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(or, How Did Genocide Happen in Our Backyard?)

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Guatemala: a human rights history GUATEMALA: A HUMAN RIGHTS HISTORY (PART 2) (or, How Did Genocide Happen in Our Backyard?) The massacres at Rio Negro 1975 plan to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: (or, How Did Genocide Happen in Our Backyard?)


1
Guatemala a human rights history
GUATEMALAA HUMAN RIGHTS HISTORY (PART 2)
  • (or, How Did Genocide Happen in Our Backyard?)

2
Q. How does genocide happen?
  • A. Black/white logic of Latin Americas war on
    terrorism
  • entrenched racism and structures of ethnic
    exclusion
  • genocide

3
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4
First wave of war (1960-1970)
  • Fought in eastern lowlands (and capital)
  • Although state response involved massive force,
    it was (mostly) selectively applied
  • Second wave of war (1975-1986)
  • Fought in western highlands (and capital)
  • Scorched earth tactics
  • Goal to eliminate social world in which
    guerrillas were active

5
The massacres at Rio Negro
  • 1975 plan to build hydroelectric dam on Chixoy
    River
  • Project funded by World Bank, IADB
  • Maya Achi communities of Rio Negro resisted
  • Army organized civil patrol (PAC) in Xococ
  • 1981-82 massacres of hundreds
  • Development project went forward

6
Document 3
  • declassified CIA cable from April 1981,
    describing how an Army patrol found evidence that
    residents of a village named Cocop supported the
    guerrillas, and therefore were forced to fire at
    anything that moved
  • The Guatemalan authorities admitted that many
    civilians were killed in Cocob, many of whom
    undoubtedly were non-combattants.

7
Cocop, Guatemala, 2008 Exhumation and reburial of
50 of 76 victims of the April 16, 1981 massacre
8
Cocop, Guatemala, 2008 Reburial of 50 of 76
victims of the April 16, 1981 massacre
9
Document 4
  • DCI Watch Committee Report, dated 5 February 1982
  • (DCI Watch is a committee of the CIA)
  • discusses Guatemalan militarys plans to
    sweep through an area where many indigenous
    peasants support the guerrilla, and acknowledging
    that it will be necessary to destroy a number of
    villages

10
Document 5
  • Feb 1982 CIA cable
  • Describes Army sweep through the same area
    discussed in document 4, noting that no major
    guerrilla forces had been found but that since
    the Army has concluded the entire Indian
    population is pro-guerrilla, the Army can be
    expected to give no quarter to combatants and
    non-combatants alike and the army has therefore
    destroyed a large number of guerrilla
    collaborators

11
Genocide
  • Prior to this period, binary logic of youre
    either with us, or youre against us gt massive
    repression
  • Turning point equation of indigenous identity
    with communism
  • This is where massive repression became genocide
  • 626 massacres
  • many communities wiped off map
  • idea was not to punish guerrillas, but to
    eliminate entire society which hid them

12
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13
Genocide
  • Attempt to eliminate a social world
  • Stigmatization of indigenous dress, language
  • Destruction of sacred sites
  • Forced conscription
  • Model villages
  • According to CEH
  • 83 victims Maya
  • 93 of killings were by security forces or
    paramilitary
  • 3 killings by guerrillas

14
Peace
  • End of cold war, rise of human rights movement gt
  • Awareness began to spread about what was
    happening
  • International public opinion turned against
    Guatemalan government, encouraged peace process
  • 1996 Guatemalan government and guerrillas signed
    peace accords

15
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16
Human rights in Guatemala today
  • Impunity No one has been convicted of ordering
    human rights crimes
  • Those leading effort to change this continue to
    be threatened and killed today
  • lawyers, witnesses, plaintiffs in human rights
    cases routinely killed
  • Also, new struggles environmental justice,
    indigenous rights, security from common crime

17
Exhumations
18
Police Archives
19
(No Transcript)
20
Lessons?
  • The Guatemalan genocide happened in the name of
    saving democracy from terrorism
  • Some communities were killed in the name of
    economic development
  • Tragic that in the struggle to defend
    democracy, promote development, profoundly
    antidemocratic mistakes were made

21
Is the US government partly responsible?
  • To what extent did the US participate in the
    carnage?
  • Military training, assistance some accounts of
    in-person participation
  • In 1982, Pres. Reagan moved to reinstate military
    aid to the Guatemalan Army, said Guatemala
    struggle for democracy
  • In 1997 Pres. Clinton formally apologized to
    Guatemala

22
The erroneous belief that the end justifies the
means converted Guatemala into a country of death
and sadness. It should be remembered, once and
for all, that there are no values superior to the
lives of human beings, and thereby superior to
the existence and well-being of an entire
national community. UN Commission for
Historical Clarification, 1999
23
Discerning patterns
  • Similarities/differences with Southern Cone
    experiences?
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