Guatemalans Protest Firing of Corruption Prosecutor

Aug 2, 2021
12:14 PM

Protesters block the Inter-American Highway in Totonicapán, Guatemala after Indigenous leaders here called for a nationwide strike to pressure Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei to resign, Thursday, July 29, 2021. The protest comes in response to the firing of Special Prosecutor Against Impunity Juan Francisco Sandoval by Attorney General Consuelo Porras. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

GUATEMALA: The firing of an anti-corruption prosecutor has sparked an angry reaction from civil society and demands for the resignations of President Alejandro Giammattei and Attorney General María Consuelo Porras.

Porras came under fire last month when she removed Juan Francisco Sandoval, a special prosecutor appointed to support the CICIG, an international body set up to investigate corruption in Guatemala. After the CICIG was disbanded in 2019 by President Jimmy Morales, Sandoval’s office took over many of the international body’s investigations.

Porras’ rationale for firing Sandoval was that the latter had refused to follow instructions and had interfered with the functioning of her office. In a press conference after his dismissal, Sandoval called the firing “illegal” and pledged to contest it.

On Friday, Sandoval met with representatives from the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden in Washington, D.C. The U.S. State Department also announced last week that it was temporarily suspending anti-corruption cooperation with Guatemala because of Sandoval’s firing.

SOUTHERN CONE

BRAZIL: Supporters of President Jair Bolsonaro took to the streets across the country on Sunday to demand changes to voting laws in order to prevent fraud in next year’s presidential elections. The protesters were demanding that voting machines print paper receipts, making a physical recount possible. President Bolsonaro spoke to the demonstrators over videoconference, casting doubt on the legitimacy of the election’s outcome over a year before the first votes are cast, and suggesting that he would not accept an electoral defeat.

CHILE: Workers at the Escondida copper mine in northern Chile voted overwhelmingly last week to reject a contract offer from BHP, the company that owns the mine. The company has requested government mediation, during which workers will be required to continue working for a period of up to 10 days. If an agreement is not reached by the end of that period, the union will begin a work stoppage. Escondida is the biggest copper mine in the world, accounting for about 5% of global annual production. In 2017, a 44-day strike by workers at the mine contributed to a decline of 1.3% of the country’s GDP.

THE ANDES

PERU: Leftist elementary school teacher Pedro Castillo was inaugurated as president of Peru last week, inheriting a sharply divided congress in which his Perú Libre party holds only 37 of 130 seats and the world’s worst COVID-19 death rate. Castillo, who has not previously held public office, is the fifth person in five years to hold the office of president of Peru. In his inauguration speech, he promised to create a national health system and write a new constitution, while reassuring his opponents that he will respect private property. On Friday, Castillo appointed former World Bank economist Pedro Francke as finance minister in a move that was seen as a further reassurance to moderates.

COLOMBIA: Prosecutors have brought charges against former Colombian Army General Mario Montoya for his involvement in 104 extrajudicial executions between 2007 and 2008. The killings were part of the “false positives” scandal, in which over 6,400 civilians were murdered by the Army before being registered as guerrilla fighters killed in combat. Montoya, who was Colombia’s top general from 2006 to 2008, is being charged with several counts of aggravated homicide. He is accused of incentivizing combat deaths, a policy which prosecutors say led to the murders of non-combatants.

THE CARIBBEAN

HAITI: Police are looking for a former Supreme Court justice and longtime political rival of deceased former President Jovenel Moïse for alleged involvement in the president’s July 7 killing. Police say that Judge Wendelle Coq-Thelot met with the mercenaries who killed President Moïse at her home twice before the attack. Moïse removed Coq-Thelot from the Supreme Court in February of this year along with two other justices, accusing her of having been involved in a coup plot. Coq-Thelot’s location is unknown, and her lawyers say the arrest warrant is illegal and are asking a judge to dismiss it.

CUBA/UNITED STATES: The United States Treasury Department announced additional sanctions against the government of Cuba on Friday, in response to the repression of anti-government protests over the past month. The sanctions extend existing bans on international travel for officials in Cuba’s national police force.

Thousands of Cubans in cities across the island took to the streets early last month to protest food and medicine shortages. The protests were met with repression by police, and as many as 700 people have been arrested, according to the NGO Cubalex. Meanwhile, the governments of Mexico and Bolivia began sending thousands of tonnes of medical supplies and food to the Caribbean country last week.

CENTRAL AMERICA

EL SALVADOR/NICARAGUA: Nicaragua has granted nationality to former Salvadoran President Salvador Sánchez Cerén, after prosecutors in his home country issued an arrest warrant against him for corruption crimes. Sánchez Cerén, who served as president from 2014 to 2019, has lived in Nicaragua since 2020, and is a rival of current president Nayib Bukele. Both politicians were members of the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) party until Bukele was expelled in 2017.

Sánchez Cerén is accused of illicit enrichment during his term as vice president from 2009 to 2014. His naturalization by Nicaragua will protect him from extradition, as Nicaragua’s constitution prohibits the extradition of its citizens.

NORTH AMERICA

MEXICO: Mexicans voted in a referendum Sunday to decide whether or not to investigate living former presidents for corruption and other crimes. According to preliminary counts released Sunday night, between 89 and 96% of those who participated would like to see former presidents investigated. However, turnout was only around 7% of eligible voters, far from the 40% necessary for the referendum to be legally binding. Leaders of the ruling Morena party said that they would like to see some kind of truth commission regardless of the outcome of the vote. The opposition PAN party criticized the government’s decision to hold the referendum, calling it “a presidential spectacle.”

MEXICO: President Andrés Manuel López Obrador issued an executive order to release over 12,000 people being held in federal prisons. The prisoners to be released include some older adults, victims of torture and people who are waiting to be sentenced. López Obrador also encouraged state governments to release people from state prisons if they fulfill the same characteristics. On Friday, the government of Mexico City announced that it will begin investigating who should be released from its prisons.

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