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GUATEMALA:
Civil Society - Look How It Has Grown
By Alberto Mendoza
June 13, 2006 - (IPS) Civil society
in Guatemala is coming of age, as non-governmental organisations
seek to overcome the country's troubled history of armed conflict.
Ten years have passed since the peace accords were signed, and social
organisations have cut down on the rebellious lashing out in favour
of cooperating with the State and setting forth proposals.
"It is no longer about fighting the State, but rather a question
of finding ways to work with the government and propose solutions,"
Sandino Asturias, director of the Centre for Guatemalan Studies,
a non-governmental political research institute, told IPS.
Civil society has been grappling with this transformation ever since
the 1996 signing of the peace agreements, which brought an end to
the 36-year civil war in which 200,000 people -- mainly indigenous
civilians -- were killed.
"The movements are successfully replacing rebellion with constructive
action," said Asturias. Sandra Morán, head of Women's
Sector, which represents a number of women's groups, agreed. "Today,
proposals are being drafted; before, attention was focused on confrontation
and on avoiding State oppression."
Issues such as the government's recent push for a "national
pact", which has divided social movements, reveal the limited
political action capacity and coordination levels of Guatemala's
social organisations.
To work towards a national pact, the government launched a broad
national dialogue last month with student, labour, women's and indigenous
groups on issues related to health, nutrition, and transparency
in public administration. On Jun. 16 it plans to open up the dialogue
to address the questions of inclusion of indigenous communities
and rural development.
Yet some of the most representative organisations, such as the Confederación
General de Trabajadores de Guatemala (CGTG), a national labour federation,
and CNOC, a national umbrella group of campesino organisations,
have rejected the invitation to engage in dialogue.
"The government is just using the dialogue to score some points,
because it feels isolated," charged Carlos Pérez, executive
secretary of the CNOC. Roberto Dueñas, associate director
for the CGTG, noted that "dialogue processes have lost credibility,
because governments do not follow through on the agreements reached."
But divisiveness is not new to civil society. "There is not
the same maturity level here that you find in the Southern Cone
region (of South America), where movements have a common agenda.
What is going on in Bolivia, for example, could not happen here,"
Mario Polanco, an analyst with the Mutual Support Group, a local
human rights organisation, told IPS.
Polanco was referring to the fact that Bolivian movements, which
encompass a wide spectrum of backgrounds and priorities, not only
have succeeded in uniting their demands in a common platform, but
have received committed support from the government of Evo Morales,
the country's first indigenous president, who took office in January.
In Guatemala, "each organisation prioritises its own work over
the common good," said Asturias. Hugo Ayala, coordinator of
a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) initiative to strengthen
civil society, said the movement is generally divided along territorial
lines or according to issues.
Organisations based in Guatemala City, the capital, tend to look
down on local movements, "even though the local groups work
more effectively," said Ayala. And each organisation focuses
on one problem and ignores the rest, "despite the fact that
there is overlap between some issues, such as indigenous concerns
and human rights."
The secret to unification has become civil society's Holy Grail.
But in the meantime, significant progress has been made, such as
the establishment in 2004 of the Indigenous, Campesino, Union and
Popular Movement (MICSP), an umbrella group that counts the CNOC
and CGTG among its members, and the Collective of Social Organisations,
a network of progressive and human rights groups.
"It is not easy to coordinate a unified front, but the MICSP
wants to set concrete objectives and bring us together," said
Pérez. On Jun. 8, the movement held a national assembly,
inviting 300 delegates from all around the country.
Social organisations do agree on one thing: the need to jumpstart
the peace agreement agenda. Ten years after ratification, the goals
outlined by the accords have been all but shelved.
The peace accords set out to address issues ranging from the rights
of indigenous groups, who represent more than half of the population,
to agrarian reform designed to combat the poverty and marginalisation
which plague 54 percent of Guatemalans.
The non-governmental Institute of Cultural Affairs (ICA), meanwhile,
monitors Guatemala's civil society "maturity," measuring
levels with a Civil Society Index, which analyses four dimensions:
context, structure, values and impact, based on survey results and
public information.
ICA, which has promoted community development and participation
since 1979, is part of Civicus, a global civil-participation alliance.
According to the index, 38.5 percent of Guatemala's social organisations
said human rights campaigns have had limited success, while 32.1
percent rated them as moderately successful. Fifty-nine percent
said civil society has had little or no impact on public spending.
Legitimacy is also a problem. "There is more to civil society
than non-governmental organisations -- it encompasses the entire
population, but the people have delegated the responsibility to
collectives," said Ayala. "So organisations have gained
their representative legitimacy by default, as they do not have
broad social support behind them."
Only seven percent of ICA survey respondents believe that women,
men, indigenous people and youths enjoy equal representation in
the organisations, although 43 percent of their management positions
are held by women. In the meantime, a mere 1.8 percent of Guatemala's
workforce is unionised.
These figures reveal weaknesses that social organisations themselves
have criticised. Thus, the second phase of the UNDP programme is
focusing on improving the participation of such groups in public
policy-making. "State institutions are not receptive to civil
society initiatives," said the UNDP official. Therefore, more
pressure must be put on "official local institutions and not
just state government," he added.
Compounding these obstacles are the difficult situations in which
some social organisations work, particularly those defending human
rights, which continue to be targets of intimidation. In 2005, 193
activists were victims of attacks, according to the Office of the
Human Rights Ombudsman. Most were social and human rights activists,
followed by justice officials and journalists. Only 28 percent of
the attackers have been identified; the accused include members
of the National Civil Police.
Luis Felipe Polo, adviser to Guatemala's vice president, admitted
to IPS that activists are in need of better State protection, and
said "the issue of security is being given serious attention."
This insecurity complicates the work of civil society, but non-governmental
organisations are willing to persevere. "Major mobilisations
are still necessary to make ourselves heard," said Pérez,
on behalf of the country's campesinos. (END/2006)
From: http://ipsnews.net
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