Guatemala sentences four in landmark civil war trial

GUATEMALA CITY, (Reuters) – Guatemala yesterday  sentenced four soldiers to 6,060 years of prison each, in the  first conviction for a massacre during the country’s brutal  36-year civil war.

More than 200 people were killed when Guatemalan soldiers  attacked the northern village of Las Dos Erres in 1982 at the  height of Guatemala’s civil war.

The soldiers were given 30 years of prison for the deaths  of each of the 201 killed in the attack.

The court also found them guilty of crimes against human  rights, adding another 30 years to their sentences.

The soldiers — Carlos Carias, Manuel Pop, Reyes Collin  Gualip and Daniel Martinez Hernandez — were all special forces  officers at the time of the massacre.

The officers, in an elite unit known as the Kaibiles, went  to the village in December 1982 and shot, strangled and  bludgeoned the villagers to death with sledgehammers.

Guatemala’s Public Ministry said the army ordered the unit  to the village to look for missing military weapons, believed  to be in the hands of left-wing guerillas.

Last month, the United States deported former Guatemalan  soldier Pedro Pimentel Rios, 54, for his alleged role in the  Las Dos Erres massacre. Guatemala’s Public Ministry will hold a  separate hearing for Rios.

The ruling center-left administration of President Alvaro  Colom has been under pressure by human rights organizations to  bring war criminals to justice in Guatemala, one of the poorest  and most lawless countries in Latin America.

Nearly a quarter of a million people were killed in  Guatemala’s 1960-1996 civil war and many thousands are still  missing.