects, protects and promotes the rights of indigenous peoples. As long as this does not happen, the state will continue to deny our rights and facilitate the dispossession of the lands and natural resources that are fundamental to the material and spiritual life of indigenous peoples. Brothers and sisters: we must stop the continuation of genocide in Guatemala.

Not in Guatemala nor any other place in the world: Genocide, never again


Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Genocide trial sentence overturned; CALDH press conference called sentence, "An opportunity for peace"

The Guatemalan Constitutional Court emitted a resolution late Monday evening to annul the genocide trial verdict and revert proceedings back to April 19. Judge Barrios of the First Court for High Risk Crimes "A" has 24 hours after being notified of the resolution this morning to comply with the Constitutional Court. The full impact of this decision is yet to be determined.

Yesterday morning, the Center for Human Rights Legal Action called a press conference to publicly share the genocide trial sentence. A cross-section of Guatemalan society gathered to celebrate the sentence as a fundamental step in achieving peace.

See our full translation of yesterday's press release below.

"Yes, it was genocide. Guatemala walks firmly toward peace"

The Genocide Sentence
An Opportunity for Peace

Today Guatemala has a new opportunity for peace, an opportunity that is constructed on the foundation of memory and truth of the Maya Ixil people and on the foundation of justice and strengthening the rule of law.

The First Court for High Risk Crimes "A" has condemned General José Efraín Ríos Montt for genocide and crimes against humanity. The sentence against Ríos Montt verifies that the crime of genocide was committed in Guatemala and situates his participation in grave human rights violations committed during the internal armed conflict.

With this historic sentence, the Court has given evidentiary value to the brave testimonies of the Ixil men and women, who after 31 years have been heard and had their suffering recognized by the Guatemalan justice system.

Through these testimonies, as well as scientific and documentary evidence, the court proved the evidentiary value and demonstrated the intention to destroy the Ixil who were identified as the internal enemy, "the violent actions committed against the Ixil weren't spontaneous but rather the concretization of previously elaborated plans that formed part of state policy aimed at eliminating a specific ethnic group… Having proved to society that they were civilians, dedicated to agriculture."

The sexual violence was a systematic attack against women, which contributed to the destruction of the social fabric and whose objective was to eliminate the Maya Ixil ethnic group. Women suffered intentional violence and humiliation, not only as a means to inflict mental and physical harm, but also as a means to impede the physical and cultural reproduction of the group.

The prevailing racism in Guatemala was "the machinery of extermination," and was the foundation for genocide. "Racism expresses itself in the conduct, imagery, and racist practices and ideologies that occupy distinct spaces and reach society as a whole… Racism profoundly affects, provokes, collaborates and contributes to the genocide that occurred in Guatemala." Historically, a stereotype of an "indian" has been constructed as an inferior, as "a bad person, thief, ugly and who smells bad." The elites have historically presented the idea of "their elimination" or the necessity to "improve the race". This was what was put into practice in the Genocide.

Through this trial, networks of impunity have been uncovered which are still deeply entrenched in the justice system. There are also powerful groups that continue to deny the possibility of living in a full democracy with true rule of law. We've witnessed illegal resolutions; malicious litigation and the attempt to discredit actors within the justice system through various means. It is important to reiterate, that during this trial, it is the public oral debate which determines if the means of evidence reached their evidentiary value. This is what gives force and credibility to the rule of law and not the hundreds of appeals submitted to delay and obstruct justice.

The survivors of the genocide have taught Guatemalan society a lesson; It is possible to move forward and resolve controversies through established democratic means. Those who invoke hate and violence or those who are afraid of democratic processes are those who have never believed in peace or democracy.

We call upon Guatemalan society to not be convinced by these violent, racist and discriminatory messages of those sectors that threaten actions, and even violence if the ruling is not revoked.

We share the idea that this sentence is part of a watershed moment in the history of Guatemala, as it opens up the opportunity for us to once again ask ourselves as a society what it is we desire for the present and future of our country. Guatemala has a new opportunity, shaped by the long path toward justice that the victims undertook decades ago. This path symbolizes the claims and recognition of true reality, not only for the Maya people but also for the thousands of the victims arbitrarily executed, disappeared and massacred in our territory.


