From Rights Action <[email protected]>
Subject President Arevalo & Semilla Party win Guatemalan elections
Date October 4, 2023 1:52 PM
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Rights Action September 2023 Newsletter

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President Arevalo & Semilla Party win Guatemalan elections
Will U.S., Canada & “international community” accept it?

Rights Action Newsletter September 2023
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Dear friends, I spent most of August in Guatemala, being there when the Semilla Party won a landslide victory in the Presidential elections.


PDF version: [link removed]

It is hard to overstate what a monumental shift the Semilla Party represents in Guatemala. Since a US-backed military coup ousted Guatemala’s last truly democratic government in 1954, Guatemalans have suffered under 69 years of military-backed, corrupt, “open for global business” regimes.

It is comparable, in some ways, to the 2021 election in Honduras when Xiomara Castro was elected president in a landslide victory that ousted the military-backed, corrupt, “open for global business” regime that, for 13 years, was headed by former President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who is now in jail in the US awaiting trial on charges of heading up a government and military-aided drug trafficking cartel.

“A triumphant day. A day of many tears”
End of U.S./Canadian-backed Narco-regime in Honduras
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This extraordinary achievement of the Guatemalan people should be celebrated, even as the traditional political, economic, military elites are pulling out all the stops to try and prevent the Semilla Party from taking over the executive branch of government during the transfer of power on January 14, 2024. To date, two plots to assassinate President-elect Bernardo Arevalo and VP-elect Karin Herrera have been thwarted ([link removed]).

As in Honduras, the challenges the Semilla Party faces to get to the transfer of power on January 14, 2024, let alone begin to re-build their democracy and rule of law, and begin to transform their country and society, government and state, come as much from outside their borders as from within.

Through January 14, 2024 and beyond, Rights Action will continue to fund and be involved in work in support of Guatemala’s return to democracy for the first time since 1954. For more information about this complicated struggle for a return to democracy in Guatemala, read our Election Watch Alerts here: [link removed].

Grahame Russell, [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])

***

Guatemalans Voted to End 69 Years of Corrupt Rule
Will U.S., Canada Accept It?
By Grahame Russell, August 25, 2023
Original version of this article was published by TRUTHOUT ([link removed])
On August 20, 2023, the Semilla Party’s Bernardo Arévalo and Karin Herrera were elected ([link removed]) president and vice president of Guatemala. This election will bring a formal end to 69 years of anti-democratic, military-backed, corrupt, “open-for-global-business” governments when the transition of power takes place on January 14, 2024. “The Supreme Electoral Tribunal has recognized the results and what the people have shouted is, ‘No more corruption,’” President-elect Arévalo said ([link removed]) in an August 20 press conference.

But Arévalo’s election won’t bring an end to the interests of an alliance of corrupt judges, prosecutors, politicians, and economic and military elites known as the “Covenant of the Corrupt ([link removed]) ,” who have run the country for decades. These elites, who now have to vacate the executive branch of government for at least four years, retain considerable control over most branches of the state and most institutions of the government. They dominate all sectors of Guatemala’s exploitative economy.

“The government can’t combat corruption because corruption is the government”
As millions of long dispossessed, impoverished Guatemalans, a majority being Indigenous Mayan peoples, celebrate the Semilla Party’s victory, seemingly impossible-to-overcome challenges still remain within its borders — challenges the incoming government will have to address and work to remedy.

But before it can get to work remedying the country’s systemic inequalities, the party will have to overcome ongoing “lawfare” attacks against its members, who face potential arrest on trumped-up charges. By legally attacking the Semilla Party, the Covenant of the Corrupt, which controls the attorney general’s office, hopes to render the Semilla Party itself illegal, leaving Arévalo and Herrera as an independent president and vice president.

Such attacks are also targeting the role of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal ([link removed]) in officializing the final vote count.

To understand Guatemala’s challenges going forward, we must ask questions about the role of the “international community”

Guatemala faces just as many challenges from outside its borders, namely the policies and actions of the United States-led “international community,” including Canada, the European Union, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and countless transnational companies that -over the past 69 years- have maintained beneficial political, military and economic relations with successive military-backed, Covenant of Corrupt governments.

“Bitter Fruit”: U.S. Military Coup
What would Guatemala be like today if the U.S. had not planned and orchestrated a military coup in 1954?

The June 27, 1954, “bitter fruit” coup ([link removed]) violently ended Guatemala’s only period of actual democracy, from 1944-1954, crushing 10 years of social, economic, land and human rights reforms that the governments of President Juan Jose Arévalo (father of President-elect Bernardo Arévalo) and President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman were working to implement.

