RESOLUTION NO. 25/86 - CASES OF DISAPPEARANCE OF PERSONS IN GUATEMALA
BACKGROUND:
- That for several years the IACHR has been receiving a sizable number of reports of
kidnapping and forced disappearance of persons in Guatemala, but in particular during the period
l978-l985.
- That the Commission has opened and processed the individual and class cases
corresponding
to the complaints made about such disappearances and has transmitted the pertinent parts to the
Government of Guatemala requesting it to undertake the pertinent investigations and to provide
the
relevant information.
CONSIDERING:
- That such disappearances have been carried out by means of a similar and coordinated
procedure consisting in illegal and forced seizures of persons in their homes, in their places of
work and
on the public highway, by heavily armed personnel, sometimes in uniform, who usually identify
themselves as belonging to the Technical Investigations Department of the National Police (DIT)
or to
the Special Operations Brigade (BROE) or to the Armed Forces, also by paramilitary groups or
members of the Civilian Self-defense Patrols, who acted with the acquiescence of the government
authorities, which neither the police nor the armed forces of the locality where the events
occurred
interrupted or intercepted during the conduct of the operation; they then took the victim to an
unknown
destination, from which no news was again had of him nor was the identity of the authors
determined
in even one of the thousands of cases of disappearances reported, and all these events went
unpunished;
- That in each one of the cases covered by this resolution and kindred situations like that
of
the hundreds of persons that are missing on whose behalf writs of habeas corpus have
been lodged but
which were almost all dismissed by the courts of that country, and of the hundreds of missing
persons
of to the Mutual Support Group (GAM), the list of the names of which, in both cases, were
delivered
by the IACHR to the Minister of External Relations, the Minister of the Interior, and the President
of
the Supreme Court of Justice, concerning which the Government of Guatemala has provided
insufficient or unsatisfactory information or has not provided any information, which does not
clarify
the whereabouts of the missing persons or report the penalties applied to the authors of those
disappearances, despite the fact that in some cases the family members of the victims have
provided
descriptions and even identified the participants in the kidnapping operations;
- That the Commission has received information from varied sources concerning the
problem
of the chronic violence that Guatemala has experienced in recent years and especially about the
disappearance of persons, which has also been a matter of public knowledge within and outside
that
country;
- That the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights during its on-site observation
visit
to the Republic of Guatemala, in September l982 and May l985, and through various and
continuing
steps, expressed the greatest interest in exhausting every opportunity to determine the truth of the
present status of the missing persons and also interviewed the highest political military and police
authorities and also some of the persons accused of being the persons responsible, the family
members
of the missing persons, and eyewitnesses of those events.
- That the Commission has reached the regrettable conclusion that most of the missing
persons
were murdered for reasons it is not in a position to determine but which, in any case, involves a
serious
responsibility for those who ordered their arrest, seized them, kept them detained and caused
them to
disappear.
- That the General Assembly of the Organization of American States, considering the
proportions and characteristics of the phenomenon of the disappearances that had been taking
place,
decided, at its XIII Regular Session in November l983, in Resolution No. 666, to declare that the
forced
disappearance of persons is an affront to the conscience of the hemisphere and constitutes a crime
against humanity.
- That the democratic governments of America may grant amnesties for reasons of social
peace
but not cease to investigate the atrocious events that may have occurred during the periods that
preceded
them.
THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS,
RESOLVES:
- To declare that the responsibility of those who, in the discharge of their duties, during
the
period covered by this resolution, under the administrations of General Romeo Lucas
García, General
Efraín Ríos Montt and General Oscar Humberto Mejía Víctores,
ordered the arrest, made the arrests,
detained and summarily executed without trial, or caused the disappearance of thousands of
Guatemalan
citizens who have not been found in the Republic of Guatemala, is condemnable and serious.
- To inform the Government of Guatemala that such events constitute the most serious
violations to the right to personal liberty (Article 7), the right to personal security and humane
treatment
(Article 5), the right to due process and other judicial guarantees (Article 8) and the right to life
(Article
4) of the American Convention on Human Rights.
- To urge the Government of the Republic of Guatemala to take all the necessary
measures for
clarifying and solving as far as possible the problem of missing persons and that of their widows,
orphans and other family members.
- To recommend to the Government of Guatemala:
-
That it inform and clarify to the family members the status of the missing persons,
which
is to be understood to mean those who were arrested in operations that, by reasons of the
conditions under which they were carried out, their characteristics, and the coinciding
declarations of the eyewitnesses, give good reason to presume the participation in them of the
police;
- That an exhaustive investigation be made of the facts mentioned and that the
corresponding responsibilities be established through the public institutions the democratic
systems provides for;
- That legislative measures be adopted for repairing the consequences of the
disappearances of persons, especially as regards the situation of the family members of the
victims.
- That whatever measures are necessary be taken to prevent such events ever
occurring
again, which should include a national campaign for the promotion and teaching of human
rights;
- That it keep the Commission informed of the measures taken to implement the recommendation contained in this Resolution;
-
That it inform and clarify to the family members the status of the missing persons,
which
is to be understood to mean those who were arrested in operations that, by reasons of the
conditions under which they were carried out, their characteristics, and the coinciding
declarations of the eyewitnesses, give good reason to presume the participation in them of the
police;
- To transmit this resolution to the Government of Guatemala and to the petitioners.
- To suspend consideration of the individual and collective cases of the missing persons
although, in those cases in which new and important evidence comes to light, the Commission
may
reopen its consideration and again begin to study them.
- To include this Resolution in its Annual Report to the General Assembly of the Organization of American States, in accordance with Article 48 (2) of the Regulations of the Commission, although at its next session the Commission may reconsider this resolution in the light of new and further evidence that may have been provided.
