Showing posts with label FAMDEGUA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FAMDEGUA. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 December 2015

'Movimiento de Desarraigados' and the Crippling Effect of Corruption

Morning visit in Nebaj
November 23: 
Fredy


In the morning, our first stop in Nebaj was meeting the team at 'Movimiento deDesarraigados'  (Organization of the Displaced)  with which the organization I am with, Equipo Forense Interdisciplinario (EFI) partners in this field region. The organization was first created before the '96 Peace Accord. 

Their first goal was to claim back what lands citizens in the area had been lost. Following this was to find people that were lost and taken. Since the other members only spoke Ixchil, there was some double translating. 

Fredy spoke the most during our stay as he was fluent both in his native tongue and Spanish. Cristian as always, was our translator. Fredy, like the individuals he serves, lived through the atrocities of the conflict, being 12 years old when he escaped to the mountains. He is now the economic coordinator, dealing with the politics of the limited amount of money that goes in and out of the organization. 

He notes that in the last years the finances have gotten worse. This organization, like Blanca Hernandez's FAMDEGUA, is greatly affected the international cuts and removals due to the continuous corruption of Guatemala. 

Anna helps with the legal aspects for families in seeking helping finding their missing to applying for the reparations that are supposed to be granted. The first things these families need is personal identification who they are looking for to the organization RENAP when Guatemalans must go to register for birth and death certificates. the problem with this, is many from the rural communities living during the conflict, never received identification. She says she does not stop until these families get their reparations. 

The third individual is Gabriel of which we are honoured to be in the field with. He is the orienter as he knows these mountains inside out. He conducts the first interviews with families for descriptions of where the remains might be buried. He then scouts out the geography where he believes the remains are buried.

Anna
During the discussion with these three members, we discussed some of the main setbacks which limit them from providing effective and successful support for their community.  In the initiative's infancy, the main question was 'how do you coordinate and organize people to approach the State when you are hiding in the mountains with no power or roads?'

 The first step was to empower the communities so that the silence could come to an end. The goal remains to approach every single form of government in order to show how important reconciliation work is in order to influence long-term social healing and progress. 

To some extent, after the Civil War, they were able to get access to a military garrison where "our people were tortured". The organization, comprised of locals no different from their community members they try their best to support, still are waiting for answers from the government. 

Especially Civil War cases like this, they wait till all the family members are available to be a part of the uncovering process. As EFI member Juan Carlos reminds us, he had never experienced the trauma of the civil war while coming here as a scientist to do his job. He reminds us that we must never forget that we are all humans. 

He says many people including professionals tend to push this aspect out of the way or to separate themselves from the family and the work of uncovering bodies. Even though you are dealing with bones and uncovering remains, you should not think less of these people. This is especially important for the family members you are doing this for. Even though it may be difficult, at first, to work when they may want to be all over the excavation site, you must be understanding, leave time for their prayers or ceremonies, but most of all to work together. 

Particular in the remote and rural areas, the interview processes towards a forensic anthropological exhumation with EFI, must take into consideration the language barriers and language that is lost in translation. This is the case even for native Spanish speakers because there are many dialects and Mayan languages. That is why the forensic anthropologists in the field, bring a colour scale to ensure an accurate description when interviewing family members for both searching for the unmarked grave location and in identifying the remains. Not only do you need to ensure the right understanding, but you must also ensure cultural sensitivity. 
Gabriel and Juan Carlos

They reminded us that governments and aid workers cannot forget that even when the remains are back to the family, there are scars that cannot heal unless helped to mend. Initiatives must consider these issues and thus follow through to the end. 

Like Indigenous peoples within Canada, they understand that the root to so much modern violence is the result of undiagnosed and unsupported post-traumatic stress these families continue to suffer with and alcohol as a coping mechanism. They say, that is why initiatives like  'Movimiento deDesarraigados'   assist the families till the end; they know the reconciliation process is not set up for actual assistance. 


The organizers emphasize they will be there before to help break the silence, they are there during to help with documentation and legal process for the exhumation and to be able to mourn in dignity. They then make sure they are there after the bodies are found. This is not only because it takes months if not years to process and get confirmation currently from the Guatemalan government for small amount of reconciliation fees, but also because there is very little support or initiatives helping with psycho-social and mental health issues. Despite what little funds they have themselves, they do not charge families, while helping assist with transportation to the city offices for documentation processes.

