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HISTORY
The Mayan
civilization flourished throughout much of Guatemala and the
surrounding region long before the Spanish arrived, but it
was already in decline when the Mayans were defeated by Pedro
de Alvarado in 1523-24. During Spanish colonial rule, most
of Central America came under the control of the Captaincy
General of Guatemala.
The first
colonial capital, Ciudad Vieja, was ruined by floods and an
earthquake in 1542. Survivors founded Antigua, the second
capital, in 1543. In the 17th century, Antigua became one
of the richest capitals in the New World. Always vulnerable
to volcanic eruptions, floods, and earthquakes, Antigua was
destroyed by two earthquakes in 1773. The remnants of its
Spanish colonial architecture have been preserved as a national
monument. The third capital, Guatemala City, was founded in
1776, after Antigua was abandoned.
Guatemala
gained independence from Spain on September 15, 1821; it briefly
became part of the Mexican Empire, and then for a period belonged
to a federation called the United Provinces of Central America.
From the mid-19th century until the mid-1980s, the country
passed through a series of dictatorships, insurgencies (particularly
beginning in the 1960s), coups, and stretches of military
rule with only occasional periods of representative government.
1944
to 1986
In 1944,
Gen. Jorge Ubico's dictatorship was overthrown by the "October
Revolutionaries," a group of dissident military officers,
students, and liberal professionals. A civilian President,
Juan Jose Arevalo, was elected in 1945 and held the presidency
until 1951. Social reforms initiated by Arevalo were continued
by his successor, Col. Jacobo Arbenz. Arbenz permitted the
communist Guatemalan Labor Party to gain legal status in 1952.
By the mid-point of Arbenz's term, communists controlled key
peasant organizations, labor unions, and the governing political
party, holding some key government positions. Despite
most Guatemalans' attachment to the original ideals of the
1944 uprising, some private sector leaders and the military
viewed Arbenz's policies as a menace. The army refused to
defend the Arbenz government when a U.S.-backed group led
by Col. Carlos Castillo Armas invaded the country from Honduras
in 1954 and quickly took over the government. Gen. Miguel
Ydigoras Fuentes took power in 1958 following the murder
of Colonel Castillo Armas.
In response
to the increasingly autocratic rule of Ydigoras Fuentes, a
group of junior military officers revolted in 1960. When they
failed, several went into hiding and established close ties
with Cuba. This group became the nucleus of the forces that
were in armed insurrection against the government for the
next 36 years. Four principal left-wing guerrilla groups--the
Guerrilla Army of the Poor (EGP), the Revolutionary Organization
of Armed People (ORPA), the Rebel Armed Forces (FAR), and
the Guatemalan Labor Party (PGT)--conducted economic sabotage
and targeted government installations and members of government
security forces in armed attacks. These organizations combined
to form the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity (URNG)
in1982. At the same time, extreme right-wing groups of self-appointed
vigilantes, including the Secret Anti-Communist Army (ESA)
and the White Hand, tortured and murdered students, professionals,
and peasants suspected of involvement in leftist activities.
Shortly
after President Julio Cesar Mendez Montenegro took office
in 1966, the army launched a major counterinsurgency campaign
that largely broke up the guerrilla movement in the countryside.
The guerrillas then concentrated their attacks in Guatemala
City, where they assassinated many leading figures, including
U.S. Ambassador John Gordon Mein in 1968. Between 1966 and
1982, there was a series of military or military-dominated
governments.
On March
23, 1982, army troops commanded by junior officers staged
a coup to prevent the assumption of power by Gen. Angel Anibal
Guevara, the hand-picked candidate of outgoing President and
Gen. Romeo Lucas Garcia. They denounced Guevara's electoral
victory as fraudulent. The coup leaders asked retired Gen.
Efrain Rios Montt to negotiate the departure of Lucas and
Guevara. Rios Montt had been the candidate of the Christian
Democracy Party in the 1974 presidential elections and was
widely regarded as having been denied his own victory through
fraud.
Rios Montt
was at this time a lay pastor in the evangelical protestant
"Church of the Word." In his 1982 inaugural address,
he stated that his presidency resulted from the will of God.
He formed a three-member military junta that annulled the
1965 constitution, dissolved Congress, suspended political
parties, and canceled the electoral law. After a few months,
Rios Montt dismissed his junta colleagues and assumed the
de facto title of "President of the Republic."
Guerrilla
forces and their leftist allies denounced Rios Montt. Rios
Montt sought to defeat the guerrillas with military actions
and economic reforms; in his words, "rifles and beans."
In May 1982, the Conference of Catholic Bishops accused Rios
Montt of being responsible for increased militarization of
the country and for continuing military massacres of civilians.
General Rios Montt was quoted in the New York Times of July
18, 1982 as telling an audience of indigenous Guatemalans,
"If you are with us, we'll feed you; if not, we'll kill
you."
