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The real test for Paz and her prosecutors will be parlaying the arrests into just trials, said Anita Isaacs, a longtime Guatemala scholar and a professor of political science at Haverford College in Pennsylvania. She pointed out that the public ministry belongs to a judicial system still considered highly inefficient and, in many ways, corrupt. Paz, for one, appears to be taking that charge seriously. Her aggressive prosecutions and reputation for staying above corruption have won her the backing of the U.S. government, which provides millions in aid to Guatemala and has some 200 marines in the country on anti-drug missions. Paz is the only senior Guatemalan official to have met with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Diplomatic insiders say the U.S. has made no secret of its insistence that Perez keep Paz, support the CICIG and reform the country's weak national justice system. "Claudia Paz is backed by the international community because of her efficiency and professionalism. That's something President Otto Perez Molina recognizes and respects, too," said Rene Mauricio Valdes, resident coordinator of the United Nations in Guatemala. Military action against civilians is a highly sensitive topic in a country scarred by a 36-year war between right-wing paramilitary groups and Marxist guerrillas that led to the deaths of some 200,000 people
-most of them Mayan Indians. Many were raped, tortured and executed in mass killings. Meanwhile, conservative voices, mostly from Guatemala's business elite, warned against comparing the protester shooting outside the town of Totonicapan to the civil war. "We must be calm and be mindful not to use this event to rehash the past," said Andres Castillo, president of the Coordinating Committee of Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial, and Financial Businesses. His office filed an official complaint with the public ministry that the indigenous groups were violating members' right of movement by blockading the highway.
Guatemala has also long been under international pressure to bring those responsible for war crimes to justice. A 2006 treaty-level agreement with the United Nations created the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala, known by its Spanish acronym CICIG. The independent body has 50 international prosecutors, police officers and attorneys charged with investigating a limited number of sensitive cases. CICIG has successfully prosecuted several high-profile cases but its longer-term mission is strengthening the attorney general's office and other state institutions before the commission leaves Guatemala, expected after 2015. It's overseen the hiring of hundreds of prosecutors, many assigned to new investigative units, and helped train them to use forensic evidence in trials. According to a public ministry report, the ballistic evidence shows soldiers opened fire at the protesters, contradicting initial claims by the president and other government ministers that the soldiers were unarmed and later claims that they were armed but fired only into the air. The president told reporters last week that armed security guards had driven the soldiers to the protest and one of the guards apparently was the first to start shooting. Then an unspecified number of soldiers fired to protect themselves from what they considered a threatening crowd, Perez said. Paz said all soldiers who fired their weapons were arrested. Ricardo Guzman, deputy undersecretary general for the attorney general's office, said Guatemala's defense ministry cooperated fully with the investigation, providing the roster of every soldier present at the scene. Guzman said all of the soldiers' weapons were surrendered to his office for investigation and investigators had matched the bullet fragments from each body to specific soldiers' weapons. "What happened at Totonicapan was a terrible tragedy. But with this investigation we watched an independent public ministry at work," said Michael Frulhling, Swedish ambassador to Guatemala. Since CICIG's creation, Sweden has donated over $13 million to the commission. Alberto Brunori, a representative of the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Guatemala, said the public ministry's findings match those of his office. He said such results would have been unthinkable only a few years ago. "Paz y Paz's investigation proves two things: CICIG's ability to provide technical training and the level of professionalism the public ministry is acquiring," Brunori said.
[Associated
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