Association for Justice and Reconciliation, AJR; Ancestral Maya Authorities of the Ixil Region, Victims Movement Association for the Integral Development of Northern Quiche; Departmental Youth Association of Sololá Kaji Batz; Association for Development and Recovery of Alta Verapaz, AJODER; Caja Lúdica Association; The Association of Family Members of the Detained and Disappeared of Guatemala, FAMDEGUA; Community Studies and Psychosocial Action Team, ECAP; Center for Human Rights Legal Action, CALDH; Collective We the Women; National Coordination of Guatemalan Widows, CONAVIGUA; Coordination of Ixil Women "Baxil B'atz"; Committee of Victims of the Ixcán; Coordination of Youth for Guatemla, CJG;  Coordination Genocide Never Again; Coordination and National Convergence Waqib Kej; the Guatemalan Religious Confederation, CONFREGUA; Relatives in Search of Truth and Justice for the Victims of the Military Diary; Rigoberta Menchú Foundation; HIJOS Guatemala; Institute for Comparative Studies in Criminal Science, ICCPG; Institute for Sustainable Development Teaching, IEPADES; Julio Solorzano Fopa; Women Transforming the World, MTM; Movement of Maya Youth, MOJOMAYAS; Archbishop's Office on Human Rights, ODHAG;  Pastoral Youth Ministry of San Marcos, Network of Ixil Youth "Chemol Txumb'al"; Security in Democracy, SEDEM; Women's Sector; Civil Society for Youth Development/ Foundation for the Youth; National Unity of Guatemalan Women, UNAMG

Read the complete sentence here:
www.caldh.org
www.paraqueseconozca.blogspot.com

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Sentence of Dignified Reparations for the Ixil People


On May 10, Efraín Ríos Montt was found guilty of the crimes of genocide and crimes against humanity, in an historic ruling that sentenced him to 80 years in prison. As ordered during the verdict, yesterday Judge Yassmín Barrios heard the reparations requests of the Association for Justice and Reconciliation and the Center for Human Rights Legal Action. Below we have translated a summary of the petitions granted to the plaintiffs.

The representatives of the survivors put forth an extensive list of petitions and made special mention of the women who suffered sexual and gender violence. In a trial filled with moving and powerful moments, the day in which women bravely spoke to an open courtroom stands out for many. Read more about their courage here

In a notable link between the crimes of the past and violence occurring in Guatemala today, the plaintiffs asked the government be ordered to respect Convention 169, the International Labor Organization convention stating indigenous peoples have the right to free, prior and informed consent on any projects taking place in their territories.
This and other petitions were not granted because the crimes and subsequent verdict relate to an individual –Ríos Montt- and not the state. Therefore, Judge Barrios highlighted, while certain mechanisms of the state will be used to carry out reparations, these are not state reparations.

Another denied request was the restitution of land taken from displaced Ixil victims, the only economic petition made by the plaintiffs. CALDH lawyer noted, 
Defense lawyers and social media hate speech have repeatedly accused the victims of being involved in this case for the purposes of financial remuneration.

Below we share the “dignified reparations” granted to the Ixil people, as mandated under the Guatemalan penal code.


Sentence of Dignified Reparations for the Ixil People

Today, May 13, three days after having issued the historic sentence condemning Ríos Montt, the High Risk Sentencing Tribunal A held a hearing to listen to petitions for reparations. The petitions were for dignified reparations for the victims of genocide and crimes against humanity for the Ixil people. The judges ruled the following:
  1. That the Executive Branch, through the Ministry of Culture, make a request to the Congress of the Republic that a law declare Mach 23 as the National Day Against Genocide. In addition, the Executive Branch must develop a program to disseminate the verdict, as well as respect for cultural diversity.
  2. The President, Minister of Defense, Presidential Secretary for Women’s Issues and others, must publicly apologize to the victims, in particular to the women who were victims of sexual violence. The apologies will be written on a parchment to be submitted to each of the municipal mayors in the Ixil region.
  3. Monuments honoring and remembering the victims of genocide will be erected in Santa María Nebaj, San Gaspar Chajul and San Juan Cotzal, in particular for the women victims of sexual and gender violence and the children who were victims of the genocide.
  4. Respect and recognition of cultural diversity, training on human rights and international human rights are to be incorporated into the training programs  of all prevention and security [institutions], such as military and police. 
  5. Create schools and study center in all three municipalities of the Ixil region. 
  6. The Attorney General’s office, in the form of a mural, will reaffirm their commitment to creating a system of justice that is respectful of cultural diversity.
  7. The Ministry of Education will create a moving museum that promotes respect for all peoples and peaceful coexistence. 
  8. Create a cultural center for the promotion of Maya Ixil culture. 
  9. The study of the Ixil genocide will be incorporated into education curriculum. 
  10. The National Reparations Plan will incorporate in their programs the category of genocide and crimes against humanity, so that victims may access [financial] reparations.
  11. It is ordered that the plaintiff’s institutions will follow-up on the content and compliance of the [reparations] sentence.
 Association for Justice and Reconciliation – AJR
Center for Human Rights Legal Action – CALDH