The government
began to form local civilian defense patrols (PACs). Participation
was in theory voluntary, but in reality, many Guatemalans,
especially in the heavily indigenous northwest, had no choice
but to join either the PACs or the guerrillas. Rios Montt's
conscript army and PACs recaptured essentially all guerrilla
territory--guerrilla activity lessened and was largely limited
to hit-and-run operations. However, Rios Montt won this partial
victory at an enormous cost in civilian deaths.
Rios Montt's
brief presidency was probably the most violent period of the
36-year internal conflict, which resulted in about 200,000
deaths of mostly unarmed indigenous civilians. Although leftist
guerrillas and right-wing death squads also engaged in summary
executions, forced disappearances, and torture of noncombatants,
the vast majority of human rights violations were carried
out by the Guatemalan military and the PACs they controlled.
The internal conflict is described in great detail in the
reports of the Historical Clarification Commission (CEH) and
the Archbishop's Office for Human Rights (ODHAG). The CEH
estimates that government forces were responsible for 93%
of the violations; ODHAG earlier estimated that government
forces were responsible for 80%.
On August
8, 1983, Rios Montt was deposed by his own Minister of Defense,
Gen. Oscar Humberto Mejia Victores, who succeeded him as de
facto President of Guatemala. Mejia justified his coup, saying
that "religious fanatics" were abusing their positions
in the government and also because of "official corruption."
Seven people were killed in the coup, although Rios Montt
survived to found a political party (the Guatemalan Republic
Front) and to be elected President of Congress in 1995 and
2000. Awareness in the United States of the conflict in Guatemala,
and its ethnic dimension, increased with the 1983 publication
of the book I, Rigoberta Menchu, An Indian Woman in Guatemala
. The book recounts the life of the title character, a young
woman whose often tragic life experiences reflect the experiences
common to many indigenous people suffering under that nation’s
injustices.
General
Mejia allowed a managed return to democracy in Guatemala,
starting with a July 1, 1984 election for a Constituent Assembly
to draft a democratic constitution. On May 30, 1985, after
9 months of debate, the Constituent Assembly finished drafting
a new constitution, which took effect immediately. Vinicio
Cerezo, a civilian politician and the presidential candidate
of the Christian Democracy Party, won the first election held
under the new constitution with almost 70% of the vote, and
took office on January 14, 1986.
1986
to 2003
Upon its
inauguration in January 1986, President Cerezo's civilian
government announced that its top priorities would be to end
the political violence and establish the rule of law. Reforms
included new laws of habeas corpus and amparo (court-ordered
protection), the creation of a legislative human rights committee,
and the establishment in 1987 of the Office of Human Rights
Ombudsman. The Supreme Court also embarked on a series of
reforms to fight corruption and improve legal system efficiency.
With Cerezo's election, the military moved away from governing
and returned to the more traditional role of providing internal
security, specifically by fighting armed insurgents. The first
2 years of Cerezo's administration were characterized by a
stable economy and a marked decrease in political violence.
Dissatisfied
military personnel made two coup attempts in May 1988 and
May 1989, but military leadership supported the constitutional
order. The government was heavily criticized for its unwillingness
to investigate or prosecute cases of human rights violations.
The final 2 years of Cerezo's government were also marked
by a failing economy, strikes, protest marches, and allegations
of widespread corruption. The government's inability to deal
with many of the nation's problems--such as infant mortality,
illiteracy, deficient health and social services, and rising
levels of violence--contributed to popular discontent.
Presidential
and congressional elections were held on November 11, 1990.
After a runoff ballot, Jorge Serrano was inaugurated on January
14, 1991, thus completing the first transition from one democratically
elected civilian government to another. Because his Movement
of Solidarity Action (MAS) Party gained only 18 of 116 seats
in Congress, Serrano entered into a tenuous alliance with
the Christian Democrats and the National Union of the Center
(UCN).
The Serrano
administration's record was mixed. It had some success in
consolidating civilian control over the army, replacing a
number of senior officers and persuading the military to participate
in peace talks with the URNG. Serrano took the politically
unpopular step of recognizing the sovereignty of Belize. The
Serrano government reversed the economic slide it inherited,
reducing inflation and boosting real growth.
On May
25, 1993, Serrano illegally dissolved Congress and the Supreme
Court and tried to restrict civil freedoms, allegedly to fight
corruption. The "autogolpe" (or self-initiated coup)
failed due to unified, strong protests by most elements of
Guatemalan society, international pressure, and the army's
enforcement of the decisions of the Court of Constitutionality,
which ruled against the attempted takeover. In the face of
this resistance, Serrano fled the country.
On June
5, 1993, the Congress, pursuant to the 1985 constitution,
elected the Human Rights Ombudsman, Ramiro De Leon Carpio,
to complete Serrano's presidential term. De Leon, not a member
of any political party and lacking a political base but with
strong popular support, launched an ambitious anticorruption
campaign to "purify" Congress and the Supreme Court,
demanding the resignations of all members of the two bodies.
