OEA/Ser.L/V/II.79.rev.1 ANNUAL
REPORT OF THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION REPORT
N°
6/91 CASE
10.400 GUATEMALA 22
February 1991
PRIOR TO THE ON-SITE VISIT 1.
Between November 22 and 29, 1988, in the mountainous area of Guatemala
known as the Sierra Madre, near the Cerro Las Minas, the El Soco mountain and
the District of San Isidro, which make up a triangle of thick and almost
impenetrable forest, there took place the mass murder of 21 peasants who lived
some three kilometers away, in a village named El Aguacate, a village composed
of 168 mestizos grouped into 34 families related to one another by blood. The
population of the village was made up of 38 men, 40 women, and 90 children.
The village itself is a series of dwellings scattered on both shores of
the Rio de la Virgen, a river located within the area at a distance of four
kilometers from the Municipality of San Andres Itzapa, in the Department of
Chimaltenango.
On November 29, 1988, the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights, received from the Mission of Guatemala to the Organization of American
States the first information confirming the massacre, which was reported as
follows:
The Events:
On the 22nd of this month, Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas, an aide to
the Military Commissioner, disappeared on his way to work in the fields.
When his family became aware that he had not returned home, on the
following day they organized a search without success.
On the 24th a more intense search was carried out by 30 peasants, who
came into contact with a terrorist group and tried to talk to its members, but
were threatened with firearms. Some
of the peasants managed to escape, but 20 persons were seized, including the
evangelical minister of the community. The
peasants who fled reported the matter to Military Zone 302, based in
Chimaltenango, and a company was detached and clashed with the terrorist group,
leaving Second Lieutenant Adolfo Molina Gutierrez wounded.
Mr. Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas was found dead, and on the 26th three
mass graves were found, containing the tortured remains of the following
peasants: 1.
Francisco
Callejas Tobar; 2. Rosalio Callejas
Tobar; 3. Pastor Callejas Tobar; 4.
Romualdo Callejas Tobar; 5. Julio
Callejas Tobar; 6. Luis Callejas
Tobar; 7. Oscar Callejas Tobar; 8. Juan
Oswaldo Callejas; 9. Aroldo Callejas Tobar; 10. Horacio Tajtaj Callejas; 11.
Cristobal Chuy; 12. Pedro Guerra; 13. Isidro Castellanos Guerra; 14. José Leonel Callejas; 15. Antonio Olivares Banse (the
evangelical Minister); 16. Factor
Callejas Guerra; 17. Humberto Callejas Guerra; 18. Leonel Callejas Aspuac; 19.
Isidro Guerra; 20. Esteban Arenales.
This
grievous fact was confirmed by the press, which witnessed the anguish and pain
of the wives and children of the victims. Through
me, the Government of Guatemala demands from the OAS the most vigorous
condemnation of this unspeakable violence that has left so many children
fatherless. 2. Next day, corroborating its report, the Mission of Guatemala sent to the IACHR the text of the cable from the CERIGUA News Agency, which regularly reports the war communiques of the Guatemalan guerrilla, in which the latter, on November 28, apparently claimed responsibility for the murders by issuing the following information:
CERIGUA-83/11/88
UNIDAD REVOLUCIONARIA NACIONAL GUATEMALTECA (URNG)
[GUATEMALAN NATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY UNIT]
REPORT ON OPERATIONS IN THE CENTER OF THE COUNTRY
Guatemala,
November 28. (CERIGUA). The
Guatemalan guerrilla killed 25 soldiers of the government army in two successive
ambushes in the mid-western area of the Department of Chimaltenango, it
was reported here today by the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unit (URNG).
The clashes took place in the Municipality of San Andres Itzapa, at a
45-minute distance from this capital and only five minutes from Military
Zone 302 in Chimaltenango, last November 25 (the day the peasants were
murdered). According to the war
communique, the government troops made up a company that was attacked from three
positions "with heavy fire from rifles and machine guns."
"In short-range combat, we confirm that we inflicted 25
casualties on the army, between dead and wounded," added the insurgents.
The URNG has kept up a constant activity in this area since last June,
within a territory that also includes the Department of Solola and the northern
part of Suchitepequez. (END
CERIGUA. AR/CL). 3.
On November 29, the CERIGUA News Agency through which the guerrillas had
taken responsibility --as an act of war-- for the events
of November 25, published a new communique from the Comandancia General de la
Unidad Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca (URNS) [General Headquarters of the
Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unit] in which, without rectifying or
clarifying the previous communique, the Guatemalan Army was accused of having
perpetrated the massacre with Government complicity, and denying as a complete
and absolute falsehood that guerrilla forces from ORPA (ORGANIZACION DEL PUEBLO
EN ARMAS) [ARMED PEOPLE'S ORGANIZATION] belonging to the URNG had abducted and
subsequently murdered the peasants. The
event, according to the URNG, was part of a new wave of terrorism, repression
and intimidation, under a new plan carefully orchestrated by the Government and
the army to blame the revolutionary movement for the atrocities they themselves
committed. 4.
In the course of the second week of December 1988, the Government of
Guatemala organized a visit by two peasants from the village of El Aguacate,
Oscar Orlando Callejas Tobar and Waldemar Figueroa, to various human rights
agencies based in the United States of America, both public and private,
including the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
Later, the testimony of these two persons was challenged by some
nongovernmental human rights organizations, which believed that the two were not
true survivors of the tragedy and regarded their visit as a fraud prepared by
the Government and the army of Guatemala to deceive international public
opinion. This was based on the
repeated statements made by the two men that neither one had been physically
present where and when their family members were seized, that neither one had
been himself abducted or had managed to escape the ambush in which the 20
victims had fallen. In this regard,
the testimony from the two villagers was disappointing.
But the important fact remained that they vigorously attested to the
disappearance of Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas and stated that they had been
part of the three search parties organized to look for him, that they had been
eyewitnesses to the presence of guerrillas in the area of the Sierra Madre when
their 20 relatives were abducted, for they themselves, the witnesses, were part
of that group and had gone along with them, but had then stayed behind when the
others went on to try to negotiate the release of Carlos Humberto Callejas.
In addition, the first-mentioned of the two witnesses, and his
brother Baldomero Callejas Tobar, acted as guides for the army rescue team and
were witnesses not only to the clash between the army forces that had come with
them to rescue their relatives, on the one hand, and the men who were holding
them, on the other, but to the finding of the bodies of their relatives by the
search party. 5.
On December 15, 1988, a nongovernmental human rights group that was aware
of the Commission's inquiry into the events denounced by the Government of
Guatemala filed a complaint against that government and requested to be
recognized as a complainant.
The new complaint changed the version of the facts by claiming in an
additional report and in presentations before the full Commission that the
torturing and murder of the peasants had taken place in Military Headquarters
302 of Chimaltenango and not on the mountain, from which the victims were said
to have been taken alive to the garrison and, after being killed, returned to
the mountain to be buried, so as to make it look as though the killings had
taken place there, when the massacre had actually been perpetrated by the
Guatemalan army and not by the guerrillas. 6.
