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Politics & Culture

"We have to protect the investors" -- Oscar Berger, President of Guatemala
The present president of Guatemala is Oscar Berger and represents the party GANA. He is backed by the US and therefore has made no real reforms in the country.
The biggest conflict today in Guatemala is the land distribution. 3% of the population (the rich) in the country own 72% of the fertile land. 1% of the 3% are so called "new rich" and 2% are "old rich", old rich people who has held the same position, influence and wealth for the last decades. In Guatemala there are 17 very rich families. One of the families own the fast food restaurant Pollo Campero. The "new rich" are mainly ex-military (some still have a career within the military), who acquired the land during the war (seized it by force) and who after the war continue to refuse giving any land to the peasants. There has not been any real development within the question of the land conflict, but with the commercial treaty TLC the development will be slowed even further or maybe even reversed. The treaty strengthens the position of the rich in the country and promotes foreign investment. It is also important to point out that even thought the different parts have signed a peace treaty there is no real peace in the country. There are still massacres, murder, violence and common crime, which are not only a sign of desperation, but also an expression of the violent environment many Guatemalans have grown up in. The situation in Guatemala doesn't get any better by the fact that the police forces down work from 1 a.m. until early morning and that the streets don't see any authorities during these hours.
The US has an incredible amount of influence on the politics and the culture and it comes to show when moving across the country. Every little village is either sponsored by Pepsi or Coca Cola, which is part of the companies eternal battle.
The Spanish school we attended in Guatemala has written a short evaluation of the current situation in Guatemala:
Social and Political Reality Today in Guatemala
Today Guatemala continues to struggle with a legacy of violence and extreme poverty that has endured since the Spanish invasion of 1524. In the 1980s the
situation came to the attention of the outside world when violence swept the highlands in a deliberate policy of genocide against the indigenous peoples
leaving 200,000 dead (80% of them Mayan), 50,000 disappeared, and 1.5 million displaced either internally or externally. There have been many calls for
justice and reparations for the victims of this bloody war - the worst in the hemisphere during the 1970s and 1980s - and these demands are only just
beginning to be addressed by the country's judiciary system amid a climate of continuing fear and threats against human rights workers and survivors of
the genocide seeking justice.
The country is still living with this violent legacy in almost every sense. Medical care in Guatemala is woefully inadequate: about 25% of children die
before they reach the age of five and malnutrition affects 50% of children. Education statistics are similarly poor: about 48% of the population is
illiterate. Unemployment and underemployment stand at a startling 60%. The United Nations estimates that 80% of the population lives in poverty (measured
as a daily income of $2 USD or less) and half of those, 40% of the total population, live in extreme poverty (measured as a daily income of $1 USD or
less).
The peace accords signed between the government and the insurgent forces of the URNG on December 29, 1996, have opened new political space for popular
organizations and progressive political parties; compliance with these accords to bring a firm and lasting peace to the country is the challenge facing
the people of Guatemala. So far progress has been slow and many members of the civil movement in Guatemala assert that the social and human rights
situation worsened palpably during the year 2000 following the election to power of the rightist FRG party (Republican Front of Guatemala).
The FRG is led by Efraín Rios-Montt, who had previously come to power as a military dictator following a coup d'etat in 1982 and presided over Guatemala
during two of the bloodiest years of its civil war. Its ranks include many politicians who have previously held military posts during the armed conflict.
Many observers feel that this party does not have a genuine commitment or interest in the full and proper implementation of the peace accords.
The year 2000 saw several politically-motivated attacks on offices of leading human rights organizations, the kidnapping and torture of one human rights
investigator and death threats against other human rights defenders. 2001 saw an orchestrated campaign of harassment and intimidation against independent
journalists investigating corruption in government departments, attacks against high level judges in charge of politically sensitive cases (including the
brutal assassination of Bishop Juan Gerardi, in which military officers are among the accused), and further threats and attacks against trade unionists
and human rights workers. Despite this intense pressure and very difficult conditions, the social and civil movement in Guatemala is gaining in strength
and confidence and is ensuring that its voice is heard at all levels of debate in this country.
The Current Berger Administration, 2004-present
Oscar Berger´s corporate government, representing the interests of the Guatemalan oligarchy of Spanish descent, has distinguished itself by adopting
measures that affect the most deprived sectors of the country negatively and by overlooking the most basic problems that the country currently faces.
Education, security, health, and the economy are topics long abandoned by Berger. Public education still does not reach the entire population while the
quality of instruction that does exist is neglected. Hospitals lack money in their budgets to cover medicine, which has lead to a prolonged nation-wide
hospital strike, and famine afflicts many rural communities.
As far as the economy is concerned, the government has not distanced itself from its corporate affiliations contrary to popular outcry to do so. Rather,
through the luxury of force, Berger has facilitated the entrance of trans-national corporations to commence unregulated mining regardless of the damage
and destruction that it will cause to various communities and to the environment. In Guatemala, 54% of the population works in the informal economy yet
the government ratified the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA, also known as the TLC in Spanish) amidst a climate of popular discontent and
active protest against this treaty.
The current Berger government respects neither human rights, nor labor rights, nor national sovereignty. Berger has reopened old wounds by reinstituting
a policy to forcibly eject, at times violently, poor campesino communities who have occupied idle land as a means to survive a life of destitute poverty.
Moreover, to this day, months after Hurricane Stan devastated the country and exposed the nation’s vulnerability and vast economic inequities, there are
still dozens of affected communities who have not received the minimal attention necessary to overcome this crisis.
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