Open
Letter to U.S. President Barack Obama in response to his apology to the
Guatemalan people regarding the recent media coverage that a Wellesley
professor through her research found hidden evidence that unethical “Tuskegee”
like Syphilis and Gonorrhea experiments were being made in Guatemala by U.S.
Health officials with the “suppose” acknowledgment of Guatemalan health
department.


As
 a collected group, we want to publicly acknowledge the U.S. apology to 
the Guatemalan people and Guatemalan immigrants abroad. However, we, a 
coalition of Guatemalan nationals, immigrants and allies, also feel that the 
real contrition is for the U.S. to move swiftly in making reparations.  It is 
imperative that we demand a speedy and timely resolution to the U.S. appointed 
two study panels, and that the Guatemalan President Colom make a firm stand and 
take action for the people of Guatemala and not just provide lip service. Today,
 more than ever, anti-immigrant sentiments, continued failed U.S. 
policies, drug-cartel wars, erratic climate produced by global warming 
are all directly affecting developing nations like Guatemala.  Continued
 exploitation of the land, natural resources, and labor by U.S. funded 
industrialists as well as presently U.S. funded forced sterilization of 
Guatemalan marginalized and Mayan communities our presence and message 
is of the essence! How many more apologies are needed to the Guatemalan 
people? 100
 years of U.S. influence in Guatemalan economics and politics has had 
tremendous negative impact on the social and civil liberties of 
Guatemalans in the past and in the present.  According to information pulled 
from USAID.Gov today, Guatemala has a wealth of natural & cultural resources 
yet it is the third most unequal country in the world in terms of income 
distribution, and thus is a land of contrasts --
 an estimated 58% of its people live in poverty.  Most of the poor are 
rural indigenous people, often women of Mayan descent who have suffered a
 long history of repression and exclusion from fully participating in 
society and who were most seriously affected by the 36-year armed civil 
conflict. As
 a result of historical inequalities and the lowest health and education
 spending in the region, Guatemala struggles with some of the lowest social 
indicators in the hemisphere (http://www.usaid.gov/gt/history.htm).   In
 a press-release by the USA Guatemala Peace and Development Network and 
Red por la Paz y el Desarrollo de Guatemala. The organizations stated the 
following historical particulars:   In
 the early part of the 20th century, the U.S. Government helped the 
United Fruit Company (UFCO) to transform itself into what Miguel Angel 
Asturias, Guatemalan Nobel Prize in Literature, named the “Green Pope.” 
The Green Pope subsequently became known as “the octopus” in the 
country, with tentacles in all areas of Guatemala’s economy and 
politics.   In
 1954, Washington intervened directly in Guatemala to abort the 
“Democratic Spring” brought about by the October Revolution of 1944, 
precisely, inter alia, to restore UFCO’s privileges and unlimited power.
 The overthrow of democratically elected president Jacobo Arbenz ushered
 in a long period of state repression and, eventually, armed resistance 
movements. After a 36-year internal armed conflict, state repression 
only came to a halt with the signing of the Firm and Lasting Peace 
Accord between the government and the insurgents on December 29, 1996.   During
 this long nightmare for the Guatemalan people, from 1954 to 1996, the 
armed and intelligence forces of the U.S. used Guatemala as a testing 
ground for counterinsurgency warfare. Guatemalan military and security 
officers trained at the School of the Americas and other military 
installations in Panama and the U.S., unleashed their version of state 
terrorism against the Guatemalan population. Torture and extra-judicial 
execution became
 common, and Guatemala became the first country in Latin America where 
“forced disappearance” appeared as a counterinsurgency tool. Guatemala 
is the Latin American country with the highest number of forced 
disappearances: 45,000. Washington supported successive militarized 
governments in charge of repression, and military aid was provided even 
after the U.S. Congress officially cut it.   According
 to the UN-supported Historical Clarification Commission (CEH), genocide
 took place in Guatemala at the same time that President Reagan was 
embracing the policies and actions of de facto leader General Efrain 
Rios Montt.  The CEH concluded that “agents of the State of Guatemala, 
within the framework of counterinsurgency operations carried out between
 1981 and 1983, committed acts of genocide against groups of Mayan 
people which lived in the four regions analyzed…” The CEH also pointed 
to the responsibility of the United States, stating: “The United States 
demonstrated that it was willing to provide support for strong military 
regimes in its strategic backyard.    In
 the case of Guatemala, military assistance was directed towards 
reinforcing the national intelligence apparatus and for training the 
officer corps in counterinsurgency techniques, key factors that had 
significant bearing on human rights violations during the armed 
confrontation.”   Along
 with this history, we now learn that the U.S. Government supported the 
multiple coup attempts against another democratically elected president,
 Juan José Arévalo, from 1945 to 1950, at the same time that U.S. 