The complainant stressed several points, which may be arranged as
follows: a. The Municipality of San Andres
Itzapa in the Department of Chimaltenango was a combat area that had been under
army occupation for the last seven years, during which time the army had
frequently launched military operations that affected the civilian population. b. According to the testimony
of Oscar Orlando Callejas, who travelled to Washington D.C. as a surviving
eyewitness, Salvajan Gomes, one of the individuals who joined the search
parties, had told him that he had come across armed men who threatened to kill
him, and that these persons were dressed in green uniforms and black berets. c. It took the soldiers of the
Guatemalan Army less than six hours to discover the bodies after they started to
search. d. All bodies showed signs of
torture and some bore evidence of having been burned with hot irons; each victim
had been strangled, wore no shoes, and had his hands tied, leading to the
conclusion that "these torture methods were the same as the practices and
patterns of interrogation and torture used in the past by the army in its
military operations." e. When the bodies were dug up on
November 27, the Guatemalan Air Force sent two combat aircraft to the area, on
the pretext of supporting the helicopters that were digging out the bodies, and
these planes opened fire against alleged guerrilla positions, firing rockets
into an area populated by civilians. f. According to the account of
five relatives of the victims, the group of 22 people who disappeared had been
arrested between November 24 and 25 by soldiers belonging to Military Base 302
and taken to that garrison (Report on the Massacre at El Aguacate, The Findings
of an Independent Investigation). g. A cleaning woman at Military Base
302 says she heard the unmistakable voice of the abducted Evangelical minister
Antonio Olivares Bance while he was being tortured. h. A soldier from Military Base 302
said: "I saw them being
tortured and in the base one could hear the screams and prayers of the
minister." i. A soldier from that Base
said: "I saw them with my own eyes." j. A soldier friend said that
the clothes of the detainees were very dirty and that their wives (18 women)
took clean clothes for them to Base 302, where a soldier confirmed to them that
the men were being held at the base. This
testimony is contradicted in the same report. k. Two jeeps carrying eight soldiers
were seen driving on a highway leading to the mountain where the bodies were
found. 7.
Next, the IACHR received a completely different version from a source
independent of the executive branch of the government.
The then Ombudsman for Human Rights of Guatemala, Gonzalo Menendez de la
Riva, who was one of the first to arrive at El Aguacate with his whole team of
investigators, talked to the press on December 12 and said that an investigation
had ascertained that the massacre was committed by a "group engaged in
pillage, not necessarily involved in politics."
A few days later, the same Human Rights Ombudsman pointed to the
guerrillas as the perpetrators of the massacre, letting it be known, however,
that this conclusion was not final because the investigation was still going on.
Subsequently, on June 13, 1989, at a Multisectoral Meeting of Representatives of
Human Rights Groups, Interior, Defense and Indigenous Communities, attended as
well by the Minister of the Interior and the Director of SIPROC, public security
problems were discussed and the Ombudsman for Human Rights declared that the
State was responsible for the El Aguacate massacre because it was incapable of
protecting the population and incapable of discovering who had done it. 8.
By an undated note of March, 1989, the following reply was received from
the Government of Guatemala: HUMAN
RIGHTS ADVISORY COMMISSION OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC,
REPORT: (Massacre of El
Aguacate). SUBJECT:
Review of judicial inquiry in the case labeled "Massacre of Aguacate"
in the Department of Chimaltenango. INFORMATION:
Concerning the judicial proceedings, these were instituted in November
1988, before the local District Justice of the Peace for the village of El
Aguacate; after three (3) days the case was taken over by the lower-court
Investigating Magistrate [Juzgado Primero de Primera Instancia de Instruccion]
for the Department of Chimaltenango, case file No. C-2261/88, classified
as an inquiry and labeled KIDNAPPING OR ABDUCTION AND MURDER, handled by the
second clerk [Oficial Segundo] of the court.
At present, the proceedings are in the investigative stage.
NO ARRESTS HAVE BEEN MADE. The
Office of the Ombudsman is represented. EVIDENCE
COLLECTED: a. 26 statements from
witnesses; b. forensic medical
reports; c. court inspections
connected with the evidence. NO
DETAILED INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE because of the secrecy of the investigation
provided for under Guatemalan criminal procedure. Guatemala, March 1989. 9.
Whether or not related to the massacre of the 21 peasants at El Aguacate,
seven months after that event, on June 20, 1989, another member of the same
family and from the same village, Alberto Callejas Callejas, was kidnapped by an
unidentified group of men and to this day his whereabouts remain unknown.
Callejas, another one of the surviving witnesses of the events, was the
father of Oscar Orlando Callejas Tobar and Baldomero Callejas Tobar, who served
as guides for the army in the operation to search for and rescue their
relatives. The former of these two
had visited the Commission in Washington, in December 1988.
Alberto Callejas Callejas was related, on both his father's and his
mother's side, to the then Chief of the National Defense General Staff.
According to his family, the abduction took place when Alberto Callejas
Callejas went looking for a cow that had just given birth in a mountain located
between San Andres Itzapa and Chicasanga, in the Department of Chimaltenango, an
area quite close to the Village of El Aguacate. 10.
On June 22, 1989, two days after the mysterious disappearance of Alberto
Callejas Callejas, the sons of the
kidnapped man, Israel Callejas Tobar and Jairo Callejas Tobar, were looking for
their father near the village of El Aguacate, close to the mountain, when they
stumbled on a stranger and asked him if he had seen their father.
As they talked, the Callejas had the feeling, because of the demeanor of
the man and his nervous answers to their questions, that there was something
suspicious about him. While they
carried on this conversation the brothers realized that the man was trying to
pull something out of his bag without their noticing it.
This prompted them to react and take it away from him, and they
discovered, to their surprise that
it was a loaded revolver, whereupon they decided, rather than "taking
justice into their own hands," to take him to Military Base 302 at
Chimaltenango and turn him over to the military authorities as a presumed member
of the guerrillas who, they believed, had massacred their family in November
1988, and had probably also abducted their father Alberto Callejas Callejas. 11.
A few days after the arrest of Eleodoro Sal Siquinajay, the same
nongovernmental human rights group lodged a fresh complaint about the arrest of
that person. 12.
On July 14, 1989, the Commission received a report on the status of the
investigations, according to which the case was in the hands of the Lower Court
for Chimaltenango, at the investigative stage.
The proceedings before the court specifically name as the alleged
perpetrators of the massacre the following members of ORPA:
Pedro Palma Lau, Pancho, Sandra Chavez Galvez, Captain Ana, Luis Antonio
Santacruz Mendoza, Captain Pablo, and Jaime Aurelio Tun Luch, Captain Hernan,
against whom the judge will issue the proper arrest warrants so that they may be
apprehended and brought before the Court. 13.
In the course of the 76th session held in Washington, D.C. from September
18 to 29, 1989, at a hearing attended by the complainants, the Government of
Guatemala extended an official invitation for the IACHR to "visit the
site" in Guatemala, there to conduct such inquiries as it deemed
appropriate in Case 10400 concerning
the events that had taken place at the hamlet of El Aguacate, and to see for
itself --in the words of the invitation-- that the
domestic remedies were in progress and, consequently, had not yet been exhausted
in this case. 14.
In line with the regulations governing the IACHR, the full Commission
entrusted the visit to a special commission headed by its Vice-Chairman,
Dr. Leo Valladares Lanza, by its member Ambassador John Stevenson, and by David
Padilla, the Assistant Executive Secretary of the IACHR and Manuel Velasco
Clark, the lawyer in charge of Guatemala.
THE ON-SITE INVESTIGATION 15.
The visit was divided into two parts:
a preparatory period from January 22 to 29, handled by Dr. Velasco Clark
from the IACHR Secretariat, and the official visit itself, from January 29 to
February 3, 1990, conducted by the IACHR special commission.
Just before starting the visit, the members of the special commission
issued a press release explaining the purposes of the investigation. 16.
The special commission began its meetings on Monday 29, at 8:30 a.m., by
visiting the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and head of the Guatemalan
judiciary, Dr. Edmundo Vasquez Martinez. The
IACHR delegates explained the object of the visit and requested the cooperation
of the head of the judiciary in order to enlist for their activities the support
of the various magistrates who had taken part in the judicial inquiry.
Dr. Vásquez offered and provided the assistance requested, thanks to
which the special commission was able to interview not only the judges who took
part in the investigation but also the other lesser court officials who played a
role in it, including the forensic physician for the town of Chimaltenango.
Furthermore, thanks to Dr. Vasquez' support, the special commission was
given a photocopy of the judicial case file, which made it possible to make a
thorough study and review of the proceedings. 17.
