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Catherina

(35,568 posts)
Wed Jun 6, 2012, 12:48 AM Jun 2012

Guatemala: Pérez Molina downsizes Peace Archives


Guatemala: Pérez Molina downsizes Peace Archives

*3. Guatemala: Pérez Molina Downsizes Peace Archives

During the last week of May the government of Guatemalan president Otto Pérez Molina began a process that human rights defenders charge will virtually close down the Peace Archives, the agency in charge of preserving and investigating military and police records from the country’s bloody 1960-1996 civil war. Newly appointed Peace Secretary Antonio Arenales Forno announced that the agency was unnecessary. Its function, he said, is “to computerize and analyze military archives to establish human rights violations, but this is the responsibility of the human rights community, and the investigation of crimes is the responsibility of the Prosecutor’s Office.”

The government notified 17 workers in the Peace Archives on May 28 that they would be laid off at the end of June, and Arenales Forno indicated that there more than 100 unnecessary positions in the Peace Secretariat that might be eliminated. The government hasn’t decided where the Archives’ records will kept, but they may be divided between several different Guatemalan agencies and the General Archives of Central America.

Mandated by the peace accords of 1996 and put into operation in 2008, the Peace Archives has already computerized two million documents and published nine reports on topics ranging from the National Police archives to forced disappearances during the war years and the illegal adoptions of children. Staffers from the agency have served as expert witnesses in trials for genocide and crimes against humanities, including the ongoing trial of former military dictator Efraín Ríos Montt (1982-1983).

Kate Doyle, a director of investigations at the Washington, DC-based research group National Security Archive, wrote on June 1 that “the closing of the Peace Archives ends an important source of support to human rights prosecutions in Guatemala, and may in part reflect the current government’s particular distaste for the genocide cases.” President Pérez Molina has denied that there was ever genocide in the military’s counterinsurgency campaigns. The president himself was a major in the army during the Ríos Montt dictatorship, operating around Nebaj, El Quiché department, in the Ixil Mayan region [see Updates #1114, 1115]. (Prensa Libre (Guatemala) 5/31/12; EFE 6/1/12 via Terra.com (Peru); National Security Archive blog 6/1/12)

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http://weeklynewsupdate.blogspot.com/2012/06/wnu-1131-mexican-presidential-race.html
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Guatemala: Pérez Molina downsizes Peace Archives (Original Post) Catherina Jun 2012 OP
What a shame the right-wing decided, when there was progress in opening the documents, Judi Lynn Jun 2012 #1
They were digging up too many corpses Catherina Jun 2012 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,444 posts)
1. What a shame the right-wing decided, when there was progress in opening the documents,
Wed Jun 6, 2012, 04:27 AM
Jun 2012

to run this genocidal sadist for the President's office.

So after a modest time in office he decides to shut down the investigation before the truth about him is illuminated for the whole world to see.

If he thinks he can cast this investigation into an open grave and bury it again, like the helpless indigenous people he's destroyed, he's just crazy. Sooner or later, life is going to teach him the lessons he has refused to learn.

Now we know what kind of man he still is.

Thanks for the information.

Catherina

(35,568 posts)
2. They were digging up too many corpses
Wed Jun 6, 2012, 02:17 PM
Jun 2012

"If he thinks he can cast this investigation into an open grave and bury it again, like the helpless indigenous people he's destroyed, he's just crazy. Sooner or later, life is going to teach him the lessons he has refused to learn. "

From your keyboard to God's ears

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