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GUATEMALA
Between the sword and impotence
BY NIDIA DIAZ—Granma
International staff writer—
AS during the crudest times of interventionism in
banana republics, James Derham, U.S. proconsul in
Guatemala, snuck into a session of Congress on April
18 to pressure legislators to approve – now! – a
complimentary law being demanded by the United
States so that the country definitely enters into a
Free Trade Agreement.
In
2005, the United States, Central American nations,
and the Dominican Republic signed a Free Trade
Agreement (FTA) which was set to go into effect
January 1, but has been blocked by the failure to
pass legislation that would protect this new form of
domination involved in those types of agreements.
To date, only El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua
have given their approval, changing their national
laws. The Costa Rican Congress has not yet ratified
the FTA and in Guatemala, the legislature is
debating between the trick of making them wait and
not appearing as servile to the master, or – before
destroying their inheritance – snatching at least a
few modifications so as not to affect the social
aspect to quite such an extent.
Nevertheless, the yankee representative needed
just a few minutes for Jorge Méndez Herbruger,
president of the Guatemalan Congress, to address his
colleagues with a request: "We are aware that there
are insufficient votes, but I would like to ask the
bloc leaders to be aware of the importance of the
law (which the United States is forcing us to
approve) in order for the FTA to go into effect on
May 1."
In order to do so, Congress must agree to the
modification of some 15 laws, just as Washington is
demanding. These include the current Penal Code, the
Trade Law, the Transactions Law, and Tax Law; those
related to fiscal stamps, financial products, and
banks; and those affecting telecommunications,
industrial property, intellectual property rights
and environmental protection.
These are modifications to the detriment of the
country’s sovereignty and the few labor and civil
rights that the Guatemalan people still have.
Meanwhile, according to an AP report, Guatemalan
President Oscar Berger stated a few days before
Derham’s visit to the Capitol: "They want to drive
us into situations that we cannot permit. We have
national laws that we must respect, that we cannot
change from one day to another because of a trade
agreement; moreover, it is a situation that United
States is aware of."
It is worth asking whether or not President Oscar
Berger knew that by signing the FTA with Washington,
he was handing over the country’s sovereignty, and
tying his own hands as the head of the executive
branch.
It would have been naïve on his part if he didn’t
even question how Guatemala would be affected after
the signing of the agreement.
The delay in approving complementary legislation
demanded by the empire is stalled for reasons that
include a lack of consensus for giving the green
light to compensatory social measures so that once
the FTA goes into effect, the most vulnerable
sectors of the population will not be affected. We’re
talking about 70% of the 12 million Guatemalans who
live in poverty.
In the midst of this gross and interventionist
push, the government is debating impotently, in
contrast with the resolute determination of
campesinos, indigenous peoples, workers and human
rights activists who have set forth a list of
demands, convening a peaceful national uprising that
included roadblocks.
The just and unanswered demands are for the
resolution to more than 1,000 agrarian conflicts; a
halt to evictions; cancellation of the debts of
hundreds of campesino families; a rural development
law; an end to mining concessions for foreign
companies; higher wages in diverse sectors, and the
suspension of a supposed education reform that could
lead that sector to privatization.
The protests have been organized by powerful
organizations, such as Union and People’s Action
United (UASP), which brings together 276 unions and
grass-roots groups; the National Indigenous and
Campesino Coordinating Committee; the National
Educators Assembly, and workers from the informal
economy, whose precarious situation is desperate.
It is also notable that rejection of the FTA was
at the center of their protests.
Of course, the protests left a total of 28
arrests and four campesinos injured as a consequence
of combined actions by the Army and police, who used
tear gas against the demonstrators.
Making the country ungovernable could be one of
the consequences that comes with this determination
of the people, which is why Vice President Eduardo
Stein, representing the government, held talks for
nine hours with protest organizers, and they reached
an agreement which, according to Juan Tiney, leader
of the National Indigenous and Campesino
Coordinating Committee, was "satisfactory, with the
most important result being the constitution of a
table for dialogue with decision-making abilities,
that includes the three powers of the State: the
executive, the legislative and the judicial."
The most pressing demands are for the Agreement
on Indigenous Identity and Rights, which proposes
access to the land, health and education, as well as
the issue of agrarian conflicts and the reactivation
of small producers.
The vice president assured them that everyone who
was arrested during the demonstrations would be
freed.
Doubtless, it was a day of combat and victory, in
which the government was obligated to listen to the
demands of a people’s movement that has demonstrated
it will not be deceived again.
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