Next, at 10 a.m. on that same morning, the special commission met with
the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Guatemala, Ariel Rivera Irias. Besides the members of the special commission, this meeting
was also attended by high officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The Minister welcomed the members of the special commission and informed
them that in order to expedite the work of the Commission a special committee
had been set up to coordinate the visit from the IACHR. This committee was made
up of the following persons: Ileana
de Rosario Acuña Ordoñez, Chairman of the Human Rights Advisory Committee of
the President of the Republic; Infantry Colonel Luis Arturo Issacs Rodríguez,
Chief of Public Relations of the Army; Major Marco Vinicio González Vega, from
the Ministry of National Defense; Juan Carlos Cuestas Gálvez,
Minister-Counselor from the Special Affairs Department of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs; Hilario Roderico Pineda Sanchez, Representative from the
Ministry of the Interior; Carlos Anelu, Deputy Secretary for Public Relations of
the Presidency of the Republic; Humberto Castillo, Representative from the
General Bureau of the National Police, and Víctor Hugo Garrido Colón,
Representative of the Office of the Attorney General.
The special commission advised the Minister that it would confine its
activities to investigating and reviewing Case 10.400 dealing with the events at
the hamlet of El Aguacate, that the program and inquiries it carried out would
be confidential, that no statements would be given to the media concerning
progress or difficulties encountered in its work, that, as usual, an official
communique would be issued at the outset of the mission and another at its end,
so that public opinion might be aware of the general outline and purpose of the
visit, and that the special commission hoped to be able to rely on the
cooperation of officials, police, and military authorities.
Lastly, the Minister was reminded of the Government's commitment to
prevent retaliation of any kind against all persons to be interviewed by the
Commission in the course of its inquiry. 18.
The special commission carried on with its official meetings by next
visiting the Ombudsman for Human Rights, Ramiro de Leon Carpio, who had been
recently selected to replace Gonzalo Menéndez de la Riva.
The new Ombudsman for Human Rights told the special commission that on
January 17, 1990, he had issued a resolution broadening the investigation of the
El Aguacate events. Under that
resolution the Ombudsman ordered the completion of his investigation within 30
days. It is the Commission's
understanding that the investigation was finished by the deadline established
but that its results were inconclusive. 19.
The special commission also met with a two other governmental
authorities. They were then
Minister of Defense, General Héctor Alejandro Gramajo Morales, and the Minister
of the Interior, retired General Carlos Augusto Morales Villatoro. 20.
The special commission likewise
met with leaders of two Guatemalan NGOs, namely Nineth Montenegro de García
of the Grupo de Apoyo Mutuo (GAM)and Factor Mendez, director of Guatemalan
Center for the Study, Research and Promotion of Human Rights (CIEPRODEH).
GAM was helpful in urging widows of the El Aguacate victims to talk to
the special commission. CIEPRODEH
made available a witness whose testimony was recorded.
The witness asked for anonymity. 21.
The special commission also met with Luis Alfredo Dardon de La Riva and
Luis Mazariegos, Chimaltenango court officials who serve as Justice of the Peace
and Investigating Magistrate, respectively, and who were in charge of this case.
Also present was the Secretary of the Court, Freddy Avila. 22.
The Commission met twice with Dr. Emilio Mendizabal Ferrigno, the coroner
who conducted the post mortem of the 22 cadavers.
The doctor, who is the forensic physician of Chimaltenango, was first
invited to an interview in the Military Zone where the bodies had been
identified. He was asked to explain
how or why he had gone there on November 28, 1988 to conduct the
medical-forensic examination of the bodies of the 22 peasants from the
Village of El Aguacate, how he had carried out this work and whether he had
received cooperation from the base commander, Colonel Quilo.
He said he had been summoned to do the medical-forensic examination
by Freddy Edwardo Avila Rodriguez, the Secretary of the lower court judge, and
had gone to the Military Zone and done the medical-forensic examination of
the bodies but not an autopsy, because of the evidence of death by strangulation
and the advanced state of decomposition of the bodies.
Dr. Mendizabal said he could not affirm that the victims of the massacre
had been tortured since the state of decomposition of the bodies was such when
he examined them that the darks blotches which looked like burns or bruises
might simply have been the result of blood clotting.
He said that he did not conduct complete autopsies of all the bodies,
first because the cause of death, strangulation was obvious, and second, because
he only had facilities in Chimaltenango for two cadavers. 23.
The special commission also met with nine villagers from El Aguacate who
had formed part of the search party that had set out to find Carlos Humberto
Guerra Callejas. This meeting took
place in the City Hall of San Andres Itzapa.
All of these men belong, in one degree or another, to the Callejas
family. Of these, three were
present but fled when the search party was detained by the presumed assassins.
None of these ascribe responsibility to Government agents.
Moreover, all of these men reported guerrilla activity in the vicinity in
recent times. They also testified
to armed confrontations between the Army and guerrillas between November
22-27, 1988. They went on to
relate how they went out to search for Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas, led by
their evangelical pastor, Antonio Olivares Bances, and how they intended to pay
a ransom because they believed their kinsman had fallen into the hands of the
guerrillas, punishment for his having served as a military agent.
Oscar and Baldomero Callejas testified in separate and lengthy
interviews, that they had informed the military of the kidnappings of their
relatives, had served as guides for the Army search party and were present when
the bodies of the 21 victims were discovered.
They also corroborated Army reports about hostilities with the guerrillas
during the time in question. One
even placed six men dressed as civilians, presumably guerrillas, near the site
of the graves. 24.
The special commission met twice with the prisoner Eleodoro Sal
Siquinajay who complained of a mental block and was clearly confused about some
or all of the details of his situation. In
any event, Sal Siquinajay's testimony was so addled, and inconsistent that the
special commission was of the view that it shed no light one way or the other on
the El Agucate massacre. 25.
In the course of its on-site visit, the special commission visited
Military Zone 302, the Army base, in Chimaltenango.
In the company of Colonels Jose Luis Quilo Ayuso, Zone commander at the
time of the massacre and Marco Antonio Gonzalez Taracena, present commander, the
special commission inspected the premises of the military headquarters, because
--as explained to the above officers-- serious
accusations had been made by the complainants that the 22 peasants had been
murdered by the Guatemalan army within the military base and then taken back to
the Mountain at El Aguacate, where the bodies presumably turned up as having
been discovered by the Army itself. 26.
In the company of the above officers, the following facilities were
visited:
A heliport where the bodies were brought in November 1988; the area where
they were placed for identification by the civilian authorities and next of kin
and for the judicial and medical-forensic procedures carried out by the
proper authorities: the construction materials warehouse and bedroom of the
local bricklayer and plumber; the vehicle repair shop; laundry building; kitchen
and mess hall for the troops; food supplies warehouse of the logistics section;
commissary; sleeping barracks of the troops; officers' club; correctional
building. 27.
It was observed during the tour of the facilities that, for the most
part, Military Zone 302 has no wall around it and looks more like a school than
a military installation, so that it would seem unlikely that the peasants could
have been executed within it, as there does not seem to be a truly secluded area
that is set apart and might serve to murder 20 persons in the manner described
in the complaint. In addition, the
surrounding area is very populated, and includes the La Alameda school that
looks directly into the interior of the Zone.
Furthermore, among the civilian personnel in the Zone are natives of San
Andres Itzapa who perform administrative or domestic work as clerks, cooks, and
so on, so that there would have been hundreds of eyewitnesses to the killings. 28.
The special commission held several private meetings with the officers
who had been involved in the events connected with El Aguacate. They told the IACHR that they had acted in accordance with
the law, with their duties and with the appeal from the El Aguacate residents to
protect and help them find their missing family members.
In addition, thanks to the help of two local guides, the bodies of the
peasants had been found almost immediately, though unfortunately murdered and
buried in an area of the Sierra Madre mountains. Otherwise, they might still be
listed as missing to this day. 29.
The officers, non-commissioned officers and soldiers interviewed
were informed that they too were under investigation, because they had been
named not as rescuers of the villagers but as their kidnappers and murderers. 30.
The officers told the members of the special commission that they were
aware of the charges brought against the Guatemalan Army and had been instructed
and authorized to provide any information requested of them, regardless of its
confidential or secret nature; they said that in connection with the El Aguacate
investigation to be conducted by the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights they had the full support of the Government of Guatemala and the backing
of the Army. 31.
