Tag Archive | "violence"

Guatemala: President Reports Death Threats Were Made


Alvaro Colom, president of Guatemala, reported that he had received death threats to his e-mail accounts. He informed that he received letters that read “I am going to kill the President” and “we are organizing to kill the president.”

He said that these messages were “terrorist messages” and assured that his security team is investigating the threats. He also indicated that any nuances discovered during the investigation would be presented publicly to the Public Ministry. On the other hand, the President expressed concern over the strained political environment in Guatemala, and questions the strength of the country.

He specifically referred to the “uninformative climate” of the press and suggested that this could translate to fraud in the 2011 general elections. Just one month ago, the ex-deputy commissioner of Colom’s cabinet, was assassinated in an armed attack. This assassination occurred within days of the president and his official cabinet declaring that there were sectors of government interested in creating a climate of instability. He aligned these types of sectors as similar to those that were responsible to teh recent coup d’etat in Honduras.

In the last month, there has been an increase of violent attacks in the country.  In July, there was an attack on the public transportation systems that killed 20 people in 13 days.

Story courtesy of Agencia Pulsar, a news agency run by AMARC-ALC network of community radios

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Tools Of Torture: A Look Inside Argentina’s Jails


The footage is dark and grainy, but the view of the prison courtyard is clear enough. It appears to be empty, until suddenly three men are sprinting towards the far corner. A brief fight ensues, before two of those involved flee from the scene. The third – Daniel Martínez – tries to follow, but collapses after just a few paces, never to get up again.

The 27 year-old was stabbed fatally with a faca, a homemade knife ubiquitous in Argentine prisons. The brutal assault, which took place in the early hours of 13th February, was captured by CCTV cameras in the Unit 1 detention facility in Paraná, the provincial capital of Entre Ríos. After the event, prison prefect José Luis Mondragón told local press that the fight broke out “at a time of relative calm, when nothing would suggest an outcome like this was possible”.

Unit 35, inspection on August 15, 2006, courtesy of Comité Contra la Tortura

Yet this outcome is all too common in Argentina’s prisons. According to the NGO Coordinators against Institutional and Police Repression (CORREPI), Martínez was one of four detainee deaths that week, and the ninth so far in 2010. In the province of Buenos Aires – where approximately half of the country’s 60,000 prisoners are held – 112 inmates died in 2008. With another 39 fatalities in federal prisons and dozens more from other provinces, deaths in state custody are occurring approximately once every two days.

Bursting At The Seams

Around half of these deaths are attributed to fights between inmates by the human rights groups that compile annual reviews of the federal and provincial penitentiary services. As prisons become more and more crowded, this type of friction seems unavoidable. According to Ministry of Justice data, the nationwide prison population swelled by over 45% between 2000 and 2005, overwhelming institutions that were, in many cases, already struggling to cope. Increasingly, prisoners are held indefinitely in the temporary cells found at the back of police stations, where conditions are generally even worse.

Mar de Plata Police Station, inspection on September 29, 2006, courtesy of Comité Contra la Tortura

“Detention centres are saturated,” says Roberto Cipriano García, director of the Anti-Torture Committee (CCT), which monitors prisons and police stations in the Buenos Aires province. “We have cases of police stations holding three or four times the number of prisoners that should be allowed, while some prisons are running at 60% above capacity. Many units don’t have running water or ventilation, there’s lots of hunger, and hygiene is abysmal because they are not cleaned properly.”

The situation is even worse when official capacity figures are scrutinised, adds García. “If a prison was built to confine 800 people in individual cells, and later you add another bed in each, the building capacity does not suddenly become 1,600 because the bathrooms, the sewers, the kitchens were all designed for 800.”

Added to this is the alarming statistic that over two thirds of this overcrowded prison population is made up of procesados, or those still awaiting trial. Some remain in this state, unaware how their case is progressing in the clogged up judicial system, for months or years.

This confluence of factors often reaches breaking point, sparking riots with disastrous consequences. In October 2005, 33 inmates died after a fire broke out after a riot in a pavilion of the unit 28 prison in Magdalena, Greater Buenos Aires. Two years later, another fire in a jail in Santiago del Estero claimed another 34 lives. In both cases, serious questions were raised about the lack of water and personnel to fight the fire, and the use of highly flammable material in mattresses.

