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Femicide in the Aftermath
of Guatemalan Civil War
by Samantha Mathis
April 8, 2007 – (IndibayNews) Ever since
I was a little girl I remember my father telling me about Guatemala
with an almost mythic reverence. He had traveled to Lake Atitlan
in the 1950's as a young man with a group of archeologists to
explore the rich waters filled with treasures from the ancient
Mayan civilizations. He spoke not only of this beautiful country,
rich and green, filled with ancient Mayan cities, but of a culture
of people like no other he had ever met; warm and gracious, an
intellectual culture that loved life, and loved and valued their
fellow man.
In 1960 Guatemala became mired in a bloody internal armed conflict
that lasted 36 years. Over 200,000 people were massacred, victims
of genocide. That conflict ended in 1996, and my father decided
to go back to the country he had held in his heart to see what
had become of it.
Last year I had the good fortune of being able to visit my father's
adopted country, to see the ancient cities of Tikal and Antigua,
two of the most beautiful cities I have ever visited. I also met
many women living there, students, business women, domestic employees
and other friends of my father. I soon learned of a horrific pattern
of brutality: women were - and still are - being violently murdered,
often tortured before they were killed. As news of this femicide
started making the front page of Guatemalan and international
publications, I began to ask the women, "Are you afraid here?
Do you feel unsafe?" I was met with a resounding "Yes.
We are all afraid. We are all unsafe."
Some of you may wonder what the term "femicide" really
means. The term femicide was first introduced in 1976 by Diana
Russell during her testimony at the International Tribunal on
Crimes Against Women in Brussels. She used the term to refer to
the killings of women for the simple fact that they are women,
which, in turn, is a form of domination, power and control over
all women around the world. The term "femicide" represents
the most extreme expression of gender based violence, accepted
both culturally and by society and most astonishingly by the State,
which participates in a systematic violation of women's human
rights when its laws don't criminalize violence against women
and whereby negligence or the lack of political will results in
almost total impunity for the perpetrators of such brutality.
The femicides in Guatemala are happening at a shockingly high
rate. According to the Guatemalan National Civilian Police, the
number of women killed has risen steeply from 303 in 2001 to 665
in 2005. So far this year, the lives of over 400 women have been
claimed by this brutality. To date, over 2500 women have been
killed since 2001. Exceptional cruelty and sexual violence are
quite common in the killings, women's throats are cut, they are
bound, beaten, shot, and stabbed to death. Many of their bodies
show signs of rape, torture, mutilation, and dismemberment. And
although we often use the term women to simplify the discussion,
girls as young as eight or nine have been targeted, sometimes
with warnings or messages carved into their skin.
The brutal murder of a daughter, mother, or sister is barely endurable.
But adding further injury and insult to the pain is the complete
inadequacy of the justice system. Investigations seem to be perpetually
stalled, wholly inadequate or even non-existent. The victim appears
to be the focus of police who question why a woman might walk
alone, wear a short skirt, or smile at a passerby. Family members
do not see perpetrators punished and perpetrators continue to
murder with impunity. According to Amnesty International, as of
July 2006, only 2 of the femicide cases had resulted in convictions.
The Guatemalan Government has made serious efforts to address
this horrific problem. Those efforts have been welcomed by the
international community. However, more must be done.
Guatemala is a beautiful country, rich with history, and home
to extraordinary people. There is great opportunity for change
and growth as the country recovers from more than three decades
of conflict. But the killings must stop. A society in which women
are savagely killed is deplorable. This is a human rights emergency
that must be addressed immediately. As we listen to the family
members of the victims and their advocates, please think about
how you can work with them and with Amnesty International USA
to help bring an end to the killings of women in Guatemala.
From: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/04/08/18392044.php
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