Colonel Quilo was asked for information concerning the charges in one
report that he had obstructed the work of the forensic doctor. Colonel Quilo
replied that all members of his military command had provided at all times the
fullest cooperation in order to solve any problems arising in the course of the
court proceedings, and he suggested that the Commission should meet with the
court officials and the forensic doctor to find out about his
--Colonel Quilo's-- own personal attitude and that of
his subordinates. 32.
Another matter that the special commission wanted to look into was that
of the human rights organizations which had met with Colonel Quilo to obtain
information about the case. Colonel Quilo reported having received only one
visit from the Ombudsman for Human Rights, Mr. Gonzalez Menendez de la Riva, the
week after the incident. The
Ombudsman had been in the company of his two Assistants, and Colonel Quilo was
asked to narrate the role of the Army in the events of El Aguacate.
Colonel Quilo also reported that he had received no visits from any other
human rights group or any other national or international agency connected with
the protection of human rights anywhere in the world, and that he had been
interviewed about this matter only by reporters from various national and
foreign media. 33.
The special commission was taken to a special room named the War Room of
the Military Zone, where they were shown maps of the military operations carried
out by the Guatemalan Army in the Chimaltenango area, which described in great
detail the location of the incident. Next,
the special commission asked for the record of military operations, a true log
book in which all military operations conducted by that unit are entered day by
day. The reports are typewritten in
six copies distributed on a strictly secret basis to the senior officers of the
Guatemalan Army responsible for fighting subversion, and the garrison keeps only
one copy. 34.
All officers who had taken part in the El Aguacate incident were present,
including Lieutenants Freddie Antonio de la Cruz, Juan Domingo Vivar Cajtic and
Second Lieutenant Manuel Adolfo Molina Gutierrez.
The officers explained the tactical procedures followed by rescue
patrols. The Commission was also
shown highly classified (secret) documents containing the directives and orders
from the Army High Command to all personnel with respect to operating
procedures, including the particular mention that their primary mission is to
protect the civilian population, that reprisals against civilians are forbidden,
and that no military action is to jeopardize the safety of the inhabitants.
It was also mentioned that the documents shown to the special commission
at that time would be made available as well to the OAS Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights, with such limitations and reservations as might be
dictated to preserve the security of operations and individuals. 35. At the request of the members of the Commission, the officers indicated on what days operations had taken place, and their type, and on what days there had been no operations whatever. The daily record was very detailed and showed, in addition, the casualties suffered by the Guatemalan Army or those established or estimated to have been suffered by the guerrillas. It described each military operation, the instructions given to the patrols, the manner in which they had been carried out, the type of military equipment taken along, the munition that was used, the unforseen events that took place and, if anyone had been wounded, a description of the wounds and the measures taken on behalf of the wounded soldier, all of this with a description of the coordinates of each location. 36.
With regard to air support from military helicopters, furthermore, it was
pointed out that a detailed control was kept of their operations, including the
following aspects: flight plan
prior to takeoff, number of flight hours logged by each helicopter every time it
leaves its base, whether or not the flight plan specified by the pilot of the
aircraft prior to departure has been followed, an estimate of the fuel used, a
report of any mechanical breakdowns of the machine, a report of breakdowns or
damage attributable to clashes (perforations, total or partial destruction of
parts of the aircraft, etc.). 37.
The documents kept in Military Headquarters 302 at Chimaltenango were
reviewed directly by the members of the special commission, who were allowed to
read all pages or portions requested. While
the special commission was examining these records, the officers pointed out
that although the documents could be reviewed by the Commission, for reasons of
national security and in view of the combat situation, they could not be
photocopied or removed from the War Room, access to which, as noted before, is
strictly restricted. 38.
In the record of operations carried out in November 25 was the report
from the two local men who had acted as Army guides that Carlos Humberto Guerra
Callejas had been abducted on November 22 and that 21 persons who had gone out
to search for him in the mountain had been taken prisoner.
There was also a record of the military rescue patrols dispatched on that
same day, guided by the brothers Callejas Tobar. 39.
Each of the statements made by the army about the clashes and the conduct
of the search for, and attempted rescue of, the murdered peasants was described
in the above-mentioned log book, which also indicated the wounds suffered
by the officers who had taken part in the rescue mission.
There was mention as well of the shelling requested by the army and
carried out by the Guatemalan Air Force against the mountainsides where the
guerrillas were thought to be hiding. 40.
The officers then showed the members of the special commission some
documents bearing the same date that had also been filed away with these
records, proving the preexistence of the records made available to the
Commission and the fact that it was not prefabricated evidence.
The Commission was also given copies of the maps, diagrams and summary
charts containing a detailed explanation of the whole sequence of events, as
investigated and established up to that date. 41.
To gauge the present situation in the hamlet of El Aguacate and talk with
the villagers who still live there, a visit was made in a
four-wheel-drive vehicle to the village at the foot of the mountain,
where it was observed that most dwellings had been abandoned, the families
having gone to a new housing development named "El Eden."
There were, however, several persons engaged in farming. 42.
The hamlet of El Aguacate lies in a ravine parallel to a small river
named Rio de la Virgen and a local road that accommodates only one vehicle at a
time. 43.
When villagers who were busy with their labors were asked whether the
inhabitants of El Aguacate were forbidden to return to their houses and land,
they answered no. They said that
many worked in El Aguacate by day and slept in San Andres Itzapa, where the
government had given them some houses, while others had leased out their lands
or were having them worked by other people. 44.
They were also asked why they had to take the cattle to graze far from
the village, to which they replied that they did so because the land was narrow
and was fully used for crops, and if the animals were allowed to roam about the
town they would eat everything that had been sown, for which reason the Callejas
took their cows to a neighboring mountain area known as Astillero de San Isidro
[San Isidro Shipyard], explaining that the name of the place had nothing to do
with shipbuilding but only with the splintering of the lumber that was cut down
there in order to make the firewood that all dwellers of El Aguacate and
neighboring areas used for cooking their food and protecting themselves from the
cold. 45.
The special commission made two visits to inspect the area of the crime.
The first of these was designed to observe, evaluate and assess, to see
whether the place offered any clues, hazards, and to get a first-hand idea
of the area. This was done on
January 25, 1990, by the IACHR Senior Specialist responsible for Guatemalan
affairs, who had arrived a week earlier. The
second trip was undertaken by the whole special commission group on the 31st of
that same month. 46.
One of the first findings was that since November 28, 1988, the day the
Court Secretary had been there and the bodies had been removed from the
mountain, no other visit had been paid to the scene of the events and no court
official or any of the nongovernmental human rights agencies that have filed
complaints had inspected the place until January 25, 1990, the date of the visit
by the IACHR attorney. By sheer
coincidence, on the same day the IACHR attorney finished his inspection the
place was visited by a group from the Office of the Ombudsman for Human Rights,
headed by Luis Fernando Hurtado Prem, Assistant Ombudsman, whom the Ombudsman
for Human Rights had sent there to look at the place for the first time.
47.
The first trip by the special commission was made aboard a Bell 412
helicopter of the Guatemalan Air Force that took off from Military Zone 302 at
Chimaltenango and headed for the area of the incident, flying over San Andres
Itzapa, the hamlet of El Aguacate, Cerro de Las Minas, Tuluche, the El Soco
Mountain, Quebrada de la Virgen, and landing at the heliport where the 22 bodies
had been removed on November 28. Here,
with a security patrol and in the presence of the officers who had taken part in
that operation, the Commission made its way to the grave where the body of
Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas and his three dogs had been found, and thence to
a campground, described as a subversive camp, where Second Lieutenant Manuel
Augusto Molina Gutierrez had been wounded in the armed clash of November 25,
1988. The Commission then went on
to the site of the four graves for the 22 bodies.
The surrounding area was inspected, and hats and clothing belonging to
the victims were still to be found. All
the clothing that was found was stuck to the ground, because of the long time it
had lain outdoors. The trip then
continued to the heliport, along the route followed to bring out the bodies.
Finally, a helicopter was radioed for, and the Commission flew back to
Military Zone 302, where it landed at about 1:00 p.m. 48.