A System Of Cruelty

When such tragedies occur, the headlines reverberate around mainstream media, with an unflattering spotlight briefly placed on Argentine jails. However, the day-to-day violations of human rights go largely unreported.

There was no major riot in the unit 1 prison in Olmos in 2008, yet 15 inmates died according to the CCT, more than in any other prison in Buenos Aires province. According to Garcia the prison employs a shift of just 27 guards to watch over 1,800 inmates. “The guards delegate control of the prison to a group of influential prisoners,” explains García, adding that this system of governance leads to serious problems: “if the rest of the unit rebels against the dominant group, we see lots of fights and violent incidents.”

However, it is arguably other common system of governance in Argentine prisons – where order and discipline is maintained through brutal repression by guards – that is more shocking.

“Torture and ill treatments are everyday facts in jails today,” claims Gabriela Boada, interim executive director of Amnesty International’s Argentine office. In 2008, the global NGO listed Argentina as one of 81 states where torture is still practised. The report stated that the prison services use “the pretext of fighting insecurity [to] attempt to justify the unjustifiable: the use of torture”.

Unit 35, inspection on August 15, 2006, courtesy of Comité Contra la Tortura

The CCT’s latest annual review revealed that 72% of the detainees questioned suffered physical abuse by guards. According to the report, entitled ‘The System of Cruelty’, torture methods currently used in jails through the Buenos Aires province include “suffocation [by placing a plastic bag over inmates’ head], regular beatings, electric shocks, constant transfers, prolonged ice-cold showers or hosedowns, and isolation.”

And these practices are not confined to the Buenos Aires province. In a comprehensive investigation into conduct in federal prisons, the independent National Penitentiary Procurator (PPN) found widespread evidence of torture and ill treatment of detainees. Aside from physical aggression, which affected 70% of those surveyed, inmates reported suffering almost constant verbal and psychological abuse, and a lack of proper medical attention. Meanwhile, the penitentiary service in Mendoza province has faced repeated criticism from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

According to Dr Marta Monclús, coordinator of the prison observatory at the PPN, inmates are most likely to be subjected to torture or ill treatment at three key moments: when they first enter the prison – and receive the infamous ‘bienvenida’ (welcome) – during cell inspections and when they are sent to the buzones (solitary confinement).

The culture of violence is so ingrained that even the prison guards themselves are sometimes given a bienvenida. In September last year, Carlos Maidana reported three of his fellow guards for the brutal welcome he received a La Plata prison. The handcuffed the new recruit to railings, where they beat him, stripped him, doused him in alcohol and threatened to set him on fire. “If that’s what they do to their colleagues,” says Ana Cacopardo, “just imagine what happens to the prisoners.”

What The Eyes Don’t See…

Cacopardo has first-hand experience of some of the country’s worst jails through her work with the Commission For Memory, to which the CCT pertains, and as a documentary filmmaker.


Photos courtesy of ‘Ojos Que No Ven’

Her recent film ‘Ojos Que No Ven’ (What The Eyes Don’t See), which took the best film award at last year’s human rights film festival in Buenos Aires, takes an unflinching look at prison life through the testimonies of four protagonists. Between interview segments, the camera scuttles though dark and damp holding cells, where anonymous inmates talk frankly about prison violence and police brutality above the prison din.

“I wanted to show the jail as it really is, and put names and faces to the stories that go inside. Often, the life or death of an inmate depends on the whim of the prison guard. And the way the system works, it’s so easy to eliminate a witness. There’s so much impunity.”

It is this impunity and corruption that lie at the heart of the problem. When official statistics are supplied by the prison service itself, and the only contradictory voice is that of an inmate – a criminal in the eyes of society and the judiciary – it becomes almost impossible to prove cases of torture and ill treatment. Sometimes, prison guards ‘employ’ certain detainees to do their dirty work. These so-called ‘car bombs’ are forced to eliminate a nuisance fellow prisoner. “They simulate a brawling between prisoners, it goes down as a death due to infighting, and is never investigated,” explains Cacopardo.