Friday, May 10, 2013

Ríos Montt: Guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity

MiMundo.org

Today in Guatemala, Judge Yazmin Barrios found former dictator Efraín Ríos Montt guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity. The court ratified all the elements of genocide described by witness and expert testimony, concluding that Ríos Montt had both command authority and "full knowledge of what was happening and did nothing to stop it."  Ríos Montt was sentenced of 80 years in prison and is now in police custody. Former intelligence director Rodriguez Sánchez was acquitted of all charges.

The historic sentence was greeted by cries of "Justice!", the singing of hymns, and emotional displays of appreciation by Ixil witnesses and other members of the public. "After so much struggle, we've finally achieved our goal," said a member of the Association for Justice and Reconciliation.

Although the court's ruling is sure to be subjected to ongoing challenges, now is not the moment for doubt. Now is a moment to fill our hearts in celebration of the years of dedication and toil that have led to this victory. It is a time for solemn remembrance of the many who have not lived to see justice, but in whose names this struggle has been carried forward.

Today proves that the bonds of solidarity and memory can triumph over violence and forgetting, that the humblest commitment to truth and justice can in time tear down the wall of impunity.

From the bottom of our hearts we thank you for your constant vigilance and accompaniment of the survivors, witnesses, and human rights defenders that have made today possible. We ask you to deepen your support in the coming weeks, months, and years as struggles for justice and self-determination in Guatemala continue in the face of threats both new and old.

Above all, we ask that you join us in celebration, in raising our voices worldwide in a chorus of justice.

In enduring and grateful solidarity,

The entire NISGUA team, now and over three decades in solidarity with the people of Guatemala.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Genocide trial still suspended: Supporters remain hopeful, public dialogue continues

NISGUA continues ongoing coverage of the trial in Guatemala of Efraín Rios Montt and Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez for genocide and crimes against humanity.


The air in Guatemala is tensely optimistic as various injunctions and appeals related to the fate of the genocide trial are one by one being resolved in Guatemalan courts. The genocide trial has been suspended for just over one week and both Guatemalan civil society and the international community have reacted with widespread popular response. Energy remains high and hope holds strong that the trial quickly resumes.

Survivors gather in vigil on Thursday, April 18.
Following Judge Flores' shocking resolution on April 18 ordering an annulment of the genocide trial proceedings, survivors gathered together in vigil to call for the trial to continue and also to name the impunity at work behind Flores' decision. In the aftermath of the decision, the CICIG and the Attorney General's office qualified the Flores decision as illegal and the next day Judge Barrios followed suit, stating her court would not comply with illegal resolutions. Barrios was, however, forced to temporarily suspend the trial while the Constitutional Court resolves Flores' resolution and other outstanding issues.

Surrounding these recent events, the hashtag phrase #SiHuboGenocidio (#YesItWasGenocide) has swept the top Guatemalan Twitter trends several days in a row. Guatemalans shared family stories, facts and figures, personal declarations and political statements, in an incredible show of public discourse on the topic of genocide in Guatemala. The international community swiftly followed the example and the topic has become a popular forum for dialogue --see the trend in-action for yourself!



A physical display of tweets pulled from the #SíHuboGenocidio Twitter
trend meets the crowd outside Judge Barrios' courtroom on Friday, April 19.

Survivors and supporters marched to the CC later Friday morning to demand
a quick resolution by the Court. Photo: James Rodríguez.
See more of his beautiful photo-essay of the demonstration here.