The area of mountainous jungle inspected is situated on one of the chains
of the Andes which, in Guatemala, is known as the Sierra Madre. Its deep gorges,
mountains and small valleys make access to the area very difficult.
The altitude of the mountains here is about 2,800 meters above
sea-level and the narrow and craggy paths leading into the area obviously
lend themselves to ambushes. It is
an area of dazzling beauty, but usually at noon, a strong wind rises and the
whole area is enveloped in a dense fog that makes it almost impossible to see. 49.
On January 31, in a similar but unarmed helicopter, the members of the
Commission took off from the same Military Base 302 in Chimaltenango and
overflew to and fro the routes likely to have been followed by Carlos Humberto
Guerra Callejas on the day of his abduction, by the various subsequent search
parties organized by the villagers of El Aguacate, and by the military search
and rescue patrols. Next, on
instructions from the members of the Commission, colored flares were fired on
land in order to pinpoint as nearly as possible the area where the pickup truck
of the Evangelical Minister had been parked, at which point the helicopter let
down to allow the members to look at the place and take photographs.
Travel was then resumed along the path followed by the peasants who went
in to negotiate the ransoming of Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas.
This was verified from the air using the same system of colored flares,
and the helicopter flew to the site where the group of peasant negotiators was
probably seized and abducted. 50.
After flying over the area in various directions for some minutes,
occasionally returning to the same places in order to let the members of the
Commission reconcile what they were observing from the helicopter with the
charts and air maps being looked at on board, the helicopter pilot was told to
try to approach the heliport rigged by the army especially for the purpose of
bringing out the bodies of the peasants. 51.
Because the mountains are very steep, the helicopter's approach is
neither easy nor safe, particularly if a strong wind is blowing, because the
aircraft must fly into a canyon flanked by mountains and approach the side of
one mountain, the Montaña del Sojo, where in an area some 3 x 4 square meters,
felled tree trunks have been placed horizontally, without fastening or securing
them in any way to the surface of the small area of the heliport.
Due to the incline, moreover, when the helicopter approaches the
heliport, the propellers of the aircraft come dangerously close to the branches
of trees. Furthermore, as the
helicopter nears the heliport, that is to say, the rectangle formed by the tree
trunks, one must leap from the air to the ground from a height of some two
meters, because the helicopter cannot land on the heliport, which would cave in
from the weight. Accordingly, with
the helicopter flying stationary in the air, the Members of the Commission
jumped to the ground, whereupon they were told to run with their heads down to
avoid being hit by the propellers and seek shelter in the mountain from the risk
of presenting a target to any snipers posted in the surrounding mountains. 52.
Once on the mountain, the special commission had a steep climb of about
100 meters to the summit, and after traversing in every direction the area known
as Filón de las Minas, Filón del Sojo, and many other places to which the
inhabitants give different names, it reached the place where the peasants were
supposed to have been stopped and seized, which place had already been observed
and pinpointed from the air. The
route followed thereafter was that which the 21 peasants as a group were said to
have been taken on, through a matted forest and paths that climb and dip over
the thick woods, to where they were murdered and perhaps tortured first, by
their captors. 53.
After that, the special commission asked to be taken to where the armed
clashes took place between the army and the guerrillas during the operation
mounted to find and try to rescue the peasants alive. 54.
Then the special commission went to the area of the graves, where the
murdered peasants had been half-buried, and inspected them one by one,
taking photographs of every detail. It was deduced at that time that the graves
had not been dug especially to bury the bodies of the peasants, but were
trenches carefully dug long before, presumably by the guerrillas operating in
that area. 55.
Before leaving Guatemala, the special commission also met with the
lawyers and representatives of the Government, so as to give them an opportunity
to present their arguments and testimony, just as the nongovernmental human
rights organizations had done. At
this meeting, the special commission received more detailed information,
including some of the charts and maps already furnished to it, this time
presented in a folder labeled Official Report by the Government of Guatemala on
the Massacre of Peasants from the village of El Aguacate.
Attached to the report was a section with photographs of the operation to
rescue the bodies, the building of the heliport to bring out the bodies, and
some pictures of the burial. 56.
Before leaving Guatemala, the special commission held a private interview
with the President of the Republic, accompanied by the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Ariel Rivera Irias. The
Commission explained to him in detail how it had carried out its work and
described certain points it considered important. 57.
It was during this visit to President Cerezo in the Presidential Palace
that the special commission met General Manuel Antonio Callejas, Chief of the
National Defense General Staff, who had just retired from his post. 58.
It was then, moreover, that it learned of his close family tie with the
victims of El Aguacate. General
Callejas, dressed in civilian clothes, confined himself to greeting the members
of the Commission and reiterating in his own name, that of his family and of the
Guatemalan Army, the desire that everything possible should be done to clear up
the matter. 59. At this final interview the special commission voiced no opinion whatever about the results of its investigation, but did acknowledge its finding that the internal legal remedies had indeed been functioning albeit with shortcomings, and consequently were not exhausted. To the Chief of State it recommended that the judiciary should be provided with a copy of the "Special Report" prepared especially by the Government of Guatemala for the members of the OAS special commission to clear up the events at El Aguacate, as well as with the same facilities extended to the IACHR to inspect the scene of the events. At that time, the special commission disclosed that its members had formed an opinion about the manner in which the events had taken place, and this view would be con- veyed through a special report to the full Commission at its 77th session. 60.
Following the special commission's on site visit to Guatemala for the
purpose of investigating this case, the Commission held several hearings on the
matter with the full participation of the legal representatives of the
petitioners as well as diplomatic representatives of the Government.
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE REPORT FROM THE COMPLAINANTS AND THE
FINDINGS OF THE COMMISSION 61. After studying the depositions in the judicial case file with the help of the eyewitnesses and protagonists of the events, the Commission has established the following chronology of events for the week of the tragedy, from Tuesday the 22 to Tuesday the 29 of November, 1988: Tuesday
22: 5
a.m.
Military Commissioner Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas left his house with
his three dogs to look for two missing animals.
The day passes and he does not return. 3
p.m.
His family, worried because he suffered from epileptic seizures,
organizes a search party to look for him. The
search group returns to the village at nightfall without having found Carlos
Humberto Guerra Callejas. Wednesday
23: 6
a.m.
With the help of 26 persons divided into five groups, the family resumes
the search in places where he is thought likely to be found.
One group goes to the "Filón La Chichicastada or Barranca Obscura,"
and finds footprints; another group made up of Oscar Orlando Callejas Tobar and
Luis Arnoldo Callejas Tobar goes to the "El Chirral" ravine, where it
comes across Encarnacion Guerra and Manuel Nieves Coyan, who had gone out
earlier, had found the cows in the "El Chirral" field and were
bringing them back to the village. There
they see the footprints of Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas and follow them to a
place known as "El Caballo Blanco" [The White Horse] and "La
Pazona," where they observe that the prints are joined by other prints from
smooth shoes, which leads them to reason that he was stopped there by unknown
persons. Another group made up of
Fernando Callejas, Ernesto Tajtaj, and Ramiro Callejas Figueroa reaches a place
known as "La Tepescuintlera" where it joins up with another group, and
the comment is made that footprints had been seen.
They divide into two other groups and continue the search, agreeing to
meet at the "Filón del Chiquero."
By the time they reach "La Pazona" the group composed of Oscar
Orlando Callejas Tobar, Fernando Callejas, Ernesto Tajtaj, and Ramiro Callejas
find again the footprints of the missing men, which lead up to the place known
as "El Chichicastero de la Barranca Oscura," where they meet the other
search groups, making a total of nearly 20 persons.
Here they discuss the strangeness of the situation and the advisability
of notifying the army if the family members decide to do so.
The villagers break up into two groups, the
smaller going to El Aguacate and the other continuing the search.
Oscar Orlando Callejas and Ernesto Tajtaj Callejas go to San Andres
Itzapa looking for Francisco Callejas Guerra, brother of the missing man.
When asked, he tells them that no word should be given as yet to the
army, because there might be a shootout and his brother would die.