Fredy says the organization does not care if individuals were in the army, guerrillas, or civil patrollers, they give no favours if they committed crimes even though they cannot deny 97% were ordered by the government.One of the girls on my team asked if this work was their therapy since they've experienced the same trauma. 

"Our work makes us stronger, even if we cannot find or take back what happened to our friends and family, we can at least use our emotion to help others," Fredy answered, similarly to Norma and Blanca (refer to previous posts)."We all have experienced loss and trauma." 


He uses the example of families affected by the  9/11 Twin Towers tragedy of people who still cannot find family members, who have no sense of closure, and are still putting candles at Ground Zero. He adds, what about the First Nations in Canada and all the missing persons from the past to today. 

Guatemala has made November 1st a commemoration of Day of the Dead, a day for paying tribute and memory to their deceased loved ones at the cemeteries, thousands of people have no grave to go to.  But if you do not know where they are buried, the family cannot be at peace. They have had 80-year-old woman begging them to help find their loved ones so they can have a proper burial for them before they die themselves.

A lost and murdered loved one
Locating bodies are always difficult despite clues from interview processes where witnesses may remember vaguely where the victim was last seen. But because of so many missing, disappeared and displaced during the Civil War era, the odds are that victims can be buried anywhere. That is why when citizens find out that an exhumation is about to take place, the excavators will have a large audience of families, just in case it may be another's family member.

Justice and Genocide
Fredy says the major contemporary setback since the international and national community agreed during the '96 Peace Accord to provide reparations to those who have suffered and lost members during the Civil War, is that these funds have barely been seen. 

From the 1996 Peace Accord, the international community had set out some 300 million Quetsales for the National Program of Reparations under the responsibility of the Guatemalan government. There were supposed to be five major active programs including the investigation of genocide, taken land claims, development, housing and hiring psychologists. 

Unfortunately, so much of these apparent funds have gone missing says Fredy. What housing that has been built were discovered by some building inspections that they were not even proper to live in. Programs are still doing their part and sending proposals in search of funding, but still the citizen created initiatives are not seeing any improvement but rather a decline since the 19 years since the Accord.

If this is not frustrating enough for those who are already working with no form of payment to help these victims, the Guatemalan government's existing reparations and justice application processes are extraordinarily unattainable for those they were set up for in the first place. 

As I now have heard the inside of the hard-working initiatives of Movimiento de Desarraigados, EFI, INACIF, FAMDEGUA, and Fundacion Sobrevivientes, they are all struggling continuously with these unattainable processes. With fee after fee, miles of extra transportation, limited access and time to assist these victims and their families, people begin to feel helpless and hopeless. 

The Public Ministry and the National Reparations Program expect monthly reports from these forensic anthropologists, archaeologists, lawyers, and/or psycho-socialists who are assisting the families. The extent to which these reports are demanded is limiting to their work and efforts on further investigation progress, losing weeks to months, and in cases years need to complete the final stages of the job. 
This, in of itself, Freddy and Cristian describe as another form of genocide by halting the process and making it inaccessible for the victims. By waiting for these people to die, the government does not have to give out the money. Using these discouraging methods the victims begin to lose hope, or to just not bother because they cannot afford the time and money, meanwhile continuing to live in fear and pain. 

I wonder if the international community that involved themselves do not care to follow through, just how their money and effort is being spent. Do they ever talk to the individuals and organizations directly affected?

Basta Ya protesting outside Cultural Palace


Here, much more so than other countries, it is understood you can buy out crime in any aspect of life. One of the first things done, is getting out of paying taxes. No one seems to be able or has the inclination to go after the nationals, not until the recent establishment by  the international community of the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala. As mentioned above, the Guatemalan organizations that I was able to meet with are facing the consequences of the systemic political corruption, many of their critical funders are leaving the country, such as Embassy of Holland and next year Norway, because they are seeing no progress.


Karli Zschogner, 2014


I had the opportunity in my undergrad to study indicators, the effects of corruption and what the international initiatives have done to promote greater transparency.  One of  cases within the fifteen former USSR countries where I asked: “With this consideration it was asked, does a perceived high level of corruption of a state also correlate to a loss of freedom of civil liberties for these independent former Soviet states?” 

The variables of the Freedom House Index focus on political rights as an electoral processes, participation, and functioning of the government, and also civil liberties as surveys of freedom of expression, organizational right and personal autonomy. The index measures ‘freedom’ of states on a scale from 1 through 7. The scores of perceived corruption the Transparency Index range from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean), and include the measurement from surveys of perceived legitimacy, petty corruption, bribery within politics, and the limit on access. 