“Glorious Victory,” by Diego Rivera, depicting 1954 U.S. coup that ousted the government of President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. In the foreground, Central Intelligence Agency Director Allen Dulles shakes hand of U.S.-selected coup “leader” Col. Castillo Armas. Dulles’s hand rests on bomb with face of President Dwight Eisenhower. Behind Dulles, his brother, State Department head John Foster Dulles, and Ambassador to Guatemala John Peurifoy, hand cash to Guatemalan military commanders. A Catholic priest officiates over slaughter of Mayan and other poor Guatemalans. Exploited workers carry United Fruit Company bananas.
The coup restored to power the traditional military-backed economic and political elites who had been in power from 1931-1944, during the U.S.-backed dictatorship of Gen. Jorge Ubico — precursors to Guatemala’s Covenant of Corrupt governments of today.

After refusing to establish diplomatic relations with the democratically elected governments in power from 1944-1954, Canada effectively legitimized the 1954 coup by establishing diplomatic relations with the military-backed government in 1961. Soon after, the Canadian government openly supported ([link removed]) the arrival of the world’s biggest nickel mining company at the time, the International Nickel Company, known as INCO, to take control of a vast swath of Mayan Q’eqchi’ territories and begin long history of violent, harmful and corrupt mining that continue today.

“Scorched Earth” Genocide
What would Guatemala be like today if the U.S. had not -in the name of “fighting communism”- backed the Guatemalan military and death squads during the state repression and terrorism of the late 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s?

Hundreds of thousands of mainly Indigenous Mayan people - young and old, men and women - were savagely massacred, tortured and “disappeared” ([link removed]) in “scorched earth” military campaigns in the highlands.
“President Rios Montt is a man of great personal integrity and commitment. I know he wants to improve the quality of life for all.” (President Ronald Reagan) Efrain Rios Montt was a US-trained army General and “president” of the military regime during one of the worst periods of US-backed scorched earth massacres and repression against Guatemala’s mainly Mayan population.
In four regions of the country ([link removed]) , genocides were carried out against the local Mayan populations. Millions of people were violently displaced from their homes and lands during the military campaigns, becoming desperately poor and internally displaced, or refugees seeking safe haven Mexico, the U.S. and beyond. Even today they are still being hunted and killed ([link removed]) by the regime.

Ignoring the Peace Accords
In 1996, comprehensive peace accords ([link removed]) were signed that set out serious reforms and changes to remedy most of Guatemala’s historic inequalities, injustices and systemic racism, formally ending decades of “internal conflict.” The reforms included, for example, comprehensive land reform, the establishment of the United Nations Truth Commission to investigate war crimes and crimes against humanity from 1960-1996, recognition of the rights of refugees to return home to their lands, long-overdue recognition of the rights of Indigenous (mainly Mayan) peoples.

The U.S., Canada, and much of the international community stated publicly they supported the full implementation of the accords, but in practice the countries ignored the reforms by not conditioning future political and economic relations on proper implementation of the accords.

What would Guatemala be like today if these accords had not been ignored ([link removed]) by ensuing Covenant of Corrupt governments and the U.S.-led international community? What if the U.S., Canada and international community had actually demanded full implementation of and compliance with the accords, instead of getting right back to “business as usual” — maintaining and expanding economic interests with 25 more years of repressive governments controlled by the Covenant of Corrupt elites right through until today?

***

The past can’t be changed, but asking these questions is more than rhetorical. Answering these questions will show what the policies and actions of the U.S., Canada and international community have actually been since 1954.

Hopefully, August 20, 2023, will mark a transformational before-and-after date in Guatemala’s history. The incoming Semilla Party government and Guatemalan people are already working — hopefully, cautiously, nervously — to begin to address the almost impossible-to-overcome challenges confronting the needs and well-being of the majority population.

Will U.S. and Canadian governments, politicians and media ask the hard questions and demand serious reforms and changes as to how they exercise and impose our power and interests on small countries around the world, or will they quickly get back to insisting on business as usual in support of their political and economic interests?

***

More information
* Rights Action’s “Guatemala Election Watch” alerts (www.rightsaction.org/emails)
* Twitter feeds of Festivales Solidarios (@festivalesgt) & Prensa Comunitaria (@PrensaCommunitar)
* Prensa Comunitaria’s daily news ([link removed])

Tax-Deductible Donations (Canada & U.S.)
To support land and environmental defenders, and democracy, human rights and justice struggles in Honduras and Guatemala, make check to "Rights Action" and mail to:
* US: Box 50887, Washington DC, 20091-0887
* Canada: Box 82858, RPO Cabbagetown, Toronto, ON, M5A 3Y2

Credit-card donations: [link removed]
Direct deposits, write to: [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
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