They agree to continue the search the next day, and if there were no
positive results, to notify the army. Thursday
24: 5
a.m.
The search is resumed by three groups made up of about ten persons each,
which follow different routes and agree to meet at the place known as "El
Filón," which means the summit. The
first two groups arrive at that place saying they have found nothing.
When the group composed of Cristobal Chuy and Romualdo Callejas arrives,
these report having seen men dressed in grey overalls and carrying shotguns,
whom they believe to be holding the missing person.
They have also seen a man wearing a cap.
Given this situation, they decide to send Mr. Rosalio Callejas Guerra to
speak with the Evangelical Minister Antonio Olivares Bances and ask him, as a
spiritual and religious leader, to come and mediate and secure from the
"armed men" the release of the kidnapped Military Commissioner.
On reaching the place, the Evangelical Minister leaves his pick-up
truck, asks for volunteers to go with him and climbs to the place known as
"El Soco," heading for the place where Romualdo Callejas had reported
seeing the "armed men." 10
a.m. While this is
happening on the mountain, Baldomero Callejas Tobar, Oscar Orlando Callejas
Tobar, and Waldemar Figueroa accompany Augusto Guerra Ugarte, son of the missing
man, to report the disappearance of his father to the National Police at
Chimaltenango. 12
n.
After reporting the matter, the four of them board a bus to the village
of "El Sitan" and walk from there to "El Soco."
When they reach the area bearing that name, they find the pick-up
truck of the Evangelical Minister and, next to it, Arnoldo Guerra Hurtarte,
Roberto Guerra Hurtarte, Esteban Salvajan Gomez (also known as Esteban Arenales
Gomez), Francisco Javier Guerra López, Hilario Callejas, and Francisco Tajtaj
Coyan, who tell them very excitedly that the Evangelical Minister has gone to
the "Filón del Chiquero," has been taken prisoner along with 19
villagers by "armed men" and that the only ones who managed to escape
were Francisco Tajtaj Coyan, Esteban Salvajan/Arenales
Gomez,
and Francisco Hilario Salazar Callejas.
On
hearing this, Oscar Orlando Guerra Callejas and Baldomero Guerra Callejas, who
had just reported the matter to the police,decides to wait no longer and
immediately go to report the events to, and ask for help from, the Military Zone
302 at Chimaltenango, leaving behind, where the minister had left his
pick-up truck, Esteban Salvajan/Arenales Gomez, Arnoldo Guerra Hurtarte,
Roberto Guerra Hurtarte, Francisco Javier Callejas Lopez, Hilario Callejas,
Francisco Tajtaj Coyan, Jorge Augusto Guerra Hurtarte, and Waldemar Figueroa,
who dare not move from that place lest their 20 relatives should return.
However, fearing that the "armed men" might come out to seize
them as well, they get on the pick-up truck and head for Chimaltenango,
but they meet with an accident by the five kilometer marker on the highway and
subsequently have to be carried to the emergency room at the National Hospital
in that town. 4:30
p.m. When
they arrive at the Military Base, Oscar Orlando, and Baldomero Callejas Tobar,
after reporting the matter and asking for help, agree to serve as guides for the
military search party. 6
p.m.
The military rescue groups set out from two different points, each guided
by one of the Callejas Tobar brothers. 9
p.m.
The army troops and the guides come to where the minister had left the
vehicle but it is not there. Owing to darkness and fearing that they would be unable to
distinguish between victims and kidnappers in the event of an armed clash, they
decide to sleep on the mountain and begin the search and rescue operation very
early the next morning. Friday
25:
At down, the troops split up, one group guided by Baldomero Callejas
Tobar penetrating from the south, through the place known as "La Quebrada
de los Cedros," and the other, guided by Oscar Orlando Callejas Tobar going
in from the north, along the route known as "La Mosichellada" or
"El Rancho Viejo."
On reaching the place named "El Cabo Verde" at about 9:30 a.m.,
the group that went in from the north has to repel an armed attack from a
guerrilla group. At noon, near the "Plan de Canaque," a soldier from
the northern patrol finds dug-up earth, and by digging, they find one of
the dogs of the missing Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas and, under that, his own
body with another dead dog under his neck and still another at his feet.
The patrol immediately radioes the finding of the first body to Military
Zone 302. While they prepare to
transport the body, at about 1:30 pm there is another armed clash in which
Second Lieutenant Manuel Adolfo Molina is wounded and the soldier Cesar Augusto
Sum Bac receives a slight injury as well. This is reported to Military Base 302
by radio, asking for a helicopter to evacuate the wounded officer and the dead
body. During the combat, Oscar
Orlando, and Baldomero Callejas Tobar hear the guerrillas curse the soldiers.
On their way to the upper reaches of the "Cerro Las Minas" the
military patrol discovers a campground they describe as subversive, where they
find the machetes taken from the persons kidnapped, as well as food remains.
When they reach the area known as "La Pinada del Pozo del Zope"
they improvise a heliport from which, about 4:30 p.m., the wounded man and the
body of Guerra Callejas are evacuated. The
military patrol then continues the search. That night they sleep near the place called "La
Manzanera." Saturday
26: 5
a.m.
The northern patrol is again attacked by a group of guerrillas and while
they are pursuing the subversives an armed clash takes place by the village of
"Tuluche" at 9 am. 5
p.m.
The southern patrol, which was combing the Canaque mountain, find in the
neighborhood of "El Chiquero" four graves containing the decomposed
bodies of the villagers from El Aguacate. This
they radio to the Military Zone 302 and receive orders to touch nothing and
build a heliport as nearby as possible, in order that court officials might be
taken there to inspect the bodies. Sunday
27:
The building of a heliport begins at dawn, and when a helicopter arrives
to supply the patrol with materials it is attacked from the surrounding
mountains with machine gun fire, which prompts a request for air support to
silence the source of the attacks. 2
p.m.
Court officials, local authorities and the press arrive by helicopter to
witness the exhuming of the bodies. Owing
to the late hour and poor weather conditions, the bodies cannot be evacuated
that day. Monday
28: 8
a.m.
The bodies are transported, and at the request of family members and for
reasons of security, they are taken to Military Zone 302 at Chimaltenango, where
at 9:00 a.m. the Justice of the Peace, Luis Alfred Dardon de La Riva, and the
Forensic Physician Emilio Mendizábal conduct the medical- forensic
procedures and identify all the bodies except one with the help of family
members. This done, the judge
orders the bodies coffined and taken for the wake to the municipality of San
Andres Itzapa, the procession setting out at 5:00 pm. Tuesday
29: 9
a.m.
The funeral procession leaves for the General Cemetery of the
Municipality. 62.
In reviewing the allegations set out in the complaint from the
complainants, the special commission notes that the mountain area in which the
events took place had indeed been a combat zone and that, according to the local
people, it still was, but that the village of El Aguacate had not been and was
not now an area of combat, which may explain why it did not even have a Civil
Defense Patrol. The villagers had
refused to form a Civil Defense Patrol authority; most of the inhabitants
sympathized with the army, and many of them served as "Military
Commissioners." 63.
As to the presence of armed men dressed in green uniforms and black
berets mentioned in item (b), this fact too has been confirmed, but
according to most testimonies heard and those included in the court case file,
these armed men did not belong to the army but to the guerrillas. 64.
Regarding (c), where it is stated that the soldiers discovered the
bodies less than six hours after beginning the search, this is also true in
part, but the search that had begun the day before and was resumed at dawn on
the 25th, discovered only one body, that of Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas,
not those of the remaining victims, which turned up a day later.
The presence of the brothers Oscar Orlando and Waldemar Callejas Tobar as
guides of the group searching for their own relatives, rules out a fraud by the
army in that search, and underscores that there was a search and there was a
find, that there were clashes, that the clashes were provoked by unknown men,
according to the witnesses-guides, and that the army defended itself and
then went after the attackers, to no avail. 65.
Regarding allegations of torture, it is not possible to state with
certainty whether the victims were tortured.
Some witnesses to the exhumation testified that the bodies showed signs
of torture, burn marks, swollen genitalia, and the like.
