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Sasha
11th May 2013, 18:56
Genocide Conviction In Guatemala Is 'Huge Breakthrough'


by


May 11, 2013 7:00 AM

Former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt was convicted of genocide by a court in his country Friday for the part he played in massacres and other crimes committed against Mayans while he ruled in 1982 and 1983.
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2013/05/11/montt112way_sq-2dbbf9c43e1375813442803fc21ebe06da459407-s6.jpg
Former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt during his trial earlier this week.


Jorge Dan Lopez/Reuters /Landov
As , Montt (who will likely appeal the verdict) was sentenced to 50 years in prison for genocide and another 30 for crimes against humanity. The judge said the evidence showed that the army, under Montt's control, had a systemic and clear plan to exterminate the Ixil people, who they considered enemies of the state.
Montt, now 86, was found guilty of ordering the death of more than 1,700 people.
The significance of the verdict, , extends beyond the case against the former dictator: "It is the first time a former head of state had been found guilty of genocide by a court in his or her own country. Other genocide convictions have been handed down by international courts."
And, adds BBC Central America correspondent Will Grant, the decision is "a huge breakthrough for human rights in the region."
The :

"A 1999 report by the country's truth and reconciliation commission listed widespread human rights abuses during the civil war, which lasted from 1960 to 1996 and claimed more than 200,000 lives. The panel found that 93% of the rights violations were committed by the government or its paramilitary allies. Guatemalan prosecutors accused Rios Montt of responsibility for the massacre of more than 1,700 Ixil Maya, as well as systematic rapes, tortures and the burning of villages."

Earlier this week, the "the key role that science and forensics played in the trial. That involved analyzing bodies unearthed from graves and DNA of skeletons buried en masse during the war and studying satellite data of the countryside during the bloody regime."


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source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/05/11/183086801/genocide-conviction-in-guatemala-is-huge-breakthrough

L1NKS
11th May 2013, 19:04
Poor old tool. Been murdering people for the US, done his job, and can't even get a decent retirement plan.

Forget the fucker. I'm still waiting for the United States to be put on trial for what they did to Guatemala (and the rest of Latin America) since 1954.

Kalinin's Facial Hair
11th May 2013, 19:21
Poor old tool. Been murdering people for the US, done his job, and can't even get a decent retirement plan.

No tears shed here, mate.


Forget the fucker

No. All of these murdering lackeys of US imperialism must not be forgotten. Ever.

L1NKS
11th May 2013, 20:05
No. All of these murdering lackeys of US imperialism must not be forgotten. Ever.
No objections here. But let us just not forget who actually started the fire.

cynicles
11th May 2013, 20:53
Hahahaha! This is a rare political treat, perhaps one day we'll see Mubarak hung in Tahrir square, or Imelda Marcos crushed beneath a giant shoe.

Anglo-Saxon Philistine
11th May 2013, 21:05
Imperialist puppet convicted after two decades; receives light sentence that he will spend in luxury.

The puppet's former cohorts still control the government.

Indigenous Guatemalans still live discriminated and in abject poverty.

No one dares mention the puppet's masters.

Isn't the world just great?

Mather
12th May 2013, 03:45
The court cleared Montt's co-defendant, former intelligence chief José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez. Looks like the Guatemalan ruling class has made Montt the fall guy for the crimes that they were all responsible for. This really doesn't surprise me, this is bourgeois 'justice' after all.

Sudsy
12th May 2013, 03:54
So where`s the US on this? :grin: All these despots were best bros of the US. The US is so tyrannical its funny.

Sudsy
12th May 2013, 03:55
Also 50 years is not enough for his crimes. He deserves a near death sentence, followed by suffering until death. Something creative.

Bostana
12th May 2013, 03:57
Great,
now only if we can get the U.S. presidents....

dez
12th May 2013, 04:19
I, for one, see this as a victory

Ocean Seal
12th May 2013, 05:57
Against the Mayans what? You mean general indigenous peoples in Guatemala?

VukBZ2005
13th May 2013, 00:27
Against the Mayans what? You mean general indigenous peoples in Guatemala?

The Maya are the indigenous people of Guatemala.

Sinister Cultural Marxist
13th May 2013, 00:54
Really, he got off light considering what his government did to people. However it is rare to have these thugs tried and convicted, so it's still a victory of sorts.


The Maya are the indigenous people of Guatemala.

There's actually a handful of non-Maya indigenous people, but the vast majority are, as you said, Mayan peoples (including the Ixil I believe).

Red Commissar
21st May 2013, 21:39
I guess this shouldn't be surprising to those of us who were already critical of the way the sentence was handled:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/21/world/americas/guatemalas-highest-court-overturns-genocide-conviction-of-former-dictator.html


MEXICO CITY — Guatemala’s highest court on Monday threw out the genocide conviction and prison sentence of the former dictator Gen. Efraín Ríos Montt.

The decision by Guatemala’s Constitutional Court was a dramatic legal victory for General Ríos Montt, 86, and a blow to human rights advocates who had called his conviction a sign that Guatemala’s courts would no longer allow impunity for the country’s powerful.

General Ríos Montt was sent to prison immediately after the verdict on May 10 when a three-panel tribunal found him guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity. He was sentenced to 80 years in prison but was soon transferred to a military hospital for medical tests. Monday’s decision means that he will return to house arrest, where he had been held since the case against him began in January 2012.

The additional effects of Monday’s court ruling were unclear. The court did not invalidate the entire trial, which began on March 19. Instead, the court ordered that the proceedings be rolled back and reset to April 19, when a complex decision by another judge sent the trial into disarray, causing a brief suspension.

La Guaneña
29th May 2013, 03:26
I guess this shouldn't be surprising to those of us who were already critical of the way the sentence was handled:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/21/world/americas/guatemalas-highest-court-overturns-genocide-conviction-of-former-dictator.html

No surprise here. I guess only an acutal revolutionary court could bring true justice to the victims of torture and murder in Latin America.

Akshay!
29th May 2013, 03:43
Someone assassinate him.