While popular opinion on the Guatemalan genocide trial is not new, the Twitter phenomenon highlights a new level of conversation being seen in the public arena. An outpouring of support for the trial proceedings has taken place in the form of statements from international experts, organizations and diplomats, sign-on letters from Guatemalan and international organizations and civil society petitions and pledges, all urging the Guatemalan justice system to allow the trial to conclude.

An off-season rain poured on Guatemala City late Friday night and into the next morning but it did not stop genocide trial supporters from gathering in a press conference on Saturday, April 20 to continue to pressure the Constitutional Court. Rigoberta Menchú Tum described the scene, "We are gathered here together today, a day in which even the sky has cried with us." Others interpreted the unusual rain as a sign of cleansing, especially in the context of impunity and corrupt decision-making. Association for Justice and Reconciliation President Benjamin Jerónimo told the crowd, "We continue our search for justice, a justice that is fair. We don't want a dark or dirty justice."

Since it first became apparent the trial proceedings were at risk, an atmosphere of uncertainty has loomed over the outcome of the genocide case trial. Will the trial continue or not? Will the trial restart from where it left off or will it go back to an earlier date? In spite of these questions, CALDH lawyers assured the public, "This is a setback for justice, for the victims, but this is not a defeat."

On Tuesday, April 21, misinformation won the day when erroneous reports flooded Guatemalan and international press stating the trial had been officially annulled. Tuesday morning, approximately 50 buses brought Ixiles from Quiché to Guatemala City for a protest in denial of genocide. A number of Ixil members of the group reported being manipulated to hold signs and banners in protest of the genocide trial. They had been promised fertilizer and only upon arriving in the capital city were informed of the real motive behind the caravan. Ricardo Méndez Ruíz, director of Guatemala's Foundation Against Terrorism, was visibly present amongst the demonstrators and later gave troubling declarations about imminent violence.

Throughout last week, Guatemalan press and genocide trial supporters rushed to the Constitutional Court at any mention of a resolution announcement. On Thursday, April 23, the prosecution team received a resolution from the CC and met an anxious crowd outside only to explain that Judge Flores still had to rule on evidence that was previously rejected by Judge Gálvez. On Friday, she did just that and accepted said evidence. While the genocide trial is rumored to restart at any moment, there are a multitude of legal motions still in play that need sorting out.

A human wall of women holding "Sí hubo genocidio" signs set
the scene for a demonstration in front of the CC on April 26.
Genocide trial supporters join ceremonies honoring
Bishop Gerardi on the 15th anniversary of his murder.

On Friday, April 26, genocide trial supporters banded together once again in front of the Constitutional Court. In a show of cross-movement solidarity, supporters marched to Guatemala's Metropolitan Cathedral to join the commemoration of Bishop Juan Gerardi's 1998 assassination. Bishop Gerardi was murdered two days after publicly presenting the REMHI truth commission report revealing that state security forces were responsible for 93% of killings and massacres during the internal armed conflict. Bishop Gerardi is honored as a defender of truth and justice.

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (http://www.ciw-online.org/)
stand in solidarity with justice for Guatemala.
Outside of Guatemala, visual support for the trial keeps flowing in as our ongoing photo campaign in support of justice for genocide continues to grow. In another beautiful demonstration of cross-movement solidarity, the Florida-based worker and immigrant rights organization, the Coalition of Immokalee workers, demonstrate their support for justice for genocide. See the slideshow of the full photo album and take your own photo of support today!

NISGUA has provided human rights accompaniment to the witness' organization, the Association for Justice and Reconciliation, and their lawyers, the Center for Human Rights Legal Action since 2000. We will continue to bear witness to the truth and bravery of these survivors throughout this historic trial. To bear witness with us, stay tuned to our ongoing live Twitter coverage @NISGUA_Guate, like our Facebook page and sign up for email updates

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Constitutional Court issues rulings, ongoing questions about how they impact genocide trial proceedings

NISGUA continues ongoing coverage of the trial in Guatemala of Efraín Rios Montt and Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez for genocide and crimes against humanity.


Survivors, lawyers and human rights groups remain hopeful that the Constitutional Court will clear the legal obstacles impeding the conclusion of the genocide case, but lawyers interpreted today's Constitutional Court rulings as a disappointing setback.