However, according to the coroner, these signs could have resulted from
the state of decomposition of the bodies. Statements
that the victims' tongues had been cut or eyes gauged
were denied by the coroner. It
is curious that both civilians witnesses (excluding the coroner) in this case
and initial Government documents claim
that the victims had been tortured. During
the on-site visit, however, Government and military spokesmen contended
that the victims had not been tortured in a systematic fashion although they may
well have been roughed up prior to their murder. 66.
On this same point, the rest of the description is accurate; the victims
had been strangled and most had their hands tied and wore no shoes. It should be noted that the victims who had been Army
collaborators had been stripped of their clothes and burial naked. 67.
As for item (e) concerning the dispatching of aircraft in support
of the operation to rescue the bodies, this is also true, as is the fact that
the guerrillas did fire on the helicopters, which is established by several
witnesses and testimonies. What the
special commission did establish as untrue is that the firing against the
mountains surrounding the heliport was directed at an area populated by
civilians, which in fact does not exist. Nobody
lives in the surrounding mountains. There
is nothing there but impenetrable jungle. 68.
As for item (f) according to which there are versions attributed
to relatives that the victims were seized by the army, taken alive from the
mountain to the military base, then tortured and murdered at the base and
subsequently transported back to the mountain and buried, the following comment
is in order: 69.
The murder of the peasants who had gone into the mountain must have been
carried out on the mountain itself, because:
I.
It would have been virtually impossible, if the army had kidnapped the
peasants in order to murder them, to remove them from the mountain overland
without arousing the curiosity of relatives who were anxiously watching every
detail of events in the area. Bringing
out 22 tied-up persons on foot, which is the only way to leave the area,
inasmuch as it cannot be done even by riding an animal, would not have passed
unnoticed.
II.
This transfer, moreover, would have required a substantial and properly
armed military force, to prevent any escape, and any route followed in order to
come out of the mountain and reach a place from which to board trucks or heavy
vehicles would have been likewise observed by the local people who work
everywhere in the neighborhood of the Sierra Madre. It would have been similarly
almost impossible to bring them out in trucks from an area near the mountain,
because all access roads are torn up as a result of the destruction sowed in
that area by the last earthquake and it is only with great difficulty that they
can be used by small cars or pick-up trucks equipped with four-wheel
drive.
III. After
ruling out as virtually impossible the transfer of the 21 peasants by land,
consideration was given to the idea, eventually discarded, that they might have
been transported alive by helicopter to base 302, killed there and then returned
to be half-buried where they were found.
This was also held to be impossible, since it would have required several
helicopters and numerous round trips. This is because each helicopter, owing to
the altitude and operating difficulties of the area, cannot carry more than five
or six persons besides the pilot and co-pilot.
IV.
This view was corroborated by the fact that the graves where the victims
were buried had not been dug recently but are foxholes carefully dug, presumably
by the guerrillas, to surprise and destroy the military patrols that come
looking for them. A thorough examination of the graves, climbed into by the
members of the delegation in order to inspect them more closely, showed that the
walls were smooth and perfectly vertical.
V.
Having discarded the possibility that they might have been taken overland
or flown to Chimaltenango to be murdered at the garrison and then returned to
the mountain area --by whatever method of transportation, there
would necessarily have been a very obvious activity that could not have passed
unnoticed by the people in the area and would have been reported in the
complaints, yet not a single one speaks of or mentions any such massive movement
on land or in the air--, the special commission concluded, in
principle, that the murder of the peasants had taken place in the mountain and
not in the garrison, and that consequently, all versions according to which the
peasants had been killed at Base 302 in Chimaltenango were incorrect. 70.
The versions under items (g), (h), (i) and (j)
of the complaint that support the theory of the killings taking place at the
garrison, were explained to the widows who were asked if they were true, and
they denied them. It should be
noted also that the widows were questioned and interviewed by the special
commission in private. 71.
As to item (k) concerning the presence of army jeeps and soldiers
in the area, this is perfectly possible in light of the rescue operation mounted
on those days by the army to rescue the peasants alive and to protect their
families. The witness Waldemar
Figueroa confirms this in one of his statements, when he says he was leaning
against an army jeep and could hear how the army rescue teams, guided by
Callejas, communicated on the radio with the Chimaltenango base and reported
their efforts to free the villagers, their clashes with the guerrillas, etc.,
all of which could be heard over the radio terminal installed in the jeep next
to the witness. 72.
In summary, the special commission's examination of witnesses and visit
to the scenes described above, clearly contradict many of the assertions,
allegations, and conclusions contained in the complaint. 73.
Another conclusion reached during the course of the investigation was
that it would have been absurd for the army to murder the peasants and then,
while helping the relatives find and rescue them, fire against its own men
engaged in the rescue operation, even wounding some of the officers and
non-commissioned officers who had taken part in the rescue.
For this, accordingly, an opposing and different force had to be
responsible. 74.
Another conclusion that emerges from the examination of the site and the
testimony of eyewitnesses is that the peasants abducted while trying to locate
and rescue Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas were murdered by their captors when
these were encircled and cornered by the army that was coming to the rescue.
Had they spared the lives of these victims, any of them could have easily
identified who had taken them prisoner and had probably abducted and murdered
Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas earlier on. Furthermore,
herding or leading through the mountain the 21 peasants, who were probably
gagged and had their hands tied, was an extremely difficult task, for in order
to walk and make any headway in that jungle, even when following a path, it is
necessary to have one's hands completely free to hold onto tree branches.
This, as previously noted, because of the steep inclines to be ascended
and descended. 75.
It appears that the peasants must have been tied up from the time they
were seized and that it was probably certain that they were being looked for by
the army, for in the face of the abduction of 21 men, which accounted for more
than half the village, it was evident that the families had
no other choice but to report the matter to the army, which they had previously
refrained from doing so as not to pressure the captors into murdering Carlos
Humberto Guerra Callejas. Which
leads to another conclusion: the
fact that the Callejas family did not report the matter to the army explains
their certainty from the outset that responsibility for the abduction of Carlos
Humberto Guerra Callejas lay not with the army but with the guerrillas.
This was confirmed by the family and witnesses, who in the end, after
becoming more familiar with the special commission, ceased to use the euphemism
"armed men" and began to blame the guerrillas directly. 76.
This point is further corroborated by the negotiation procedure adopted
by the relatives and villagers of El Aguacate to secure the freedom of Carlos
Humberto Guerra Callejas, namely, to collect money in order to pay for a ransom.
If the people had suspected the army of being responsible for the
kidnapping, they obviously would have gone to the garrison and not to the
mountain to negotiate his release. They
surely would have chosen the way that was easiest and closest at hand, namely,
to go to the garrison, and not the one that was most difficult and dangerous,
that is to say, to negotiate with a presumed military patrol which, having
carried out the abduction, would have had to share out the amount of the ransom
among all officers and soldiers, with no guarantees that they might not be later
reported by the Callejas, various of whom were Military Commissioners and had
army friends and relatives. 77. Nor can a very important and little-mentioned fact, which the special commission came to know only because of its visit, be overlooked: General Manuel Antonio Callejas, Chief of the National Defense General Staff, during the El Aguacate massacre in November 1988 and until January 10, 1990, was a member of the Callejas family and a native of that area. This explains a number of things and highlights certain aspects that were left out of consideration. Among these, that any military patrol that had arrested Military Commissioner Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas and later all the Callejas and other relatives of these that were coming to their rescue (many of whom are also Military Commissioners), would not have dared to take any action against them without consulting the Chimaltenango base by radio, and that in the face of steps taken by the remainder of the family, in other words, by those who had not been seized and were taking steps to have their relatives released, full and immediate support would have been forthcoming, instead of the killing of the peasants. In addition, if Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas had been taken by the army it would not have been necessary to negotiate even with the Colonel of the military base in the little town of Chimaltenango, since a single intervention from General Callejas, Chief of the National Defense General Staff, would have been more than sufficient and decisive. 78.
