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Guatemala Pressed to Investigate
Surge in Killings
By Bojana Stoparic
June 12, 2006 (WOMENSENEWS) A U.S delegation is traveling to Guatemala
this summer to raise awareness of the murders of 2,000 women since
2001. Rights advocates draw parallels to the widespread killings
of women in Juarez, Mexico.
In the first four months of
this year, almost 200 women in Guatemala were murdered. Like the
other 1,800 women who have been killed in that country since 2001,
they were young and poor, usually hailing from the cities. Their
bodies were found in gutters and empty lots, sometimes missing breasts
or eyes, sometimes beheaded and, other times, cut to pieces. During
the past five years, only 14 of these murder cases have been resolved.
And there may be hundreds more murders that have gone unreported.
While far more men than women are murdered in Guatemala, the rate
at which women are being killed has jumped dramatically in the past
four years and the sexualized circumstances of the slayings alarms
local and international rights advocates. "The
gall with which these women are killed is telling women that they
shouldn't be on the street, that they should go back home,"
Juana Batzibal, a human rights lawyer with the Center for Legal
Action on Human Rights (CALDH) in Guatemala City, told Women's eNews.
Over 100 members of Congress
signed a letter in May asking the U.S. State Department to provide
technical and financial support to Guatemala to fully investigate
the attacks on women. Sponsored by three Democratic congressional
representatives from California--Barbara Lee, Tom Lantos and Hilda
Solis--the letter urged the State Department to help reinforce forensic
teams in Guatemala, increase support for victims' rights advocates
and assist the government in implementing a national plan to prevent
domestic violence.
This summer, the Washington-based
Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA is organizing a delegation
of U.S. professional rights advocates and other concerned individuals
to visit the country, meet with women's rights leaders and government
officials and look into efforts to curb violence against women.
International Vigilance Sought "Only through international
vigilance can change happen," Batzibal told Women's eNews.
Rosa Franco holds a picture
of her murdered daughter at Amnesty press conference. An Amnesty
International report last year found insufficient financial and
human resources assigned to investigating the murders, with police
reporting that 40 percent of the cases were never probed. Victims'
families also complained to Amnesty that they had to prove the murdered
women were not prostitutes or gang members before authorities would
take their cases seriously.
"Violence against women
is acceptable not just in pop culture, but also in how the police
and government respond or fail to respond to these murders,"
said Alyson Kozma, coordinator for Amnesty International's Women's
Human Rights Program in Washington, D.C. About a third of the murders
are thought to be committed within the family, but the motives for
the rest remain unclear.
The government has attributed
the increase in violence against women to gangs and drug trafficking.
Amnesty noted that for rival gangs, controlling women's sexual activities--and
murdering them as punishment for "betrayals"--has become
a show of power. Batzibal told Women's eNews she sees disturbing
similarities to murders during the country's 36-year civil war,
such as the age of the women, their social and economic status and
the sexualized nature of the killings.
The conflict between the military
government and leftist guerillas--which ended 10 years ago--left
200,000 dead, the majority of them unarmed civilians from the country's
indigenous Maya population. Rape and sexual violence were central
to the military's counter-insurgency strategy, and about one-fourth
of those killed during the conflict were women. Batzibal said the
failure to hold accountable those responsible for the wartime human
rights abuses has created a culture of impunity and helped perpetuate
extreme forms of violence against women.
"Justice has never been
part of Guatemala," she said. Amnesty's Kozma drew a parallel
between Guatemala and Juarez, Mexico, where as many as 400 women
have been brutally murdered since 1993 in unsolved cases. "In
both places, the murders are a very clear manifestation of what
happens when you have a culture that discriminates against women,
and where poor women are seen as disposable."
Escalating Murder Rate Guatemala,
with a population of 14 million, has faced escalating murder and
crime rates in the past five years; homicides increased by 40 percent
between 2001 and 2004. In 2005, the murder rate was 35 per every
100,000 inhabitants. The U.S. murder rate is 5.5 per 100,000. The
percentage of Guatemalan female murder victims has risen even faster.
According to official police
numbers from 2002, 163 women were murdered, accounting for 4.5 percent
of all killings. By 2005, 665 women were murdered, 12 percent of
all murders. Most of the victims were between 14 and 35. More disconcerting
than the four-fold increase in female murders has been the brutality
of the killings. Unlike male victims, the bodies of murdered women
are often found mutilated and disfigured, bearing signs of torture
and rape.
In May, the Paris-based International
Federation of Human Rights brought Batzibal to New York to testify
before a committee at the United Nations, which was evaluating Guatemala's
compliance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women, or CEDAW. Widely seen as an international
women's bill of rights, CEDAW was adopted in 1979 by the U.N. and
ratified by Guatemala in 1982.
Batzibal acknowledged that
the government had made some attempts to introduce the rule of law,
but she told the U.N. committee that implementation and follow-through
were lacking. Femicide Commission in Guatemala Guatemalan officials
told the U.N. committee that the country has established a commission
to study the problem of femicide and facilitate cooperation among
different branches of government.
In the past year, four new
positions were created for district attorneys charged specifically
with prosecuting women's murders. Additionally, prosecutors and
the police are working to coordinate the gathering of statistics
and collect better data. The U.N. committee members, however, continued
to express concern over the killings, and called on the government
to bring its domestic laws in line with international human rights
standards, streamline its process for addressing violence against
women and publicly condemn the murders.
Guatemala established a national
Female Homicide Unit in 2004 with 15 officers, each with a caseload
of over 20 cases, according to the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights. Investigations also have been hampered by the absence
of a DNA laboratory that could analyze evidence. Human rights activists
say that Guatemala has a track record of listening to the international
community, particularly the United States. The United States was
one of six "Friends of Guatemala" countries that supported
the nation's 1996 U.N.-brokered peace accords that ended the civil
war. The United States provides $45 million in development aid to
Guatemala annually, mostly for investments in health, education
and other social services.
Last year the U.S. Congress
also approved the Central American Free Trade Agreement, which liberalizes
trade between the U.S. and five Central American countries, including
Guatemala. "This is one case where U.S.-based activism is likely
to have a tangible impact on the ground," said Kozma of Amnesty
International.
From: http://www.womensenews.org
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