From graphing the scores from these two databases I confirmed that there is a correlation between the two variables. In other words, it was found that less civil liberties and political rights available within a country were present where there is greater perceived corruption. Where there is higher perceived corruption there is also evidence that the sense of legitimacy in their government is low and where civil unrest grows. 

Even though it is incredibly useful to compare country cases to grasp a fuller understanding, you can never fully get accurate, realistic, and useful findings to put into practice until you factor in all of that country's, history, culture, geography, values or connections, of which many cannot do unless having lived in it and among its population for a long time. For example in the case between Estonia and Uzbekistan, what is evident is that it is almost impossible to buy foreign currency at the official exchange rate in the banks of Uzbekistan. This is why the black market was the only available source where people could acquire foreign currency (Urinboyev; Svensson, 2013, pg. 377). 

Maybe then, if it is common in that country for police not to take an investigation into the black market or politicians deal with bribes, it is seen as normal and therefore citizens will not see any difference and will not proceed to prevent it.

"Justice is like a snake, it only bites the Barefoot"
From what I can conclude from the many experts and people who have lived among such impunity,  if you want to combat international corruption and atrocities, you have to internationally hold governments accountable through monitorization of those who do not respect universal human rights. 

As marked in the 10 stages to genocide, when governments and leaders use their power to tell citizens they must join one force or die (this includes what we have seen through humanity's history once we have labeled individuals as enemies as Communists, guerrillas, homosexuals, terrorists) these are grave warning signs that the worst indeed is about to happen.

To the international community, young or old we must act to ensure this force is de-legitimized and punished. For what I have seen, the worst thing you can do to someone is put them in a position that jeopardizes their life or their family's if they refuse to cooperate. 

One can use these situations to easily predict mass atrocities where civilians become the perpetrators. You cannot make humans choose between their and their family's life and safety. Fear creates monsters; it the worst psychological torture you can put someone through. 



"Even though I am not coming back to see you Acracia (anarchy) [Democracy] will prevail"

I guess that is why governments, armed groups and other civilians across the world and across history have used this tactic, as it will quickly disperse their own responsibility, and aligns the justifications for their actions they are about to commit.  Just consider the aftermath of the Holocaust, Rwanda, child soldiers, the Cold War, and in this case, the creation of Guatemala's Civil Patrollers forced to capture, murder, and rape their own neighbours.


Before we left, Fredy reminded us that we were welcome back anytime and welcomes anyone who is interested in these issues. This is a multidisciplinary issue and therefore important to have multidisciplinary academic and skill.

Please See Also:


Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Strength and Determination: Interview with Blanca Hernandez of FAMDEGUA

November 9 
Today seemed incredibly themed, or the Guatemalans were trying to prove a point to me.
Blanca and Cristian, her son Oscar in the fireman hat
Bright and early, we got invited to talk to a Guatemalan women who, like so many individuals, has gone through hell and back and yet still has the strength to give her will to others like her. She was gracious enough to tell us, and the others around, her story even though the wounds reopen every time she talks about it. Blanca Hernandez, now 68, is the creator of the Association of the Families of the Detained and Disappeared ofGuatemala (since 1992) (FAMDEGUA). It is a non-governmental, humanitarian and solidarity organization which focuses on cultural and educational services to those who still have no sense of closure. There are no other services offered. In Guatemala, in addition to the over 200,000 who died during the Civil War, there are over 46,000 who forcibly "disappeared". Many of them were tortured and killed; tongues, fingers and nails cut off. Guatemala also has the largest number of victims of forced or other forms of disappearances in all of Latin America. These victims were not limited to one group but to anyone who was deemed, at the time, a threat: peasants, indigenous, farmers, community leaders, students, professors, doctors, veterinarians, political leaders, children.....

The room where we sit down with her is filled with pictures of the disappeared. As she describes them,(and I filming) we learned that all of them just wanted a safer, more just Guatemala. A photo of her son Oscar is on the bottom row in between all the others. He was involved in his local community, a volunteer firefighter, and wanted a better Guatemala. And for that he was taken. He was 22 when he disappeared. Her fear is that she will die without finding her son.
The things those eyes have seen: Blanca Hernandez


Blanca explained to us that, "Our goal was to create this organization even though there was a lot of oppression in this country. It was a dangerous thing to do. We did it because our goal, at that moment, at that time, was to find our sons, our family members, alive. This was a really hard time. Some of our members were tortured, they were captured, they were murdered. And we lost a lot of friends and family and members of this group. A lot of them disappeared as well. We joined the lines of the people who were looking. Suddenly we became part of the disappeared ourselves."

