Published on National Catholic Reporter (http://ncronline.org)
Guatemalan
authorities arrest SOA-trained officers for massacres, disappearances
Linda Cooper James Hodge | Jan. 11,
2016
In a
daring and historic move just one week before a new president takes office,
Guatemalan authorities arrested 18 former high-ranking military men Jan. 6 for
massacres and forced disappearances during the bloodiest years of the dirty war
that particularly targeted indigenous populations.
Most
of the arrests resulted from an investigation that exhumed the remains of 558
people -- 90 of them children -- buried in clandestine mass graves on a
military base in Cobán, formerly known as Military Zone 21. DNA testing
identified victims who were killed or disappeared by the military in the 1980s.
Many of the bodies were blindfolded, bound or dismembered.
Guatemala
Attorney General Thelma Aldana called it "one of the biggest cases of
forced disappearance in Latin America."
Records
show that 12 of the 18 arrested were trained at the U.S. Army's School of the
Americas (SOA), highlighting the sordid U.S.-support for the war, which
spanned from 1960 to 1996 and claimed the lives of some 250,000, many of
them women and children.
The
most prominent of those arrested are Gens. Benedicto Lucas García, and Gen.
Manuel Antonio Callejas y Callejas, both graduates of SOA, now known as the
Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation.
In the
early 1980s, during the peak of the government's repression, Lucas Garcia was
the army's Chief of Staff while Callejas y Callejas was the Director of
Intelligence.
The
arrests came just a week before incoming president Jimmy Morales takes
office on Jan. 14. Morales, a former television comedian, ran as the candidate
of the National Convergence Front (FCN), a party he co-founded that's dominated
by military officers.
Prosecutors
are seeking to arrest Morales' top aid, Edgar Justino Ovalle Maldonado, on
similar charges of crimes against humanity and forced disappearances. Ovalle
Maldonado, also an SOA graduate and a FCN co-founder who helped Morales get the
FCN's nomination, currently has immunity as a legislator. But Aldana has
appealed to the Supreme Court to revoke his immunity.
Ovalle
Maldonado was an Operations Officer at the Cobán military base in 1983, and
later the commander of the base, according to Amnesty International. He is
reported to have claimed that the mass graves merely served as cemeteries for
two towns near the base.
Morales
will be succeeding former President Otto Pérez Molina, another SOA graduate,
who resigned last September as the result of a popular uprising over government
corruption and is now facing bribery charges.
Further
heightening the drama is the retrial of former military dictator Gen. Efrain
Ríos Montt on charges of genocide. The proceedings begin today (Jan.11) for the
SOA graduate, who was convicted of the same charge in 2013, but saw the verdict
overturned on a technicality.
Another
SOA graduate arrested in the Jan. 6 sweep was Col. Francisco Luis Gordillo
Martínez, who helped Ríos Montt overthrow the government in 1982. He, Rios
Montt and another SOA graduate formed a junta that created secret tribunals,
repealed the constitution, abolished the legislature, and escalated a
"scorched earth" policy to wipe out entire villages.
Records
show that Gordillo Martinez was a three-time graduate of SOA, graduating from
its infantry Weapons and Infantry Tactics programs in the 1960s and from its
Command and General Staff College in 1974.
Another
SOA graduate -- Col. Ricardo Mendez Ruiz -- commanded the Cobán military
base where the bodies were found from 1980 to 1982, the year he became the
Minister of Interior under Rios Montt. Mendez Ruiz died Jan. 1, five days
before the arrests began.
Details
on the current charges against the 18 officers are sketchy, and limited to the
mass graves at the Cobán base and the case of a Guatemala City teenager
disappeared in 1981 by the military. But human rights investigators have long
documented the human rights records of those arrested.
The
Guatemalan Catholic church's human rights office estimated the number of dead
from counterinsurgency operations in 1981 alone to be 11,000, most of whom were
indigenous peasants living in the Highlands.
