Inter Press Service News Agency
Sunday, November 22, 2009   07:35 GMT    
  Subscribe !
Enter your email address to receive our free weekly newsletters
Iraq & the
          Middle East
Indigenous
           Peoples
The Week
          with IPS

more newsletters >>

 - Homepage
 - Global Affairs
 - Africa
 - Asia-Pacific
     Afghanistan
     Nepal
     Tsunami
 - Caribbean
      Haiti
 - Europe
      Union in Diversity
 - Latin America
 - Mideast &
   Mediterranean
      Iraq
      Israel/Palestine
 - North America
      Neo-Cons
      Bush at War
 
 - Development
      MDGs
      City Voices
      Microcredit
      Corruption
 - Civil Society
 - Globalisation
 - Environment
      Energy Crunch
      Climate Change
      Tierramérica
 - Human Rights
 - Health
      HIV/AIDS
 - Indigenous Peoples
 - Labour
      Decent Work
 - Population
      Reproductive Rights
      Migration&Refugees
 - Arts & Entertainment
 - Columns
 - In Focus
 
 
   ENGLISH
   ESPAÑOL
   FRANÇAIS
   SVENSKA
   ITALIANO
   DEUTSCH
   SWAHILI
   NEDERLANDS
   ARABIC
   TÜRKÇE
   SUOMI
   PORTUGUÊS
   JAPANESE
PrintSend to a friend
Readers Opinions

GUATEMALA:
The High Price of Violence
Claudia Munaiz and Alberto Mendoza

GUATEMALA CITY, Jan 23 (IPS) - Civilian violence is already costing Guatemala half its national budget, as well as countless human lives and social breakdown, while corruption and impunity walk hand in hand.

Among the main economic consequences of this violence are: more resources spent on health services, loss of social capital, legal costs, worker absenteeism, investment in private security and a decline in productivity.

The Guatemalan state's efforts to combat civilian insecurity in 2005 cost approximately 2.4 billion dollars, equivalent to 7.3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), according to a report on "The Economic Cost of Violence in Guatemala", by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

This is having a devastating impact on Guatemala, which despite having the largest economy in Central America with a GDP of 32.6 billion dollars, is ranked 118th on the UNDP Human Development Index, below countries with lower per capita incomes such as Bolivia, Nicaragua and Honduras.

Although official statistics indicate that 56 percent of the population of 13 million live in poverty, the U.S. State Department puts the proportion at nearly 80 percent, and reports that two-thirds of that number live in extreme poverty. The indigenous majority is most heavily affected by poverty.

The UNDP study reports that 5,337 people's lives were cut short by violence in 2005. An overall climate of wariness and distrust caused by other crimes, such as an average of 35 robberies per month on buses in the capital, must be added to the violent death toll.

The roots of the violence go back several decades. Beat Rohr, the UNDP resident representative in Guatemala, said that meeting the challenge of improving security conditions for ordinary people is essential to ensuring the peaceful coexistence to which the 1996 peace accords aspire.

Dec. 29 was the 10th anniversary of the signing of the peace agreement that ended 36 years of civil war, in which more than 200,000 people died, most of them indigenous Mayan people. Included in that number were 50,000 forced disappearances. According to a truth commission report, the military was responsible for the great majority of the killings.

Guatemalan Vice President Eduardo Stein admitted at a press conference that violence continues to be "a headache" for his administration, in spite of all the efforts made so far. One of the more controversial measures was the deployment of troops on the streets.

The Ministry of Health was the government agency that spent the most - some 900 million dollars - to tend those injured or wounded by violence in 2005. "The main reason for admission is fractures or injuries due to violence or accidents," said Ludwig Ovalle, director of the San Juan de Dios public hospital in Guatemala City.

The judicial branch spent 4.6 million dollars, the Ministry of the Interior 28 million dollars, and the Office of the Public Prosecutor, one million dollars.

However, there are those who stand to gain from the violence, like private security firms. The report says that families and companies spend an average of 6,000 dollars a year for their services.

"We have padlocks, railings, electric fences and an alarm connected to a security company, for which we pay 30 dollars a month," said Julio Mora, a middle class resident in the centre of the capital.

There is also a neighbourhood watch committee that reports everything going on in the area. "So far I've been lucky, but I know that very bad things have happened in other people's homes nearby," he told IPS.