The organization members hope that they would find their loved ones alive.They just want to know. As Blanca described they are worse off than those who know their loved ones have been murdered. This situation brings me back to the research in the psychology of death and dying. Despite the vast cross-cultural differences in which we chose to mourn for the loss of loved ones, the feelings and processes in accepting loss are universal.  As described by the works of Corr, Doka (task-based theories), Kubler-Ross (stage theories), and Bugen (intervention theories), grieving is part of the intrapersonal dimension of coping with loss, while mourning is part of the interpersonal aspects of social expression, or social expression of grief. Furthermore, physical symptoms as well as depression of unresolved grief are a sign of unresolved grief.
Psychology of Death and Dying
As Blanca went on to say in Spanish, "When somebody takes a family member and makes them disappear, it is the most horrible act that anyone can commit against somebody else. Sometimes people will die, people will be murdered, but their families have something that we don’t have. You have a body; you can mourn them, you can bury them, you can visit them. But in our case we don’t have a place to go. In our case, they are not dead and they are not alive; it is a circle that has no end. We are still mourning them, because we cannot stop, we cannot move on with our lives".
The victims’ families cannot properly mourn. With no remains, they have no place to mourn at. Healing is limited or cannot take place at all. That is why it is so important to seek out and identify the remains of these families.
Protesting in front of Cultural Palace, Guatemala City
In great need of a walk to recollect our thoughts after that powerful two hour meeting with Blanca Hernandez, we headed toward the del Palacio Nacional (National Palace). On the front steps, a man was shouting. He spoke about corruption of the state (the government was apparently planning their Christmas Party during their morning meetings), the president's promise of new jobs turn out to be only a few new positions within the government with little worth or purpose, and the little worth of the Quetzales to Dollar (maybe make new sentence about worth). Moreover, he was stressing how Guatemalans need to rise up together to discontinue corruption; not with arms but with our voices, intelligence and common sense. He spoke of the man behind him on a hunger strike who has prostate cancer. To him, this man is representative of many others without access to health care, and urged people to act now because one day they might be in a similar situation. The man on a hunger strike is Carlos Izaguirre, a kind soft spoken man who does not have access to medicine for his painful cancer. He is camped out in protest of state corruption and the lack of resources for hospitals. One of his signs reads, “I have the same right to health as Baldetti”. Baldetti was the former Vice President who resigned after a corruption scandal. She recently sought private health care because the public health care system was not to her standards. Cristian said that such a protest would not  have happened 15 years ago without the police showing up and hauling the men off. In May, people of all ages regularly were showing up at the plaza every Saturday because of the President and Vice President’s corruption. They peacefully protested and cleaned up after themselves, which is wonderful to hear such progression.
Carlos Izaguirre hunger-striking with cancer

We stopped by later and brought the man on a hunger strike some water and Ensure powder. He was very grateful though he definitely deserved our thanks more, for his bravery in speaking out. Carlos said he has been standing up against the corruption and violence since he was a university student and is now in his 60s. He continues fighting for the youth and hopes to one day be at a place where his country owes him nothing and he owes his country nothing.He hugged all of us as we left.
Of the few hand written signs he had beside him, one stood out most powerful and true:
“Solidarity has no borders. It’s not something you ask for, it’s a gift.”
I have felt at times like the situations within countries like Guatemala are hopeless. However, listening to Blanca, Carlos and the protesting man speak was an encouraging shift. They are reminders of the strong determined people working towards making things better despite death threats and cuts to funding. People keep working even when their organizations have no money to pay their salaries, like the staff  at EFI-IFIFT and (soon to see) FundacionSobrevivientes .  Most importantly, we, including the media, need to focus our efforts on documenting the strength and determination of people like this. We need to see that one is not limited to the amount of money, or formal education; you just have to have an open mind. Their lives' work is not just for themselves but to help others. They know others have suffered just as much as themselves, and for that they will work together to make their struggles worth the effort. And it so very true! In a society of individualism, our lives will not feel as meaningful if we are just working to improve ourselves. We must, therefore, work for the betterment of our community and/or society.


Blanca will continue her search, Carlos his protest and Cristian his excavations despite the dangers. What will you do?