Despite
considerable congressional resistance, presidential and popular
pressure led to a November 1993 agreement brokered by the
Catholic Church between the administration and Congress. This
package of constitutional reforms was approved by popular
referendum on January 30, 1994. In August 1994, a new Congress
was elected to complete the unexpired term. Controlled by
the anti-corruption parties--the populist Guatemalan Republican
Front (FRG) headed by ex-Gen. Efrain Rios Montt, and the center-right
National Advancement Party (PAN)--the new Congress began to
move away from the corruption that characterized its predecessors.
Under
De Leon, the peace process, now brokered by the United Nations,
took on new life. The government and the URNG signed agreements
on human rights (March 1994), resettlement of displaced persons
(June 1994), historical clarification (June 1994), and indigenous
rights (March 1995). They also made significant progress on
a socioeconomic and agrarian agreement. National elections
for president, the Congress, and municipal offices were held
in November 1995. With almost 20 parties competing in the
first round, the presidential election came down to a January
7, 1996 runoff in which PAN candidate Alvaro Arzu defeated
Alfonso Portillo of the FRG by just over 2% of the vote. Arzu
won because of his strength in Guatemala City, where he had
previously served as mayor, and in the surrounding urban area.
Portillo won all of the rural departments except Peten. Under
the Arzu administration, peace negotiations were concluded,
and the government signed peace accords ending the 36-year
internal conflict in December 1996. The human rights situation
also improved during Arzu's tenure, and steps were taken to
reduce the influence of the military in national affairs.
Guatemala
held presidential, legislative, and municipal elections on
November 7, 1999, and a runoff presidential election on December
26. In the first round the Guatemalan Republican Front (FRG)
won 63 of 113 legislative seats, while the National Advancement
Party (PAN) won 37. The New Nation Alliance (ANN) won 9 legislative
seats, and three minority parties won the remaining four.
In the runoff on December 26, Alfonso Portillo (FRG) won 68%
of the vote to 32% for Oscar Berger (PAN). Portillo carried
all 22 departments and Guatemala City, which was considered
the PAN's stronghold. Portillo was criticized during the campaign
for his relationship with the FRG's chairman, former Gen.
Efrain Rios Montt, the de facto President of Guatemala in
1982-83. Many charged that some of the worst human rights
violations of the internal conflict were committed under Rios
Montt's rule. Nevertheless, Portillo's impressive electoral
triumph, with two-thirds of the vote in the second round,
gave him a claim to a mandate from the people to carry out
his reform program.
President
Portillo pledged to maintain strong ties to the United States,
further enhance Guatemala's growing cooperation with Mexico,
and participate actively in the integration process in Central
America and the Western Hemisphere. Domestically, he vowed
to support continued liberalization of the economy, increase
investment in human capital and infrastructure, establish
an independent central bank, and increase revenue by stricter
enforcement of tax collections rather than increasing taxation.
Portillo also promised to continue the peace process, appoint
a civilian defense minister, reform the armed forces, replace
the military presidential security service with a civilian
one, and strengthen protection of human rights. He appointed
a pluralist cabinet, including indigenous members and others
not affiliated with the FRG ruling party.
Progress in carrying out Portillo's reform agenda was slow
at best, with the notable exception of a series of reforms
sponsored by the World Bank to modernize bank regulation and
criminalize money laundering. The administration made some
progress on such issues as taking state responsibility for
past human rights cases, supporting human rights in international
forums, and pressing labor rights reforms, but it failed to
show significant advances on combating impunity in past human
rights cases, military reforms, and legislation to increase
political participation. It renounced a so-called Fiscal Pact
that had been established together with business and civil
society groups to finance the reforms called for under the
peace accords. The government later was involved in a
series of high-level corruption scandals, none of which resulted
in successful prosecution of those responsible. The United
States determined in April 2003 that Guatemala had failed
to demonstrably adhere to its international counternarcotics
commitments during the previous year. The popularity of the
government, as measured by opinion polls, steadily declined
as evidence of corruption and mismanagement accumulated.
A high
crime rate and a serious and worsening public corruption problem
were cause for concern for the Government of Guatemala. These
problems, in addition to issues related to the often violent
harassment and intimidation by unknown assailants of human
rights activists, judicial workers, journalists, and witnesses
in human rights trials, led the government to begin serious
attempts in 2001 to open a national dialogue to discuss the
considerable challenges facing the country. This dialogue
has not taken place, despite the creation of the Guatemalan
Forum, a coalition of civil society and private sector interests
calling for political reforms.
National
elections were held on November 9, 2003. Oscar Berger Perdomo
of the Grand National Alliance (GANA) party won the election,
receiving 54.1% of the vote. His opponent, Alvarado Colom
Caballeros of the Nation Unity for Hope (UNE) party received
49.1% of the vote. The new government assumed office on January
14, 2004.
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