One of his neighbours, a vendor who preferred to remain anonymous, is a good example of ordinary people's obsession with security. In addition to all the other security measures, he has a dog and a gun that he periodically fires against a wall as a warning to potential burglars.

"If you hear shots at night, don't worry, it's just the vendor attempting to dissuade criminals," Mora tells newcomers to the neighbourhood to reassure them.

But far from providing security, gun ownership has become a problem in itself. The police estimate there are over three million illegal weapons in circulation.

"I don't want a gun. If you buy one, you may kill someone. There are too many guns in the country, that's why gunfights happen," Mora said.

The violence also appears to scare off foreign investment, although Guatemala is one of the signatories of the free trade agreement between five Central American countries, the Dominican Republic and the United States (CAFTA).

According to the UNDP report, the rate of investment growth is 16 percent below the expected level because of the impact of criminal violence on the investment climate.

The tourism industry, one of the country's main foreign exchange earners, sustained an income loss of 474 million dollars in 2005 due to the violence, equivalent to nearly half of the 924 million dollars generated in 2006 by the country's 1.4 million visitors.

"There are lots of things to do in Guatemala. We have nature, archaeology and culture to offer, and all in an environment where we work hard to provide safety for the tourists," Daniel Mooney, director of INGUAT, the country's tourism agency, told IPS.

But the moral and psychological damage done to victims of violence are irreparable. "No amount of money can buy a life. The state will be indebted to me forever, as they are to all victims of violence," Rosa Franco, whose daughter María Isabel was murdered in December 2001 at the age of 15, told IPS.

Franco, who identified her daughter's body while watching the news on television, told IPS that "there is too much impunity and corruption in this countryàHardly any cases are solved," she said. The Office of the Public Prosecutor reports that only 46 murder cases out of the 4,352 on their books in 2005 went to trial.

For this family, the consequences are depression, constant anxiety, and less productivity as a family unit. "I even had a heart attack. I would exact payment even of the air that they breathe, but not even that would bring my daughter back," said Franco, who is demanding a "public apology" from the authorities.

The National Reparations Programme is still a long way from completing the compilation and analysis of cases eligible for compensation. Up to June 2006, it had taken testimony from 8,000 people. Some 580 women were killed in 2005, according to information from the Human Rights Office of the Catholic Archbishopric of Guatemala.

Furthermore, the Guatemalan state has still not completed the task of indemnifying the tens of thousands of families of victims of the civil war, including those killed by the paramilitary "civil self-defence patrols" that carried out massacres in rural areas.

Marco Antonio Garavito, director of the Mental Health League, a social organisation involved in the treatment and promotion of psychological health, which is working on the cases of children who went missing during the civil war, said that "the study findings are terrible, because it's money that could have been invested in something more positive."

Garavito added that the authorities are not concerned about psychosocial issues. "There have been many suicides, an unknown number, which are another expression of the violence," he said.

In his view, the social crisis has been exacerbated by the increase in criminal activity and drug trafficking. "The state apparatus is falling apart. Organised crime was hidden during the war, but after the signing of the peace accords it emerged very quickly," Garavito said.

Guatemala has become a narcotics trafficking route to North America. The drugs are smuggled through the jungles of the northwestern department of Petén, on the border with Mexico, where drug traffickers own property and illegal airstrips.

The links between the "maras", or youth gangs, and the drug trafficking rings are becoming increasingly evident. The power of the drug mafias is arousing fears that they may come to exert an influence on the political life of the country. (END/2007)

Send your comments to the editor

 Related IPS Articles
RIGHTS-GUATEMALA: U.N. to Probe Violent Underworld
CENTRAL AMERICA: Harsher Measures Don't Cut Crime
RIGHTS-GUATEMALA: A Glimmer of Hope for Genocide Victims' Families
CENTRAL AMERICA: Gang Violence and Anti-Gang Death Squads - September 2005
  Latest stories by 2004 winners
Zarina Geloo
ZAMBIA
: Fishing in Troubled Waters
ENERGY: Governments Must Lead on Renewables, says Shell CEO
WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: Satisfaction with an "Afrocentric" Meeting
RIGHTS-ZAMBIA: If You're in the Dock, It's Useful to Be a Man
CHALLENGES 2004-2005: For Zambia’s Street Kids, the Outlook is Bleak

