Showing posts with label Guatemala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guatemala. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Gender Savagery in Guatemala

Nightmarish crimes against women have been occurring with horrifying frequency in Guatemala. In the last seven years, over 3,200 Guatemalan women have been abducted and murdered, with many of them raped, tortured, and mutilated in the doing. The number of victims has shown a striking increase in the last few years with some six hundred murdered in 2006 alone.

The victims often are from low-income families deracinated from their rural homesteads during the civil war and forced to crowd into Guatemala City and other urban areas in search of work. We might recall Guatemala’s horrid history of violence. From 1962 to 1996, a popular insurgency was defeated by that deranged murder machine known as the Guatemalan Army, trained, advised, financed, and equipped by the United States. A United Nations-sponsored Truth Commission in 1999 characterized much of the counterinsurgency as a genocide against the Mayan people, a holocaust that left 626 villages destroyed, approximately 200,000 people dead or disappeared, including many labor union leaders, student leaders, journalists, and clergy. Hundreds of thousands more were either displaced internally or forced to flee the country.

Those years of untrammeled massacres provide some context for the current wave of femicide sweeping the country. The 1996 peace accords officially declared an end to the butchery but the war against women continues albeit in more piecemeal fashion. Guatemalan women are enduring the whiplash of decades of dehumanizing violence---boosted by the same kind of deep-seated sexism and gender-specific crimes (rape) that are perpetrated in many societies around the world.

Independent investigators charge that the vast majority of present-day atrocities against women have been committed by current or former members of the Guatemalan intelligence services. Having escaped prosecution for human rights violations during the internal war, these trained killers are now members of private security forces or police and paramilitary units that have been strongly implicated in the crimes of the last seven years.

Read More At Global Research

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

A Search For Asylum And Peace Of Mind

Eduardo's mind is a puzzle: Since he fled a civil war in his native Guatemala more than a decade ago, he has been trying to piece it back together.

Although the war ended with a peace treaty in 1996, the battle still rages inside him. He has nightmares from a childhood witnessing government soldiers torturing and killing relatives and others in his Mayan tribe.

"I am always nervous. I do not have many friends, and I never open the door when I am alone. I think they are coming for me," said Eduardo, who is 27 and does not want his full name used because he is awaiting a response on his asylum claim.

Read More At Boston.com