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View Full Version : Thousands protest for Guatemalan prez to resign



Guerrilla22
18th May 2009, 18:17
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090518/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_guatemala_lawyer_killed;_ylt=AkTyTXtoG00SwEmMHa .P7alvaA8F

By JUAN CARLOS LLORCA Juan Carlos Llorca – Mon May 18, 12:08 am ET
GUATEMALA CITY – Thousands of Guatemalans protested Sunday to demand the president resign over accusations that he ordered a lawyer killed, a scandal threatening the rule of the country's first leftist leader more than 50 years.
Supporters of President Alvaro Colom staged a counter-demonstration. Many were farmers and workers who have benefited from his social programs.
Colom denies Rodrigo Rosenberg's allegations, which were broadcast posthumously after the attorney was shot to death a week ago. He has dismissed calls for his resignation and asked the FBI and a U.N. panel to investigate the killing.
"Get out! Get out!" protesters chanted at the headquarters of the Guatemala City government. Dressed in white, many were from the middle and upper classes that make up the bulk of opposition to Colom.
"This is a civic movement of Guatemalans who are seeking peace. We are tired of violence, ineptitude and corruption in Guatemala," said Jorge Briz, the president of the country's chamber of commerce.
At the plaza in front of his offices, Guatemala City Mayor Alvaro Arzu lowered the Guatemalan flag to half-staff and raised a black flag to mourn Rosenberg.
Protesters said they collected more than 25,000 signatures for a petition to demand that Congress strip Colom of his immunity from prosecution.
The demonstrators canceled a 15-block march to the National Palace to avoid colliding with the thousands of Colom supporters who filled the nearby Constitution Plaza and spilled over into the surrounding streets.
"He's staying! He's staying! The president is staying!" the Colom backers chanted. Many were from the impoverished countryside that has been a stronghold of support for the embattled leader.
"He's with the poor," said Juan Gonzalez, who traveled to the capital from rural Guatemala.
The protests ended without violence, and Colom congratulated both groups Sunday night for their "maturity and responsibility."
He called again for a "swift, impartial investigation to determine who is truly responsible, who is trying to take advantage of (Rosenberg's) death to create a state of destabilization and who is accusing us of being murderers without any proof."
A recording distributed at Rosenberg's funeral showed him blaming his death on the president, first lady Sandra Torres and Cabinet chief Gustavo Alejos, who also proclaim their innocence.
Torres has also been at the center of corruption allegations against the Social Cohesion Cabinet, the backbone of Colom's social programs, including direct payments to rural families for sending their children to school and food rations for urban slum dwellers. She denies the allegations.
In the video, Rosenberg said officials might want to kill him because he represented businessman Khalil Musa, who was slain in March along with his daughter. The lawyer said Musa, who had been named to the board of Guatemala's Rural Development Bank, was killed for refusing to get involved in purported illicit transactions at the bank.
The video was shot in the office of journalist Mario David Garcia, who says he tried to persuade Rosenberg to denounce what he knew on the air but ran out of time.
In response to Colom's request, an FBI agent arrived in Guatemala last week to coordinate with local prosecutors and with the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala, a U.N. panel set up in 2007 to clean up corruption.
Colom's 2007 election victory gave Guatemala its first leftist leader since Jacobo Arbenz was thrown out of office in 1954 by a CIA-orchestrated coup.

Revulero
19th May 2009, 08:28
Good riddance, Rosenburg was a right wing lawyer who defended rich business men. I just hope this doesn't turn into a blood bath in a country ravaged by civil war and i hope that it isn't a reason for a right wing coup. Colom I'm sure is a corrupt politician, but its better for the sake of Guatemalan live's that he isn't disposed by the military. There are many Guatemalans that are angered by this and there is a growing support for General Arzu, the candidate of a conservative party.

redSHARP
19th May 2009, 08:42
shit! they finally get peace, and violence threatens the country again.

Guerrilla22
19th May 2009, 08:53
To be clear, Colom is no leftist, he's left of center if anything. Also by saying "middle class" individuals showed up to protest, I guess they mean people who ahve indoor plumbing?

Revulero
19th May 2009, 09:04
Not that I was trying to defend Colom....

Majority of Guatemalans in Guatemala City for some reason have always been pro right wing and have been spoiled under the military, while small towns and villages were being massacred by the army. Sadly, Guatemala is a country who only cares about its capital city while the rest of the country still lives without "indoor plumbing". I would hate for there to be another military dictatorship.

Guerrilla22
19th May 2009, 15:42
Not that I was trying to defend Colom....

Majority of Guatemalans in Guatemala City for some reason have always been pro right wing and have been spoiled under the military, while small towns and villages were being massacred by the army. Sadly, Guatemala is a country who only cares about its capital city while the rest of the country still lives without "indoor plumbing". I would hate for there to be another military dictatorship.

No, I was refering to the article which refered to Colom as a 'leftist" I was in Guatemala for a month in 2003 and I've sen the way people outside of the capital live, so I kinda rolled my eyes when the articles talks about the "middle class." I also think that it's ironic that for the first time ever a right winger gets assassinated in Guatemala after tens of thousands of left wingers have been killed there over the years, and suddenly it becomes the biggest outrage ever.