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Protests follow judges’ rulings in Guatemalan war crimes trial

Ixil indigenous women hold up flowers outside court in Guatemala City, Friday, April 19, 2013.
(Luis Soto / AP)
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MEXICO CITY – Contradictory court judgments in the war crimes trial of former Guatemalan dictator Gen. Efrain Rios Montt this week set off protests in Guatemala City and prompted rebukes from human rights organizations.

On Friday, Judge Jazmin Barrios, who is presiding over Rios Montt’s genocide trial in Guatemala’s capital, called court to order despite a ruling by another judge a day earlier granting an appeal by the defense to annul the case based on a technicality. The Thursday ruling was “illegal,” Barrios said.

Rios Montt’s defense did not show up in court Friday, however, leaving the 86-year-old former military ruler alone at the defense table.

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Without counsel for the defendants, the trial was suspended, prompting crowds to rally in protest.

The developments came after nearly a month of wrenching courtroom testimony from survivors of a counterinsurgency campaign that brutally targeted members of the Ixil Maya minority in 1982 and 1983, considered the bloodiest period of Guatemala’s 36-year civil war.

Prosecutors say Rios Montt and his former military intelligence chief, Jose Mauricio Rodriguez Sanchez, ordered a campaign to wipe out the Ixil Maya, including women, children, and elderly adults. Truth commission reports have found that military commanders believed that Marxist guerrillas had indoctrinated the community, making them enemies.

In the protests Friday, demonstrators called for “justice” and chanted, “Genocide did happen.” The cries were a direct response to a media campaign launched this week by Guatemala’s right-wing claiming that an effort to wipe out an ethnic minority did not occur during Central America’s bloodiest war.

Meanwhile, prosecutors said they would file appeals and were also reportedly forming a separate procedural case against Carol Patricia Flores, the judge who annulled the trial Thursday.

The court decisions pushed the legal drama into murky political territory and complicated the Rios Montt trial for Guatemala’s judiciary. Guatemala’s current president, Otto Perez Molina, was implicated by a witness this month in the executions of Ixil Maya villagers.

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“This is a blow to the numerous victims of the atrocities committed during Guatemala’s civil war, who have been waiting for more than 30 years for justice to be done and for remedies,” United Nations human rights spokesman Rupert Colville said in Geneva on Friday.

In New York, leading human-rights groups also denounced the Thursday ruling and called for Guatemala’s highest court to reverse it and allow the Rios Montt trial to resume.

“For years, this case and ones like it have been delayed by dilatory maneuvers and acts of intimidation against victims and justice officials alike,” said Reed Brody, senior counsel at Human Rights Watch. “This hyper-technical decision is deeply troubling and should be reversed immediately so that the trial can continue.”

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