Sunday, January 12, 2014

Perez Molina and Baldetti back down for now

El Periódico's editor José Rubén Zamora Marroquín has been going after corruption allegations against Vice President Roxanna Baldetti and Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina in Guatemala for at least the last two years. Perez Molina filed a criminal complaint against him in November and Baldetti convinced a judge to authorize a restraining order against the editor in December. Perez Molina and Baldetti allege that Zamora's investigations had gone well beyond simply reporting and investigating on crminal wrongdoing. They accused him of blackmail, stalking and a variety of other offenses.

In December, a judge ordered Zamora to refrain from "disturbing or intimidating" the vice president and her family and then issued a six-month restraining order. This was an odd decision in that a came from a court that oversees gender-based crimes. Baldetti was arguing that his Zamora's writings were an attack against her because she was a woman. A more recent ruling ordered Zamora not to leave the country and to have his bank accounts frozen. Has anyone in the prosecutor's office moved on Zamora's allegations against Baldetti and OPM?

The entire situation has been an embarrassment for the president and the vice president, domestically and internationally. While it's not over, the president and the vice president have now dropped the criminal complaints against Zamora.

The situation reminds me of the president's December 2012 decision not to recognize the Inter-American Court of Human Rights rulings on cases pertaining to crimes against humanity and genocide that occurred before 1987 in Guatemala and that it would no longer pay reparations to victims who suffered prior to 1987. Domestic and international condemnation of the decision made Perez Molina walk that decision back a few weeks later but the damage had already been done.

The relationship between the press and the region's presidents sure seem to be at a low point - Perez, Funes, Ortega, Barrow, Martinelli, and Chinchilla. We'll give Hernandez a few weeks to get comfortable. Here's where each country scores and ranks in Freedom House's Freedom of the Press 2013.


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