Ex-Guatemalan soldier Jorge Sosa gets 10 years in U.S. jail for hiding his role in ‘ruthless massacr
Source: National Post
Ex-Guatemalan soldier Jorge Sosa gets 10 years in U.S. jail for hiding his role in ruthless massacre
Stewart Bell | February 10, 2014 4:10 PM ET
A former Guatemalan military officer caught hiding in southern Alberta three years ago was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment on Monday for concealing his role in a 1982 massacre during the Central American nations civil war. Jorge Sosa, 55, will also be stripped of his U.S. citizenship, a federal judge in California ruled in a case that officials said demonstrated the determination to deny safe haven to war criminals and hold them to account.
Although he had fled to the United States and then to Lethbridge, Sosa was arrested in 2011 after being identified as a member of a Guatemalan special forces unit known as the Kaibiles, and an active participant in a slaughter.
In December 1982, Sosa and about 40 other special forces troops were sent to the village of Dos Erres to search for rifles stolen by guerrillas during an ambush. After finding no trace of the weapons, the soldiers began removing the villagers from their homes.
They then separated the men from the women and began raping some of the young girls, U.S. prosecutors said. To hide the rapes, the soldiers began killing the villagers by bludgeoning them with sledgehammers, shooting them and throwing them into a well.
Read more: http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/02/10/jorge-sosa-sentenced/
Judi Lynn
(160,516 posts)Ronald Reagan: Accessory to Genocide
May 11, 2013
By Robert Parry
The conviction of former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt on charges of genocide against Mayan villagers in the 1980s has a special meaning for Americans who idolize Ronald Reagan. It means that their hero was an accessory to one of the most grievous crimes that can be committed against humanity.
The courage of the Guatemalan people and the integrity of their legal system to exact some accountability on a still-influential political figure also put U.S. democracy to shame. For decades now, Americans have tolerated human rights crimes by U.S. presidents who face little or no accountability. Usually, the history isnt even compiled honestly.
By contrast, a Guatemalan court on Friday found Rios Montt guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity and sentenced the 86-year-old ex-dictator to 80 years in prison. After the ruling, when Rios Montt rose and tried to walk out of the courtroom, Judge Yasmin Barrios shouted at him to stay put and then had security officers take him into custody.
Yet, while Guatemalans demonstrate the strength to face a dark chapter of their history, the American people remain mostly oblivious to Reagans central role in tens of thousands of political murders across Central America in the 1980s, including some 100,000 dead in Guatemala slaughtered by Rios Montt and other military dictators.
More:
http://consortiumnews.com/2013/05/11/ronaldreagan-accessory-to-genocide/
Judi Lynn
(160,516 posts)How Ronald Reagan Made Genocide Possible in Guatemala
By Benjy Hansen-Bundy April 15, 2013
The early 1980s were particularly violent in the Latin American theater of the Cold War. Smack in the middle of Guatemala's 36-year civil war which claimed 200,000 lives, Rios Montt edged out the winner of a sham election in a bloodless coup and began systematically repressing support for the Marxist opposition,as his forces raped women, burned villages, and murdered indigenous Mayan peasants.
From day one Reagan backed Rios Montt, feeding him millions first in jeeps and trucks, and then helicopter and plane parts, despite clearly articulated reports from both the CIA and international watchdogs that genocide was accumulating bodies in the ditches and gullies of Guatemala.
A cache of internal Guatemalan records from the time revealed the existence of Operation Sofia, which was the operation that led to the massacre of indigenous peasants. It was used by the 1999 UN-sponsored Historical Clarification Commission to classify the counterinsurgency campaign in the summer of 1982 as "acts of genocide against groups of Mayan people."
The horror described by independent human rights reporters on the ground is enough to turn your stomach: "We heard many, many stories of children being picked up by the ankles and swung against poles so their heads were destroyed."
More:
http://www.policymic.com/articles/34465/how-ronald-reagan-made-genocide-possible-in-guatemala
rafeh1
(385 posts)while the suits go scot free
countryjake
(8,554 posts)For that he only gets ten years?