Jim Lobe
U.S.: Obama Returns to Greater Middle East Mess
CUBA: Dissidents' Plight Unchanged Under Raul, Charges HRW
CORRUPTION: Afghanistan, Iraq Near Bottom of Transparency Index
U.S.: Nearly One in Six Citizens Went Hungry in 2008
U.S.-HONDURAS: Washington Stresses Urgency of Unity Govt

Qurratul Ain Tahmina
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS: Glossing Over Womens' Issues
BANGLADESH: Bleak Future Awaits Sex Workers' Children
/CORRECTED REPEAT*/RIGHTS-BANGLADESH: Women's Policy Sneakily Changed by Gov't
WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: In Bangladesh, Potters Shape Their Future
RIGHTS-BANGLADESH: Fear Mixes with Anger after Journalist's Death

Latest stories by 2003 winners
Zofeen Ebrahim
PAKISTAN: Soup Kitchens Spring Up to Stave Off Growing Hunger
PAKISTAN: Military Vs Militancy Does Not Equal Peace
RIGHTS: Jailed Fishermen Await Thaw in India-Pakistan Relations
PAKISTAN: Beyond the Storm, Eco-Friendly Dream Homes
PAKISTAN: Repeal of Blasphemy Laws Still a Pipe Dream

Jim Lobe
U.S.: Obama Returns to Greater Middle East Mess
CUBA: Dissidents' Plight Unchanged Under Raul, Charges HRW
CORRUPTION: Afghanistan, Iraq Near Bottom of Transparency Index
U.S.: Nearly One in Six Citizens Went Hungry in 2008
U.S.-HONDURAS: Washington Stresses Urgency of Unity Govt

Austin Merrill
TRADE-COTE D'IVOIRE: War Threatens the World's Largest Cocoa Export
POLITICS: Life Under Curfew in Strife-Torn Cote D'Ivoire
ECONOMY-COTE D'IVOIRE: Fleeing Foreigners Boost Transport Business
POLITICS: African Leaders Seek Peace in Conflict-Torn Cote D'Ivoire
POLITICS: African Leaders Seek Peace in Conflict-Torn Cote D'Ivoire


Back to award page >>

  Latest stories by 2006 winners
Thalif Deen
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
DEVELOPMENT: Child Rights Make Headway, But Millions Still Suffering
DEVELOPMENT: UNFPA Puts Human Face on Climate Blowback
CLIMATE CHANGE: Small Islands Fear Going the Way of Atlantis
RIGHTS: U.S., Somalia Still Opt Out of Children's Treaty

Alberto Mendoza
GUATEMALA: The High Price of Violence
GUATEMALA: Devoured by Malnutrition
GUATEMALA: Where Sexual Exploitation of Minors Is Not a Crime
LATIN AMERICA: The Use - and Abuse - of Development Aid
ENVIRONMENT-EL SALVADOR: Carbon Is the Biz

Ali al-Fadhily and Dahr Jamail
IRAQ: Students Fail, Like So Much Else
IRAQ: Police Bombings Raise New Fears
IRAQ: Most NGOs Losing Face
IRAQ: Fallujah Braces for Another Assault
IRAQ: Unrest Surfaces in Fallujah Again

  Latest stories by 2005 winners
Darren Taylor
SPORTS-KENYA: "For Our People in East Africa, Soccer Is Very, Very Important"
POLITICS-KENYA: Where Are the Bright Young Things?
DEVELOPMENT-KENYA: From Petrol Power to Pedal Power
POLITICS-KENYA: Anti-corruption War Stalls
KENYA: A Corruption Suspect's Best Friend? The Law

Pratap Chatterjee
AFGHANISTAN: Black & Veatch's White Elephant in Kabul
CORRUPTION: Paying Off Afghanistan's Warlords
AFGHANISTAN-US: Military Translators Risk Low Pay, Death
AFGHANISTAN-US: Mission Essential, Translators Expendable
U.S.: Congress Reviews Military Contracts, Kabul Embassy Scandal

Constanza Vieira
Q&A: "If You Find Yourself in a Minefield, Shout for Help"
COLOMBIA: US Should Open Its Files on Palace of Justice Massacre
COLOMBIA: From Espionage to Sabotage – and the Dirty War (Part 3)
COLOMBIA: "Proof-of-Life" Videos Feed Hostages' Families' Hopes
COLOMBIA: Spying on Human Rights Defenders