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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 04:10 AM
Original message
Gunmen kill Guatemalan prosecutor
Gunmen kill Guatemalan prosecutor
Posted on Mon, Jul. 14, 2008


GUATEMALA CITY -- (AP) -- Unidentified assailants have killed an assistant prosecutor who was working on the case of three slain Salvadoran parliamentarians.

Investigator Alvaro Matus said Carlos Martínez was sprayed with bullets Monday in a rural area east of Guatemala City. Authorities have no suspects.

Martínez was trying to determine who committed the jailhouse killing of four detectives held on accusations that they had killed three members of the Central American Parliament. Martinez had accused 13 inmates, but a judge acquitted them.

The charred bodies of three parliament members and their driver were found in February 2007. No motive has been determined for the crime.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/americas/story/604718.html

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 06:57 AM
Response to Original message
1. Better story from this BBC article: Gunmen kill Guatemala prosecutor
Page last updated at 08:39 GMT, Tuesday, 15 July 2008 09:39 UK
Gunmen kill Guatemala prosecutor

Police in Guatemala say gunmen have shot dead a state prosecutor who was investigating the murders of three Salvadorean politicians last year.

Juan Carlos Martinez was shot while driving near his home in a suburb of Guatemala City, police said.

The authorities say drug gangs were behind the killing of the Salvadorean politicians, who were members of the Central American Parliament.

Guatemala has one of the highest murder rates in Latin America.

It has become a major hub for drug traffickers moving cocaine from Colombia through Mexico to the US.

The bodies of the three Salvadorean politicians were found in a burnt and bullet-ridden vehicle in February 2007.

The alleged members of a drug cartel are believed to have been behind their kidnap and killings.

Four policemen who were arrested in connection with the murders were subsequently killed in prison before they could testify in court.

More:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7506694.stm
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 07:31 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Stroll down memory lane, a reference to the death squad monster, D'Aubuisson, father of one of the
murdered El Salvadoran politicians:
Besides, Helms was never one to have much sympathy for the dead. When told of death squads massacring civilians on orders from Roberto D'Aubuisson -- one of the many abhorrent dictators he befriended -- Helms famously brushed the crimes away with, "All I know is that D'Aubuisson is a free-enterprise man and deeply religious."

Helms was so blinded by his hatred of communism that he supported some of this hemisphere's most vicious fascists, a leap in logic Bob Dylan once brilliantly lampooned as fighting a cold by taking a shot of malaria. Helms was a big fan of Chile's Augusto Pinochet, whose regime "disappeared" nearly 2,300 people -- some still unaccounted for -- and tortured roughly ten times that many. Raoul Cedras in Haiti, the Contras in Nicaragua, D'Aubuisson in El Salvador -- as long as they professed opposition to Marxism, Helms never cared how much innocent blood stained their hands.

The senator who holds his former seat, Elizabeth Dole, said last weekend that, "Jesse was indeed a watchdog for North Carolina and for the nation." That metaphor might have been a bit too apt. Like some literal watchdogs in the South of his heyday, Helms spent quite a bit of his time viciously attacking black people who merely dared to demand basic civil rights.

He sicced himself on black Africans abroad, as he tried ending sanctions against the segregationist regime in what was then Rhodesia and was such an ardent supporter of apartheid in South Africa that he pointedly refused to attend an address to Congress by Nelson Mandela.

He was even more rabid toward African Americans at home.
http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/contributors/1685

If our right-wing fascists think we all don't have their number, they are wildly confused.

A fervent anti-Communist, his closest known foreign associate was Roberto d'Aubuisson, the leader of the El Salvadorean Right and the man identified by the State Department as responsible for the assassination of archbishop Oscar Romero while he was saying Mass.
http://3quarksdaily.blogs.com/3quarksdaily/2008/07/remembering-jes.html

Finally, Helms' strong if sometimes shadowy support for violent, anti-democratic forces abroad, from South Africa to El Salvador, might have given media outlets further pause in describing him as a mere conservative; few probed his ties to groups that would more accurately be described as fascist. One exception was an editorial in the Boston Globe (8/23/01): "Helms' role in supporting foreign thugs such as Roberto D'Aubuisson, the cashiered Salvadoran major who ran death squads responsible for savage political murders, did lasting harm to America's good name. In South Africa, Argentina, Mozambique, Honduras, and Nicaragua, Helms cooperated with racists and fascists who have nothing in common with the ideals of American democracy."
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1871

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-15-08 07:15 AM
Response to Original message
2. Background from the two sets of murders: A Murder Spree in Central America
A Murder Spree in Central America
Monday, Mar. 05, 2007 By MICA ROSENBERG/GUATEMALA CITY

Just as President Bush plans to visit Central America, the demons of corruption, drug dealing and murder there that have long been kept under wraps, either by official complicity or negligence, are beginning to attract public scrutiny. Eight brazen and grisly murders —three Salvadoran congressmen and their driver, and four Guatemalan policemen —have shaken the two countries' governments and shed light on the criminal underworld operating with impunity from inside police forces.

The scandal began two weeks ago when the bodies of the congressmen, who were representatives to the Central American parliament, and their driver were found bullet-ridden and charred on an abandoned dirt road in Guatemala. Days later, four Guatemalan policemen — including the head of the organized crime investigation unit — were accused of the murders. But before they could be tried for the crimes, the four were assassinated inside their maximum-security prison cell, left face down in a pool of blood, shot with their throats slit. Authorities and opposition politicians in Guatemala say the policemen were part of a group operating within Guatemala's security forces who were responsible for drug trafficking and death-squad style killings. The four were murdered before they could reveal the full extent of their allegedly illegal activities. "They were killed to keep the lid on Pandora's box," said El Salvador's chief of police Rodrigo Avila.

The reputations of the conservative governments of Tony Saca in El Salvador and Oscar Berger in Guatemala, two of Washington's few remaining allies in Latin America, have taken a severe hit. The countries share a southern border and have two of the strongest economies in Central America. Both are members of the Central American Free Trade Agreement and are seen by the U.S. as partners in the war on drugs. Just last fall the Bush Administration nominated Guatemala to take the Latin American seat on the U.N. Security Council as a means of shutting out Venezuela. The U.S. government says the seven-country region, a land bridge between South America and Mexico, has become a major transit route for over 75% of cocaine moving from Colombia up through Mexico and into the U.S. The fallout from the ongoing investigations, now being conducted with the help of U.S. FBI agents, will surely cast a shadow over the visit later this month of President Bush to Guatemala, his second-to-last stop on a five country tour of Latin America.

For Berger, it means a failure of his campaign promise four years ago to clean up Guatemala's politics, notoriously corrupt since the country's 36-year civil war ended a decade ago. During that war, which claimed nearly a quarter-million lives, the Guatemalan military launched a scorched-earth counterinsurgency campaign against leftist guerillas, massacring entire Mayan villages accused of supporting the rebels. Many wartime figures were never prosecuted for their offenses, and human rights groups and the U.N. have warned that former state security forces — laid off after the peace accords mandated a downsizing of the military — could be involved in the drug smuggling rings.

More:
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1595944,00.html
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