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Guatemala's epidemic of killing
By Adam Blenford
June 9, 2005 – (BBC News) In Guatemala,
a small country not long emerged from three decades of civil war,
women and girls are being murdered faster than anyone in authority
can cope.
Deborah Tomas Vineda, aged 16, was kidnapped, raped, and cut to
pieces with a chainsaw, allegedly because she refused to become
the girlfriend of a local gang member.
Her sister Olga, just 11 years old, died alongside her.
The raped and mutilated body of Andrea Contreras Bacaro, 17, was
found wrapped in a plastic bag and thrown into a ditch, her throat
cut, her face and hands slashed, with a gunshot wound to the head.
The word "vengeance" had been gouged into her thigh.
Sandra Palma Godoy, 17, said to have witnessed a killing in her
home town, was missing for a week before her decomposing body was
found next to a local football pitch.
Her breasts, eyes and heart had been mutilated, reports said.
According to Amnesty International, which has collated these stories
and others in a new report on the killing of women in Guatemala,
the country's leaders must share the blame for an epidemic of violence
that has killed more than 1,500 women in under four years.
In 2001, the first year separate records were kept for men and women,
222 women were registered as murdered, Guatemalan human rights activists
have told the BBC.
By 2004 that figure had more than doubled, to 494. In the first
five months of 2005, the tally reached 225 - considerably more than
one killing every day.
Expression of hate
"It's a very serious problem for the country," says Hilda
Morales Trujillo, a veteran defender of women's' rights and a campaigner
for Guatemala's Network for Non-Violence Against Women. Among Ms
Trujillo's major concerns is increasing evidence that large numbers
of women are tortured and brutalised before or after being killed.
"The only explanation we can find for the use of extreme violence
is as an expression of misogyny, of hate towards women," Ms
Morales Trujillo told the BBC News website. Almost casually, she
uses a chilling Hispanic word - "femicidio" - to describe
what is happening to her countrywomen. In Guatemala, a male-dominated
society that was heavily militarised during 36 years of civil war,
thousands of men carry weapons and are no strangers to extreme violence.
But if Guatemala has slowly slipped toward Colombian-style anarchy
since peace accords were signed in 1996 - as President Oscar Berger
recently said - women at least have made real social progress. Today
more Guatemalan women go out to work, they stay longer in education,
and express themselves freely than ever before. In much of the country,
their reward is a perpetual fear of violent, sudden death. Prostitutes
and female gang members are at the most serious risk, but the death
toll includes women from all walks of life. "Every day the
numbers are growing, and for two reasons," Sandra Moran, another
women's rights activist, told the BBC News website. "Firstly,
there is no respect for the body of a woman. People feel they can
treat women however they want. Also, there is the idea that women
are the property of someone. "Because of this we find women
are often tortured and sexually abused before they are killed. In
some cases they are dismembered."
Impunity
In its new report, Amnesty calls on Guatemala's government to improve
public education, inject real urgency into criminal investigations,
and reform outdated laws on rape and sexual violence. The report
follows criticism of Guatemala in 2004 by the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights, which noted the high rates of murder, domestic
and sexual violence, rape and kidnapping within Guatemala. Hilda
Morales Trujillo speaks of "a latent fear" among Guatemalan
women, who are rarely protected by the country's overworked, underfunded
and often corrupt police force. In its report, Amnesty International
catalogues examples of "serious and persistent shortcomings"
in police work "at every stage of the investigative process".
"There is a common denominator to all the murders: impunity,"
Guatemala's Human Right's Ombudsman Sergio Morales said in 2004.
Anabella Noriega, who heads the women's unit in Mr Morales' office,
told the BBC that out of more than 500 cases in 2004, just one ended
in conviction. Lack of interest by state authorities, failure to
collect evidence and endemic corruption all feed the problem, she
added. Amid growing revulsion to the inhuman nature of many killings,
a handful of women's groups and victims' relatives try to raise
awareness of the issue at home and abroad.
But they face a culture of silence and are regularly targeted themselves.
In the first week of May, 12 separate offices were ransacked, Sandra
Moran said. "No-one ever comes forward to tell their story.
"The message is that people can do whatever they want, with
no chance of prosecution. "We all feel afraid. But it just
makes us want to carry on."
The brutality of the killings...
reveal that extreme forms of sexual violence and discrimination
remain prevalent in Guatemalan society
Amnesty International report
KEY FACTS
Population: 13m
Capital: Guatemala City, 2m
Civil war from 1960-1996 killed more than 200,000
Neither the police nor the government
take the problem of violence against women seriously.
Hilda Morales Trujillo
Network for Non-Violence Against Women
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/americas/4074880.stm
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