medical personnel were deceiving Guatemala’s government by claiming to 
be carrying on health campaigns while actually experimenting with 
Guatemalan citizens.   President
 Clinton acknowledged the destructive political policies of his 
predecessors and apologized for them when he visited Guatemala, in March
 1999. We have also heard the apologies from the Obama Administration 
for these medical experiments. But apologies are not enough.   We 
believe that much more can and should be done. It is possible, just, and
 necessary to take action to repair part of the damages caused, and 
compensate some of the many victims and their families. It takes courage
 to recognize unethical policies and actions, but it requires wisdom and
 determination to respond to Guatemala’s needs by taking concrete steps.
  Immigration does not happen in a vacuum. It
 is caused by internal conflicts whether by natural causes, or global 
warming, or human and civil rights violations made against marginalized 
and third world nations which have been and continue to be perpetuated 
by the United States government, institutions, industries and 
individuals. It is these types of conflicts and the lack of action by those in 
power that have galvanized our energy and has urged us to move forward to 
address through this forum a resolve for the displaced and migratory diasporas 
of many Guatemalan and other Latin-America nationals. As
 mentioned before, real contrition for all the wrongs Guatemala has 
suffered by the "tentacles" of failed US Foreign Policy can be shown by 
making speedy reparations.  The
 real contrition will be by providing protection to a people who have 
lived in a state of repression caused by failed U.S. policies in 
Guatemala. As a coalition of Guatemalan nationals, immigrants and allies we 
stand in solidarity with the Guatemala
 Peace and Development Network and Red por la Paz y el Desarrollo de 
Guatemala (GPDN/RPDG) in requesting the immediate action on the 
following measures: 

The U.S. Government must establish a fund for fair compensation of the victims 
of the experiments and their families.  The
 U.S. Government, as a good-will gesture, should immediately respond 
positively to the request presented by the Guatemalan Government on June
 4th, 2010, to grant TPS for Guatemalans in the United States. It is an 
administrative way, with no participation by Congress, that would help 
to cope with recent calamities in the country caused by the Pacaya 
Volcano eruption, the tropical storm Agatha, and the flooding rains in 
September.  Finally,
 the U.S. should consider a sort of “Marshall Plan” for development, 
which many in Central America and the international community were 
expecting at the end of the internal wars. In fact, that is probably the
 only way to significantly decrease migration from Mexico and Central 
America into the United States.   As
 said before, even these steps cannot compensate for all the damage 
caused by the United States in Guatemala. However, it could mark a new 
beginning and a different policy toward Guatemala, Central America, and 
the entire Latin American region.   Signed by a coalition of Guatemalan 
nationals, immigrants, organizations and allies:  Shirley Aldana-Schwarz, USC 
Anthropology student and concerned Guatemalan citizen Carlos Bautista, ….. Ana 
Castillo, Artist and Chapinas Unidas Joaquin Cienfuegos - Cop Watch Los 
AngelesSusana De Leon, Artist and President of Mujeres Iniciando en las 
Americas (MIA) Freddie Hernandez, Canal Chapin Lealani Montes, Film maker, 
Chapinas Unidas Lucia Munoz, Founder of Mujeres Iniciando en las Americas 
(MIA) Heidy Pineda, …. Rebecca Ronquillo, …. Azalea Ryckman, Proprietor of 
Hecho De Mano Store, Founder of Mujeres Abriendo Caminos, and Radio Voces de 
Mujeres  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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