July 2009 Delegation Starts with Claudia Samayoa

Friday, July 10, 2009, all the delegates for our SIXTH delegation to Guatemala arrived, some at 7:30 AM, some in the middle of the day, two traveled around Guatemala by themselves before meeting us in the Capital, and three arrived mid-afternoon from Texas. The Texans hardly got to breathe before we hustled everyone over to the office of UDEFGUA for a briefing of recent Guatemala history and an overview of the current situation. This report is from our delegate from Cal State University at Long Beach, Justine:

This afternoon delegates of MIA, Mujeres Iniciando en Las Americas, sister organization of the Guatemala Peace and Development Network (GPDN), met with human rights activist and defender, Claudia Samayoa, director of UDEFEGUA Guatemala (http://udefgua.blogspot.com)

Samayoa and UDEFEGUA protect human rights defenders in Central America, with a particular emphasis on Guatemala. The organization’s role is to defend human rights activists who face threats of attack and defamation as a result of challenging the government’s persistent violence and corruption that has continued to plague the country, as 2,300 out of the population of 13.5-15 million people have been killed since the beginning of 2009.

Samayoa gave the delegates an overview on impunity in Guatemala. Acknowledging countries such as the United States and Mexico in which corruption seems to infiltrate its way upward through the political system, she noted the opposite path taken in the Guatemalan system in which corruption begins at the top economic positions and works its way down through the different facets of society, as those in higher positions tend to manipulate systems into catering to their financial interests. As a result, justice for crimes is virtually impossible to obtain, as the civil (what we call the criminal system in the U.S.) system has an impunity rate of almost 100%, according to Samayoa.

Those who challenge these injustices live in a constant threat of violence. At particular risk are women, who have been pioneering the country’s nonviolent push for peace, democratization, and human rights initiatives. Attacking women activists, however, is a way to sustain the country’s corrupt system by placing women back into the home and out of work, universities, and positions through which to activate change in their country. As these women and other human rights defenders are a significant threat to organized crime, they become targets of violence. There have been a total of approximately 1,600 attacks against human rights activists, the majority of which have been initiated by some of the five different intelligence groups in Guatemala.

Addressing the situation of Guatemalan President Colom and alleged disputes with narcotics traffickers, in which attempts at investigation and a coup have been unsuccessful, Samayoa related similar situations in Guatemala to the recent coup of President Zelaya that has taken place in neighboring Honduras. While two countries’ presidents have been suspected of similar allegations, the coup in Honduras was successful due to the way in which the military made legal maneuvers to justify the coup and through elaborate and careful work with the media.

In regard to Guatemala’s progress toward justice and the tackling of impunity, Samayoa noted the commission recently established by the United Nations and the Government of Guatemala, the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG), which was formed to investigate and prosecute these impunity systems. While attacks continue, however, Samayoa and UDEFEGUA are essential allies in protecting the human rights activists who challenge these corrupt systems and push for justice in Guatemala.

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