The matter is complicated further when you consider that those who report prison guards for brutality will remain under their custody while an investigation is carried out. Fears of reprisals were enough to prevent 517 out of 601 detainees from lodging an official complaint after suffering physical abuse, according to the PPN report.

Even when reports of abuse are made, are verified by witnesses and independent medical staff, and sometimes include photographic evidence, only 1% of complaints reach court, says García. And most cases are not classified as torture, but as more moderate offences, or at worst homicide, which implicates the individual agents rather than the state. “Of 11,000 reports of abuse between 2000 and 2008, only 14 were classed as torture [by the judiciary],” laments García.

‘Torture Doesn’t Exist’

This culture of denial exists in the political orbit too. “When the PPN presented the report, the politicians responsible [for the prison service] adopted a very negative stance”, recalls Dr Monclús. “Instead of taking control and debating how to improve the situation, they simply argued that it wasn’t true that systematic torture existed in the prison service”.

This lack of urgency can also been seen in the failure to comply with Argentina’s international commitments to combat the use of torture. In 2004, the country signed the UN’s Optional Protocol to the Convention Against Torture, thereby pledging to establish transparent and independent organisms to monitor prisons and prevent torture. Even though the deadline for implementing the protocol was June 2007, to date only the province of Chaco has sanctioned the creation of a monitoring agency.

Unit 35, inspection on August 15, 2006, courtesy of Comité Contra la Tortura

The UN protocol is considered a key tool in bringing an unchecked system back into line. But would it really make a difference, if independent bodies like the PPN and CCT are already revealing shocking statistics about torture and ill treatment, only to be ignored by the government and a large part of society?

“It will serve a purpose in the sense that the more actors involved in controlling the jails, the more pressure there will be to do it right,” responds Dr. Monclús.

Cacopardo agrees: “If there were more controls, if more eyes saw what goes on inside the prisons, the judicial power, which plays the key role, would have to be more present.”

But Cacopardo says greater control will be largely pointless without long-term social and economic policies to tackle the high levels of social exclusion and marginalisation that lie behind rising crime rates. “Society has to rise against the simplistic slogans of opportunistic politicians. More prisons are not the solution … they end up violating rights and recycling violence.”

Unit 9, inspection from May 2005, courtesy of Comité Contra la Tortura

This is easier said than done. It is a brave politician that attempts to channel more public money and effort towards improving the plight of prisoners when crime and insecurity are such concerns for the electorate. The ‘eye for an eye’ instinct of those who have fallen victim to a violent robbery, or have suffered the murder of a friend or relative is understandable; a similar attitude from those governing the country is not.

And what about the procesados – a significant number of whom are eventually released after being found not guilty? Are they not victims too? Article 18 of the national constitution expressly states that people are innocent until proven guilty – does this no longer apply in today’s society?

“If someone breaks the law it’s right that they go to jail and serve a fair sentence,” concludes Boada. “But these should not be instruments of torture but an organism of social rehabilitation. At the moment it is like saying that if someone violates the rights of another person, that gives the state permission to systematically violate their rights. [That person] will then leave prison even more enraged. It’s not fair on them, and it’s not fair on society.”

Cristian López Toledo: A Case Study

In May, 2005, Cristian López Toledo was the unfortunate victim of electrical shock torture in the medical area of La Plata’s Unit 9 prison. His was the first case to be proven judicially since the country’s return to democracy.

While human rights lawyers battled against bureaucracy and a wall of silence to bring the case the justice, Toledo was transferred repeatedly to different prisons in Buenos Aires province, each time receiving a bienvenida and more threats for having reported the guards. In one unit he was attacked with a faca by another inmate, who later told Toledo that he had been ordered to eliminate Toledo by the guards.

Toledo remains in prison while his case remains stalled in the judicial system. Since then, the CCT has reported several other instances of electric shock torture in prisons throughout the province of Buenos Aires.

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SIP Warns of Rising Violence Against Journalists


The US-based Interamerican Press Society (SIP), which began its bi-annual conference in Aruba today, has warned of a rise in violence against journalists across Latin America. Alejandro Aguirre, president of the SIP and sub-editor of the Miami newspaper Diario Las Américas has condemned “a siege against the press” especially “in Cuba, Venezuela and in nations allied with the politics of (Venezuelan) President Hugo Chávez.”

