Guatemala, where the president, Otto Pérez Molina, is attempting to hold onto his office despite growing calls demanding his resignation. The president has faced months of massive protests amidst a multimillion-dollar corruption scandal in which importers paid bribes to Tax Authority officials to obtain discounts. Over the weekend, President Pérez Molina’s Cabinet stepped down. The scandal has also led to the arrest of top officials including the former vice president, Roxana Baldetti, who was arrested Friday on corruption charges. On Saturday, crowds rallied outside the presidential palace chanting “Resign now!” and waving Guatemalan flags. On Sunday, the Roman Catholic Church joined in calling for the president’s resignation.
Allan Nairn talking:
there’s a popular uprising that may bring down the president, General Pérez Molina. It’s based on corruption, but Pérez Molina was also involved in mass murder during the 1980s, when he was the field commander in the Ixil zone for the Ríos Montt program of slaughter against the indigenous Mayan population. Pérez Molina was also on the payroll of the CIA when he served as chief of intelligence for the G2. The program of massacre by Ríos Montt was backed by the United States, by the Reagan administration. They got arms from the U.S. They got arms from Israel with U.S. help. Reagan said that, that government was getting a bum rap on human rights. And this is as they were sweeping through the mountains decapitating, raping, slicing open pregnant women with their machetes, executing whole villages at point-blank range. They were the ISIS of their day. And now, one of the field commanders for that slaughter is the president, and there’s a chance he could be brought down, but on other grounds.
Ríos Montt, who was the dictator at the time, was brought to trial by a Guatemalan court as a result of popular pressure and some brave prosecutors and judges. He was convicted of genocide. He was sentenced to 80 years. The oligarchy demanded that that sentence be set aside. But tomorrow, Ríos Montt’s trial is due to resume. He’s trying to dodge accountability, claiming health problems. It’s a moment where the entire system of Guatemala is shaking. And in some senses, Guatemala is leading the world. They’ve achieved a level of civilization far higher than that of the U.S. It’s inconceivable that the U.S. could bring an American president to trial in an American court for mass murder of civilians. But Guatemala has done that. And now the people who are in the streets demonstrating are trying to take it farther by bringing down a sitting president.
September of 1982 in the Ixil triangle in the mountains of Guatemala, one of the many zones where the population is indigenous Mayan. In that video, that’s for a film that I worked on with Mikael Wahlforss and Jean-Marie Simon. And Pérez Molina at that time was using an alias. I didn’t know Pérez Molina was his name. He was calling himself “Mayor Tito,” Major Tito. And he told me that all the families here are with the guerrilla. His men, those below him, described in detail how they would go into villages, strangle civilians, execute them on the spot, return and bomb their villages, chase fleeing people into the hills and kill them. And then, some of the people who we were able to speak to on the side, some of the survivors who had been placed in army concentration camps, they verified these accounts by the soldiers. And that man, Pérez Molina, later rose to become chief of intelligence, on the payroll of the CIA, and now is president of Guatemala.
The U.S. is trying to prop up Pérez Molina. They told him not to resign, and he’s refusing to resign. But it’s unclear what’s going to happen. People are in the streets. A new election is scheduled for September 6th. People are calling for a postponement.
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Allan Nairn, longtime journalist who has covered Guatemala since the 1980s.
— source democracynow.org
This documentary explains more: Headline Today: Guatemala