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Viewing cable 03GUATEMALA705, AGREEMENT ON CLANDESTINE GROUP COMMISSION
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
03GUATEMALA705 | 2003-03-18 17:51 | 2011-08-30 01:44 | UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY | Embassy Guatemala |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS GUATEMALA 000705
SIPDIS
SENSITIVE
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PHUM PGOV PREL GT OAS UN
SUBJECT: AGREEMENT ON CLANDESTINE GROUP COMMISSION
REF: GUATEMALA 471
¶1. (SBU) Summary: The human rights community, Human Rights
Ombudsman, and FM Gutierrez agreed on the make-up and mandate
for an international commission to investigate recent attacks
on human rights defenders in Guatemala. Helen Mack invited
the Ambassador to attend the public signing ceremony on March
13 and expressed appreciation for strong USG support for the
proposal. That support will be tested as the commission
moves toward formation in September. We believe the proposal
is worthy and was strengthened by the facilitation of Human
Rights Watch facilitator Jose Miguel Vivanco. End Summary.
¶2. (U) The accord on formation of a Commission to
Investigate Illegal and Clandestine Security Groups (CICIACS)
is for three commissioners, with subpoena powers, a witness
protection program, a one-year term (renewable, in six month
increments, for up to 12 months more), focused on the
1994-2003 period, to begin its operations in September 2003.
The GOG pledged $256,000 in initial financial support and
committed to solicit funding from the international
community, to be managed by UNOPS. A copy of the full text
of the agreement (5 pages) was forwarded to WHA/CEN on March
¶14.
¶3. (U) The agreement includes a broad mandate to investigate
illegal and clandestine groups, with special emphasis on
those responsible for attacks on human rights defenders,
justice workers, witnesses, journalists, union members and
others. It is also charged with investigating illegal or
clandestine activities of state security forces and private
security forces since the signing of the Peace Accord on
Human Rights on March 29, 1994 (relevant antecedents may also
be investigated). The goal of this investigation is to
dismantle criminal groups with links to the state and
prosecute responsible individuals, and end attacks and
threats on groups listed above. A final report on the
structure, organization, and financing of groups or networks
responsible for attacks and threats will include
recommendations to the government. An annex to the report
will include information necessary to initiate administrative
action against state agents and another for criminal
prosecution.
¶4. (U) During a March 10-13 visit to Guatemala, Jose Miguel
Vivanco of Human Rights Watch reassured skeptical NGO's and
rallied GOG and international support, culminating in the
March 13 agreement. Ombudsman Sergio Morales announced on
March 14 that his office had compiled 77 complaints of
attacks, threats, crimes and intimidation of justice system
workers, witnesses, and citizens which will be submitted to
the commission in September.
Comment
-------
¶5. (SBU) With Department concurrence, the Ambassador has
been actively supportive of the CICIACS proposal, which has
now cleared its first major hurdle. NGOs are elated by
Vivanco's success. However, many other obstacles remain to a
fully functioning commission. The Executive must now draft a
decree, negotiate agreements with the UN and OAS, submit
those agreements to Congress for ratification, select a
notable Guatemalan member of the commission. We will monitor
and report these steps closely.
¶6. (SBU) We may not receive an official request for
financial support immediately, but would like to be in a
position to indicate the approximate amount that we are
likely to commit in order to aid planning and to encourage
other donors. Can we informally and unofficially advise that
we are likely to commit $500,000?
¶7. (SBU) We can also anticipate requests, once the
Commission is established, for information, including
declassified documents. The Ambassador has worked to lower
expectations of a special declassification project but urges
the Department to consider standing up now an effort to
compile an all-source report that we could provide the
Commission at the onset of its work in September. There may
be better ways to be responsive but, knowing that the
requests will come, we should prepare now to be as responsive
as possible.
HAMILTON