The afternoon began with a flurry of unofficial reports in the Guatemalan media that the genocide case trial had been annulled. Within 6 resolutions it appeared the Constitutional Court resolved, one including a ruling to reinstate defense lawyer Francisco García Gudiel, who was expelled from the courtroom on the first day of the trial. At the time of this writing, lawyers for the victims and survivors interpret this ruling to mean that the genocide hearing may return to the first day of the trial, March 19, 2013, when Gudiel was removed. Read more about Gudiel's maneuver in our Day 1 summary.  Returning to this point in the process would essentially require a repetition of the trial proceedings thus far, including over 100 witness testimonies and over 60 expert witnesses.

The Third Appellate Court had previously ruled twice against Gudiel’s appeal to be reinstated as Ríos Montt’s lawyer. On Thursday, April 18, the same day that Judge Patricia Carol Flores ruled to annul the trial, the Appellate Court reversed its own rulings, granting a provisional injunction in favor of Gudiel. This is the decision the Constitutional Court upheld today.

Less clear are the impacts of the Constitutional Court’s response to appeals filed after Judge Flores’ decision to annul the trial hearings and return them to the pre-trial phase. The Court stated today that Flores lacked the necessary paperwork to make her April 18 decision on the submission of defense evidence. The Constitutional Court put the ball back in Flores’ court, highlighting this procedural point. Lawyers for the prosecution continue to analyze the impacts of this decision by the Constitutional Court. It is unclear if this means that Judge Flores will have to re-issue a ruling on defense evidence. A repeat of her ruling to turn the clock back to November 23, 2011 would mean Ríos Montt is no longer formally charged with genocide and crimes against humanity.

Other rulings issued by the Constitutional Court remain under review by lawyers, with other resolutions still to come.

Lawyers representing the victims and survivors of the case reiterated their commitment to seeking justice and breaking down the walls of impunity. CALDH Director Francisco Soto Forno stated, “The struggle against impunity must continue. The witnesses spoke: the country, the world and Ríos Montt heard them. They can’t deny the truth…This would be a setback for the court, for the victims, but we don’t see this as a defeat. We value what we have done and what we have accomplished.”

The Constitutional Court has been the site of daily demonstrations by the survivors and their supporters since the suspension of the trial last Thursday, urging a swift and just resolution to impediments to the continuation of the genocide case trial. Today, an estimated 30 vehicles transported demonstrators from the Ixil region to counter-protest. Luis Méndez Ruíz, of the Foundation Against Terrorism, was visibly directing the protestors. On Guatemalan television this evening, he warned that, “violence is on the verge of breaking out”. When asked by the Guatevision reporter to clarify what kind of violence, Ruíz stated, “the murder of leaders from social movements”.

Stay tuned for further development tomorrow, including statements by the Association for Justice and Reconciliation.


NISGUA has provided human rights accompaniment to the witness' organization, the Association for Justice and Reconciliation, and their lawyers, the Center for Human Rights Legal Action since 2000. We will continue to bear witness to the truth and bravery of these survivors throughout this historic trial. To bear witness with us, stay tuned to our ongoing live Twitter coverage @NISGUA_Guate, like our Facebook page and sign up for email updates

Monday, April 15, 2013

Genocide on Trial, Days 15 & 16: Experts testify, "The Ixil social fabric was destroyed in the attack against their culture"

NISGUA continues live coverage of the trial in Guatemala of Efraín Rios Montt and Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez for genocide and crimes against humanity.


Read our previous summaries: Day 1Day 2Day 3Day 4/5Day 6Day 7, Day 8, Day 9, Day 10, Day 12, Days 13/14 and full archive of ongoing live Twitter coverage.

The proceedings on April 11, day 15 of the genocide trial, started with a formal protest by the prosecution, with Edgar Pérez filing a formal protest that entrance to the courtroom and public bathroom access has been limited to the indigenous survivors coming to witness the historic trial against Efraín Ríos Montt and José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez.
The defense also started their day off with a motion, requesting the trial be suspended for two days so that José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez could visit a doctor only available weekdays. Opting not to suspend the trial, Judge Jazmin Barrios ruled he could be absent from the trial on April 12 until 2PM.

