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  Human Rights in Guatemala  
     
 

July 22, 2002

The Honorable Secretary of State Colin Powell
The State Department
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520

Dear Secretary Powell,

We write to you out of growing concern regarding the deteriorating situation in Guatemala. Escalating threats and attacks against human rights workers and others engaged in calling for justice for past human rights abuses undermine the promises of the historic1996 peace accords. The United States must demonstrate unequivocal support for human rights defenders and increase pressure for government compliance with the important military, justice and social reforms included in the peace accords.

A series of vicious death threats and attacks against many of Guatemala's most prominent human rights defenders as well as clergy, judges and prosecutors, witnesses in key cases, trade union activists, indigenous and peasant leaders, reporters, and forensic anthropologists involved in investigations of massacres, has revealed the continued existence of clandestine groups. Former military, either retired or dismissed from service, are believed to participate in these clandestine groups, and are determined to prevent justice for past abuses and reform of current military structures. Until these groups are investigated and dismantled, freedom of expression is sharply limited and judicial reform is an impossible dream.

Moreover, many of the reforms agreed to in the peace accords have not been implemented. In its January 2002 report to the Consultative Group of donor nations, the UN Mission to Guatemala, MINUGUA, noted that after a period of relative improvement in human rights until mid-1998, the human rights reforms covered in the accords have stagnated or deteriorated. According to MINUGUA's May 2002 report, the military reforms specified in the accords are stalled. The Guatemalan government has repeatedly postponed the dismantling of the Presidential General Staff (EMP), an agency implicated in multiple serious human rights violations. After a period of declining military budgets, in agreement with the peace accords' directive to shift emphasis from military to social spending, military budgets since 2000 have risen sharply. MINUGUA asserts that the Guatemalan military remains, in its training methods and deployment structure, an army focused on counterinsurgency rather than external defense, directly counter to the accords' mandate. Finally, there has been inadequate opportunity for civil society input into the draft of military doctrine that was recently presented to President Portillo.

In this context, we were surprised to learn that the United States has resumed regular military training of Guatemalan soldiers despite the existence of a congressional ban on International Military Education and Training (IMET) and Foreign Military Financing (FMF). Ninety-five Guatemalan soldiers received light infantry training in FY2001. While this training is ostensibly for counternarcotics, it appears to skirt the intention of the congressional ban. The ban, established in 1990, was modified by Congress after the peace accords were signed to permit training in expanded-IMET courses such as civil-military relations, military justice and democratic sustainment. However, Congress has expressed its intention clearly that regular military training should not be offered until the military provisions of the peace accord were fulfilled. For example, the House appropriations committee report for the foreign operations appropriations bill for FY2002 notes, "The Committee retains the existing ban on Foreign Military Financing and International Military Education and Training (IMET), with the exception of E-IMET, until adequate reforms of the Guatemalan Armed Forces are carried out as established in the peace accords. The Committee is concerned about the postponement of the disbanding of the Presidential General Staff (EMP) and its replacement by civilian institutions." (p. 70)

The critical situation in Guatemala is further complicated by serious allegations of corruption leveled against the President, Vice President, members of the cabinet and members of the legislature. The international community must have confidence that the large quantities of international aid committed to Guatemala does not contribute to further injustice. Even more importantly, Guatemalans must have confidence that their elected government serves national, not personal, interests.

We ask you to take several steps to signal an unequivocal US position concerning the deterioration of human rights in Guatemala. First, instruct the new US ambassador to Guatemala to offer strong, visible support to human rights and other civil society leaders, as well as to judges, prosecutors and witnesses, and to make a renewed effort to pressure for completion of the military, judicial and social reforms prescribed in the peace accords as well as the recommendations of the Historical Clarification Commission's report. Second, push for a prompt, effective investigation of the clandestine groups, which may require the active participation of the international community. Third, immediately suspend all regular military training, including using Defense Department counternarcotics funding but excluding expanded-IMET courses, until Guatemala fully complies with the military reforms in the peace accords. Fourth, send a high-level emissary to Guatemala to deliver an unambiguous message of support for peace accord compliance and for Guatemala's beleaguered human rights community.

The US government has repeatedly called upon the Guatemalan government to implement the 1996 peace accords. This was reaffirmed at the last Consultative Group meeting for Guatemala, in which many international donors, including the United States, sent a strong message linking international assistance to good governance, human rights, and the implementation of the peace accords. Now is the moment to take further action to ensure that the Guatemalan government understands this message.

 

Sincerely,

William F. Schulz
Executive Director
Amnesty International USA

Bill Spencer
Executive Director
Washington Office on Latin America
The Reverend Bob Edgar
General Secretary
National Council of Churches in the USA

Michael McClintock
Director of Programs
Lawyers Committee for Human Rights
Kimberly Stanton, Ph.D.
Program Director for Latin America
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights

The Reverend John L. McCullough
Executive Director
Church World Service

Jaydee Hanson
Assistant General Secretary for Public Witness and Advocacy
The General Board of Church and Society of the United Methodist Church

The Rev. Elenora Giddings Ivory
Director, Washington Office
Presbyterian Church (USA)

Stephen Coats
Executive Director
US Labor Education in the Americas Project

Tiffany L. Heath
Legislative Director
Church Women United

David A. Moczulski, OFM
Executive Director
Franciscan Washington Office on Latin America

Adam Isacson
Senior Associate
Center for International Policy

Susan Berger
Coordinator
Guatemala Scholars Network

Marie Dennis
Director
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

Kathy Thornton, RSM
National Coordinator
NETWORK, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby

Steven Bennett
Executive Director
Witness for Peace

Margaret Swedish
Executive Director
Religious Task Force on Central America and Mexico

Sarah Aird
Executive Director
Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala

Alice Zachmann
Executive Director
Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA

J. E. McNeil
Executive Director
Center on Conscience and War (NISBCO)

Linda Mashburn
Executive Director
Sister Parish

Wes Callender
Director
Voices on the Border

To respond to this letter, please reply to: Lisa Haugaard, Director, Latin America Working Group, 110 Maryland Avenue NE, Box 15, 20002; phone: 202-546-7010; fax: 202-543-7647.

cc: Otto J. Reich, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs
Ambassador Lino Gutierrez, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs
Dan Fisk, Deputy Assistant Secretary
John Keane, Director, Office of Central American Affairs
Brian Wilson, Guatemala Desk Officer
Stephen McFarland, Charge d'Affairs ad interim, US Embassy to Guatemala
Ambassador John Maisto, Senior Director for Inter-American Affairs, National Security Council
Lorne Craner, Director, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Adolfo Franco, Assistant Administrator, Latin American and Caribbean Bureau, Agency for International Development
Peter Kranstover, Office of Central American Affairs

Catherine Gordon
Associate for International Issues
Washington Office, Presbyterian Church (USA)
110 Maryland Ave. Suite 104
Washington, DC 20002
www.pcusa.org/washington
Phone: 202-543-1126
Fax: 202-543-7755

 
     
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