Lucas García took command of the counterinsurgency campaign in the
Highlands in October 1981, according to anthropologist Shelton Davis*, writing
in Harvest of Violence: The Maya Indians and the Guatemalan Crisis. The
campaign, Davis said, was marked by massacres, targeted killings of community
leaders, and the burning of houses and fields to terrorize the Indian
population into not joining the guerillas.
Callejas
y Callejas was arrested in connection with the 1981 disappearance of a
Guatemala City teenager, but his tenure as chief of intelligence coincides
with the slaughter of thousands of Mayan Indians, the murders of 27 professors,
more than 80 union leaders and four priests, including American Fr. Stanley
Rother and the failed 1980 attempt to murder Quiche Bishop Juan Gerardi.
As it
turned out, Gerardi was assassinated 18 years later, just two days after
releasing a four-volume study showing that the military forces were
responsible for 90 percent of the atrocities in the war.
Both
Lucas García and Callejas y Callejas graduated twice from the SOA. Lucas García
was trained in 1965 in combat intelligence while Callejas y Callejas was
trained in 1962 in communications. Both men later graduated in 1970 from the
school's elite Command and General Staff College.
Callejas
y Callejas rose to become the Armed Forces Chief of Staff, and despite his
horrific human rights record, the U.S. State Department approved his induction
in 1988 into the School of the America's Hall of Fame.
The
Hall of Fame induction underscored U.S. complicity, says Roy Bourgeois, a
former Maryknoll priest who founded the SOA Watch after learning that the
school had trained the killers of six Jesuit priests in El Salvador 1989.
In
1990, Bourgeois was arrested after throwing blood on the Hall's gallery
where the portrait of Callejas y Callejas hung alongside that of several Latin
American dictators.
The
U.S. intervention, he said, was extensive. "Several U.S. administrations
trained, advised, funded and armed the Guatemalan military. Many of its
military and intelligence officers were on the CIA payroll."
Bourgeois
and other human rights activists have hailed the Guatemalan arrests.
Grahame
Russell, co-director of Rights Action, a Canadian NGO engaged in human rights
work throughout Central America, called it "an extraordinarily positive
step forward" in a country where military impunity has been the rule.
In an
interview with the Venezulean-based TeleSUR television network, Russell praised
the Guatemalan attorney general for filing a "series of war crimes
charges" stemming from "the worst years of the U.S.-backed repression
and genocide."
The
filing was especially significant, he said, coming "just as another
military-backed president is about to assume the presidency, in this as yet
very undemocratic country." With Morales strong links to the military,
Russell believes that the country will likely continue to be "dominated by
the same economic elites -- national and international -- that were in power
during the worst years" of the 1970s and 1980s."
Still,
Bourgeois draws hope from the fact, that against all odds, Guatemalans
themselves -- from the prosecutors to the "courageous survivors and
relatives of the disappeared" -- have risked their lives to bring the
perpetrators to justice.
"They
want the truth, and they want it to come out. And they are willing to die for
it," he said. "They've waited some 35 years. The strategy of the
military has been to keep stalling until those responsible have died off. But
there will never be any justice or reconciliation until there is accountability
and the perpetrators start going to prison."
*An
earlier version of this story attributed the wrong author for Harvest
of Violence.
Linda
Cooper and James Hodge are the authors of Disturbing the Peace: The Story of
Father Roy Bourgeois and the Movement to Close the School of the Americas [2].
Source URL (retrieved on 01/16/2016 - 11:55): http://ncronline.org/news/global/guatemalan-authorities-arrest-soa-trained-officers-massacres-disappearances
Links:
[1] http://ncronline.org/node/113251
[2] http://www.amazon.com/Disturbing-Peace-Bourgeois-Movement-Americas/dp/1570754349
[2] http://www.amazon.com/Disturbing-Peace-Bourgeois-Movement-Americas/dp/1570754349
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