The day continued with extensive testimony by expert witnesses, most notably that of political analyst Marco Tulio Álvarez Bobadilla, former director of the Peace Archives, and Ramón Cadena, President of the International Commission of Jurists.

Álvarez submitted a report on the displacement of children in the Ixil region analyzing the military plans Victoria '82, Firmeza '83 and Operation Sofia. He highlighted the broader guidelines established by the military, which translated into operations and actions in the field.
The displacement of children was not an isolated act but a policy followed by the military institution...children were included as an internal enemy [of the state]. ... Children are identified in the army manual, which includes enemies that were not participants in the subversion but supporters. This broadened the definition of internal enemy.
In a particularly disturbing example of children as targets, Álvarez read a military report from the field included in Plan Sofia. A woman was hiding and upon discovery soldiers killed her, "eliminating her and two chocolates". Chocolates, said Álvarez, were the military's designation for children.

Álvarez also named the military strategy targeting children as an attack against the Maya Ixil culture, an element of genocide.
In many cases the transfer of children meant forced disappearance, with family members unable to locate them afterwards. ...These children were denied their identity…the social fabric was destroyed in the attack against the Ixil culture.
Lawyer Ramón Cadena followed Álvarez to testify on human rights violations of the Ixil civil population. Cadena, President of the International Commission of Jurists and an expert in international law, explained Guatemala's responsibility to comply with international law.
The Guatemalan state has certain obligations and commitments to fulfill under international human rights laws. The civil population is protected in armed conflicts by international law and customs of the international community. The Martens Clause, (ratified by the Hague in 1899), says that civil persons and combatants are protected by principles of human right, the principles of humanity and the demands of public conscience. Guatemala has ratified international human rights conventions - Geneva, Hague & Genocide conventions which all have relevance to the violations committed against Ixil people.
Using key passages from military plans, Cadena illustrated not only the military's intention to dismiss international standards of protecting the civil population but also their blatant violation of civilians' rights.
The military Plan Victoria 82 says, “The great masses of indigenous in the highlands of the nation have found an echo in the proclamations of subversives.” Plan Operation Sofia names 100% of the Ixil population as supporters of the subversives.The military doctrine allows justification of cruel attacks against the civil population and genocide against the Ixil population. Plan Firmeza 83 establish on pages 5-8, “The principal objective is to reach their physical and psychological control of the population.”

By 1981, an Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (CIDH) document concluded, "a situation has been created in Guatemala in which a lack of respect for human life and the laws that protect them predominate… The application of physical and psychological constraints of cruel and inhuman treatment has transgressed the limits of being a method of obtaining information or inflicting punishment, and has become a system of killing citizens." 
The military tried to achieve physical and psychological control of the population by using a number of tactics including massive attacks, torture, persecution, rape and forced displacement.
Some 40,000 refugees were displaced to Mexico and 200,000 were internally displaced. We have not yet measured the psychological impacts for the refugees. International human rights law prohibits forced displacement as a method of war and is also a method of genocide. In my opinion, forced displacement of the civil population should be considered an element of genocide.
Genocide is a crime defined by the intention to destroy a group either completely of partially.  In Guatemala, Cadena concludes, "The state designed a system to kill its citizens and it was focused on the Ixil region."

Day 16 included expert testimonies on a range of topics and featured experts: psychologist Nieves Gomez, historian Ángel Valdez Estrada, statistician Patrick Ball and specialist in woman's law Paloma Soria. Nieves Gomez, a psychologist with Guatemala's Community Studies and Psychosocial Support Team (ECAP), testified on the lasting effects of trauma suffered during conflict describing what is known about the psychological impacts of the victims which Cadena referred to.
Lasting effects include post-traumatic stress, living in state of anxiety, strong disorientation and disassociation and extreme continual stress, a lack of trust toward the state. In the case of rape, the lack of recognition of what happened, stigmatizes the victim and further polarizes society.
Fundamentally, "human beings have a desire to belong to a group - they need to feel pertinence and belonging. Humans need mutual support in order to grow.... Elements that identify a group can represent belonging for oneself- In the case of the Maya Ixil - dress, daily rituals, spirituality, daily use of home." One of the most devastating effects of the conflict is the difficulty to preserve culture rituals creating a rupture in the very group that victims had once belonged to, creating a gap from one generation to another. In the conflict, "no one trusted anyone. Often silence was the most sure way to save one's life." Moreover, "Massacres weren't punctual events, they took hours creating prolonged anxiety of death."

