Guatemala makes landmark civil war conviction

CHIMALTENANGO, Guatemala, (Reuters) – A former  military commissioner became the first person to be convicted  of the forced disappearance of people in Guatemala’s 36-year  civil war on Monday, and was sentenced to 150 years in prison.

A panel of three judges found former military commissioner  Felipe Cusanero guilty of the disappearances of six peasant  farmers between 1982 and 1984 in a landmark case that overcame  Guatemala’s notorious bureaucracy and impunity.

Almost a quarter of a million people, mainly poor Mayans,  were killed during the 1960-1996 conflict between leftist  guerrillas and the government. Around 45,000 of them are  thought to have been forcibly made to disappear.

Over 80 percent of the atrocities were committed by the  army, according to a United Nations-backed truth commission.

The tiny courtroom in Chimaltenango, a provincial capital  about 25 miles (40 km) west of Guatemala City near where  Cusanero ordered the disappearances, was packed with Mayan  villagers and families of the disappeared as the judges read  out their verdict.

“We weren’t looking for vengeance, but for the truth and  for justice,” said Hilarion Lopez, whose son Encarnacion was  taken by soldiers in March 1984 when he was just 24 years old  and who was never seen again by his family.

Cusanero, now in his mid-60s, was the commissioner in  charge of around 40 soldiers in the region in the early 1980s.

Guatemalan rights groups believe he was responsible for the  deaths or disappearances of more people, but only the families  of six victims came forward to testify against him.

Legal experts say it is the first time anyone has been  convicted for forced civil war disappearances in Guatemala.

“This judicial precedent opens the door for the families of  the tens of thousands of victims to take their cases to court,”  said Mario Minera, executive director of the human rights  organization CALDH, which has spent four years fighting for  disappearance cases.