The Venezuelan news agency Telesur has responded, criticising the SIP’s failure to focus on violence against opponents of the coup in Honduras. Telesur accused the SIP of “focusing especially on the alleged aggression directed at journalists from right wing media” and “forgetting other press employees.”

The SIP’s conference, attended by the heads of 250 different media networks from across Latin America, is supposed to be an opportunity to consider a range of problems that currently face reporters throughout the region.

One point of discussion will be the Cuban journalist Guillermo Fariñas, who is currently carrying out a hunger strike in protest against prisoners of conscience held by the Castro regime. Among the imprisoned dissidents are 22 news workers. Also due to be discussed is Chávez’s call for internet censorship in Venezuela and the continuing house arrest of Guillermo Zuloaga, president of the private Venezuelan television channel, Globovisión.

However, the focus of the conference has been criticised by Telesur, who asserted in an article on Friday that the SIP was “is nothing more than a cartel of big media tycoons from across the continent, created in New York in 1950, as part of a North American intelligence operation.”

In particular, Telesur condemned the SIP’s failure to place greater emphasis on the violence in Honduras, where three journalists have been murdered over the past two and a half weeks. The NGO Reporters Without Borders has called the level of violence against media workers in the country “alarmingly high”. Telesur also criticised the SIP for ignoring violence against the state-owned Venezuelan Television network (VTV).

Rising violence against the press in Mexico will also be a point of concern during the SIP’s conference. Mexico is currently rated as the most dangerous country in the Americas for journalists and a total of 43 reporters have been killed there since 2005.  Aguirre said that the deaths were related to “organised crime, corruption, and weak public institutions that have been unable to combat the issue so far.”

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Gunmen Kill 14 at Student Party in Cuidad Juárez, Mexico


Just after midnight on Sunday 31 January 2010, gunmen stormed a house in the Mexican town of Cuidad Juárez and opened fire on a student party, leaving 14 dead and 14 wounded, two of which are critical. The 60 students attending the party ranged in age from 14 to 20 years old and were celebrating a friend’s birthday. The deceased include three adults and 11 minors. Witnesses claim that the gunmen barricaded the street with cars and then entered the house, going from room to room, shooting at the party goers.

“They were about 15 men, they closed off the surrounding streets and began shooting at the house as they moved inside,” said army spokesman Enrique Torres.

One neighbour at the scene said: “The men drove up in SUVs, they were well armed. They went into the house and shot at everyone, you could hear the gunfire all around.”

Amongst the dead was Adrian Encino, 17 years old who had recently received an award for academic achievement. Also caught up in the attack were a husband and wife vendor who had a stall adjacent to the house where the attack took place. The husband was killed and the wife is in critical condition. The youngest victim was 13 year old Yomira Aurora Delgado Lara.

Ciudad Juárez is situated close to the border with the United Sates and is the bloodiest front in Mexico’s three year drug war, as rival cartels fight over control of smuggling routes. Last year 2,650 people were killed in drug violence in the city, resulting in it having the highest murder rate in the world in October 2009. With a population of 1.6 million, Ciudad Juárez was averaging seven murders a day and drug related murders are already increasing in 2010.

The government of President Felipe Calderón has deployed thousands of police and soldiers to the area, but this has had little effect on the violence. The daily body count is so common that people have become numb to the figures. However, this massacre has shocked residents because so far the authorities have not been able to establish a link between the shooting of the teenagers and the drug trafficking networks that struggle for control of the city.

Patricia Gonzalez, attorney general for Chihuahua state that includes Ciudad Juárez, said the shooting was possibly linked to drug cartels. Gonzalez told a news conference: “We have two lines of investigation and one of them is linked to drug trafficking. We know from witnesses that the men arrived looking for someone.” However, there is some speculation that among the deceased is a young girl who may have recently witnessed a murder in another part of the city.

The Juárez Cartel is considered a ruthless and dangerous drug trafficking organisation that has been known to decapitate their rivals and mutilate their corpses, dumping them in public to install fear amongst the general public, local law enforcement and their rivals, the Sinaloa Cartel. They control one of the primary transportation routes for billions of US dollars worth of illegal drugs annually entering the United States from Mexico.

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