Libro
 
ID  725
Human Rights in Guatemala During Presiden De León Carpio´s First Year
Humn Rights Watch Americas
Artículo Disponible
323.197281 H918
1
Comprado
  • Human Rights
  • Guatemala
  • History of Guatemala
  • Human Rights in Guatemala
  • War
  • Guatemala Civil War
The people of Guatemala have suffered savage repression at the hands of security forces, civil partols, and guerrillas wagning thirty-years civil war. Their villages were razed and tens of thousands disappeared - presumably murdered - their bodies occasionally discovered in clandestine graves throughout the highlands. This legacy of human rights abuses has terrorized many Guatemalans to such an extent that the few democratic institutions that developed since military rule ended in 1986 are woefully stunted.
Astonishing political changes occurred in 1993, when elected President Jorge Serrano Elías briefly seized dictatorial powers (a la Fujimori of Peru), then was ousted by the army as national and international opinion turned against him. Into the presidency stepped a well-respected governmental human right advocate, Ramiro de León Carpio. Unfortunately, his proposed reforms were soon overshadowed by a lack of political support, high-profile asssassinations, and recalcitrant military. One year later, with little else to show for its initial promise, the Guatemala government has signed an accord with the guerrillas paving the way for a United Nations human rights monitoring team, which could restrain the security forces and civil patrols long used to operating without international scrutiny. Absent is an amnesty for human rights abuses, which many feared the military would demand as part of such an accord.
However, without establishing a Truth Comission, reconciliation cannot begin. The government of Guatemala owes the relatives of the disappeared answers as to the fate of their loved ones, and must examine all types of human rights violations committed by both parties during the decades of conflict.
1-56432-137-1
Human Rights Watch
1
1994
Human Rights Watch Americas
150
United States of America
New York
English
Priscila Barrientos
Priscila Barrientos
14/08/2014
14/08/2014

Elaborado por Editorial Digital, www.editorialdigital.net