However, on a positive note, the example of tribunals in Rwanda has demonstrated that the damage from conflict doesn't have to be permanent or irreversible. "Survivors can overcome trauma." Gomez affirmed that there is much work to be done in the recuperation of the Maya Ixil social fabric but she emphasized, "it's important for the Maya Ixil community itself to decide how they want to achieve justice."  Finally, she concluded with this poignant quote from Mexican poet Javier Sicilia, 
A victim is someone who has returned from death, to a world he no longer entirely belongs to. Being in this world I can understand joy, but I am not entirely here. I am carrying a bit of death inside of me. This is difficult to share with others, but nor am I sure that others are prepared to hear the scale of what I am carrying.

Ángel Valdez Estrada
, historian and professor at the San Carlos University in Guatemala, testified on the systematic attack against the Maya Ixil people. He explained, the attack "required planning and intention…The military's tactic was to use short but repeated attacks because that's what helped them maintain constant fear and create distrust." Valdez qualified Ramón Cadena's observation of the military's intent to control the Ixil, as explained in military plans.

Why would the military target the Ixil?
The Ixil culture is in direct conflict with the nation's historical project of one singular culture. Cultural indicators like the dress, language & cosmovision, are relevant because they allowed the military to identify the Maya Ixil. If we all speak one language, then we have to share the same culture. Through the colors, the weaving, the Ixil's dress identifies them as an object of war… Culture is an element of resistance in conflicts. It represents courage to not break or be divided. Some indigenous people don't speak Spanish, they don't want to and it's a defense mechanism.

Was there intent to destroy the Ixil ethnicity?
Yes.

Patrick Ball
, a statistician and US citizen, gave quantitative support to earlier expert's conclusions. Ball, in his technical analysis, concludes the Guatemalan military killed indigenous people 8 times more than non-indigenous. During the period of April 1982 - July 1983, a narrowed range of the full dates implicated in the trial (March 23, 1982 to August 8, 1983), Ball found that of all the deaths committed by the military, they killed 5.5% of the indigenous population while they killed  only .7% of the non-indigenous population.

Ball's objective as a statistician is to identify bias in testimony. While there is a small margin of error, he claims "statistics knows no bias." Ball has spent more than twenty years conducting quantitative analysis for truth commissions, the UN, and international criminal tribunals. Read his full report, "State Violence in Guatemala 1960-1996" here.

Paloma Sorias, a specialist in international law and gender, rounded out day 16's riveting expert testimonies. Sorias currently works at Women's Link Worldwide in Madrid. Sorias's expert testimony focused on the specificity of women victims in the conflict. Warning: this section might be triggering due to descriptions of extreme sexual violence.
Maya women were systematically raped. Practice of discrimination toward women is part of destroying the social fabric. While men can also be subject to sexual violence, certain aspects like forced pregnancy and forced abortion exclusively affect women. Of all victims of sexual violence, 99% of cases included women victims of which 35% were girls under the age of 18 and 3% elderly.

I had access to Plan Victoria 82, in it there were plans for sexual violence. A passage from Annex F determines that soldiers on military bases were guaranteed have free days in which they could "eat, clean, wash clothes, and have access to the opposite sex". In other words it alluded to sexual slavery.
The definition of sexual violence however doesn't include just rape. Soria explains, "threats of rape or the threat of having to witness family member be raped can be considered an act of sexual violence. I also consider denying access to sexual and reproductive health also as act of sexual violence."

All in all, "sexual violence is way to impose power over another." Soria concluded, "I think that all the acts to disrupt the reproduction of a group through sexual violence, provide proof of the intention to destroy the Maya Ixil people. There was intention to commit genocide."


NISGUA has provided human rights accompaniment to the witness' organization, the Association for Justice and Reconciliation, and their lawyers, the Center for Human Rights Legal Action since 2000. We will continue to bear witness to the truth and bravery of these survivors throughout this historic trial. To bear witness with us, stay tuned to our ongoing live Twitter coverage @NISGUA_Guate, like our Facebook page and sign up for email updates.

You can take action to support these brave witnesses! Sign our pledge to commit to following the genocide trial and take a photo for justice with your friends.