It cannot be ignored, furthermore, that to murder a family member, and
worse, nearly the whole family of General Callejas was too serious a matter to
be decided by a military patrol in that area, for there is no doubt that
disobeying an order or committing murder in connection with extortion or some
other criminal purpose would have brought on the most severe disciplinary
punishment against the members of any military patrol acting in such a manner
against the villagers. 79.
The family tie of the Callejas to the Chief of the National Defense
General Staff and their close relationship with the army serve, conceivably, to
explain why El Aguacate never had any civilian self-defense patrols, and
points as well to the existence of one more possible motive on the part of the
guerrillas. 80.
It has been established that the family of Carlos Humberto Guerra
Callejas, beginning with the latter himself, not only collaborated with the army
but were Military Commissioners for the village of El Aguacate, where, in the
absence of a civilian self-defense patrol, Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas,
his brothers and other members of the family had for years been the eyes and
ears of the army as well as the embodiment of military force in the village.
The guerrilla has murdered many Military Commissioners because it regards
them as dangerous enemies and combat targets.
This circumstance should be kept in mind. 81.
The bulk of the Guatemalan guerrilla is made up of native Indians, and
between the Indians and the "ladinos" (mestizos) there has been a
traditional antagonism that, according to some, still endures and has in fact
led to many instances of confrontation and the shedding of blood. 82.
In the village of El Aguacate the population was made up almost entirely
of ladinos, in contrast to the surrounding and neighboring areas as well as the
capital of the Chimaltenango Department, where the population is overwhelmingly
Indian. In other words, in this
case the peasants were the ladinos and the urban population, the people living
in the towns, are Indians. Accordingly,
as mentioned to the special commission, because most guerrillas come from the
neighboring urban areas, a natural hostility against the ladinos of this small
village cannot be ruled out. 83.
Another circumstance that may explain the murder of Carlos Humberto
Guerra Callejas and the Callejas family, according to neighbors in the area, is
that the Callejas, because of their connections with the army and the local
authorities, were a relatively wealthy, influential and privileged family in El
Aguacate, which served to place them in the position of bosses, landlords and a
privileged caste. 84.
Cause and effect. Before
these events, the army and the guerrilla, each on its own, had a direct
relationship with the victims on account of the following circumstances: a.
Both the army and the guerrilla carried out military operations within
the area where the peasants went to look for Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas.
The cause-effect relationship between the agent and the victim,
however, points first to the guerrillas, in light of the first communique from
the Cerigua News Agency, No. 83/11/88 dated November 28, 1988, in which they
take responsibility for inflicting 25 casualties on the army in two continuous
ambushes carried out in the mid-western area. b.
The description of the clash, the date given, the description of the area
and of the number of dead and wounded, accurately confirmed the position, the
hour and the number of casualties, a fact that points directly to the guerrilla
as the perpetrators and to the peasants and the army personnel engaged in the
search and rescue mission, as the possible victims referred to in the report. c.
The military report released by the guerrillas is consistent with the
secret military report drawn up by the Guatemalan Army, which the IACHR special
commission was able to review. This
enabled the members of the Commission to establish that the army had no combat
personnel in that area on the day the 24 peasants were abducted, namely Thursday
the 24th, but played a role in trying to help and rescue the peasants abducted
by the presumed guerrillas after 6 p.m. on Thursday, November 24, and in the
course of the 25, 26, 27, and 28. Whereas
the statements from the army are corroborated by its report, the opposite is
true of those of the guerrillas, whose allegations are gainsaid by a
prefabricated document that points to it as the perpetrator. 85.
The opportunity. In line
with the above-cited documents and the testimony of the brothers Callejas
Tobar, the opportunity factor would exclude the army because during the day of
the events, it had no opportunity to act against the villagers of El Aguacate
but only for them. On the other
hand, the guerrillas did have the opportunity, as indicated by the communique
from CERIGUA, the accounts of eyewitnesses and the guides who vouch for the
clashes. 86. Another piece of circumstantial evidence against the subversives who presumably murdered the peasants, according to several witnesses, was the fact that a well-known cleric such as Minister Olivares, who lived in Chimaltenango, instead of appealing to the member of the Callejas family who happened to be the Chief of the National Defense General Staff or to the head of the Military Base in Zone 302, over whom he might have been expected to wield greater psychological and moral influence and who was furthermore close by and able to communicate by radio with the abductors --if these were military personnel--, instead made the long trip from his home to where the Guerra Callejas were being held and went into the area saying to those who were with him that "with the help of God he would go in but those who had the courage to come along should come in with him and those who didn't should stay, because those poor souls ..."
CONSIDERATIONS SURROUNDING THE ON-SITE INVESTIGATION 87.
Because more than a year had passed since the tragedy, the special
commission entertained few hopes of uncovering the truth.
It was also aware of its own limitations as to the time allotted to
investigate and try to discover what other commissions that had visited
Guatemala were unable to find: Evidence.
The Commission took it for granted that most evidence had been erased or
had vanished from the site, that witnesses and relatives, so long besieged by
the press and the curious, would no longer wish to cooperate, that the memory of
those who had key knowledge of the matter had by now faded, etc. 88.
When it later discovered in the course of the visit that in fact nothing
had been moved, that no one had visited the place before the arrival of the
special commission, that clothing and other personal belongings of the victims,
including underwear, were still to be found at the site, that apparently nothing
had been touched, that no further personal inspection of the site had been made
by the courts, and that the judges had not received all of the documentary
evidence made available to the special commission, all of this did indeed open
new and unexpected prospects, and in line with the principle that evidence may
be produced at any time before the end of legal proceedings, the Commission
heard, reviewed and processed all the evidence of which it had no prior
knowledge and looked deeper and deeper into the tangled web of events, in an
effort to establish the truth. 89.
Another problem kept in mind by the Commission was fear. To protect themselves, the witnesses, and relatives of the
victims, besieged on every side, had learned that by resorting to euphemisms
they could avoid lying or committing themselves.
Thus, every time the press asked them who had killed their relatives,
they would invariably reply, as noted by the special commission even before its
visit, that it had been "armed men," a term that the Commission was
also later able to look into and clarify in the course of the visit. 90. The Commission notes that although this was a case of "reciprocal incrimination," it could not open an investigation in which the Government of Guatemala was the complainant, because the Commission does not process cases against groups alleged to be subversive but against "Contracting States." Nor could it process a case on a complaint from an entity such as the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unit (URNG), because it cannot accept complaints from guerrilla organizations that "are not recognized under the law." Below is the text of Article 44 of the American Convention on Human Rights, which deals with jurisdiction: Article 44 Any
person or group of persons, or any nongovernmental entity legally recognized in
one or more member states of the Organization, may lodge petitions with the
Commission containing denunciations or complaints of violation of this
Convention by a State Party. 91. The Commission believes that two further clarifications are in order: this case, N° 10.400, was not set in motion by a complaint either from the Government of Guatemala or from the complainant whose complaint was lodged when the case was already being processed. The Commission began processing this case, in view of the seriousness of the matter, ex officio under the powers granted to it by Article 26 (2) of its own Regulations, which provides: 2.
The Commission may also, motu proprio, take into consideration any
available information that it considers pertinent and which might include the
necessary factors to begin processing a case which in its opinion fulfills the
requirements for the purpose. 92.
It should be noted that the complainant in this case requested that its
identity be kept secret under the applicable legal provisions, but that for
reasons beyond the control of the Commission, its identity became evident
to the representatives of the Government of Guatemala in the course of the 76th
session, when both parties participated in a debate on the El Aguacate case. 93.
It is likewise important to note that the number of 22 dead in this case
results from the following: besides
Carlos Humberto Guerra Callejas (1), the 20 relatives and neighbors who went to
the rescue also died, which makes a total of 21 known dead.
There is, however, an "unidentified" body that was found with
the 20 villagers, which makes a total of 22 bodies. According to the Coroner this individual too had died from
strangulation. 94. Concerning the unexplained presence of this body, the special commission has been able to establish nothing. Two versions have been put forward, one from the complainants, according to which the body is that of a soldier who had allegedly revealed that the villagers were in the garrison, and the other, also reported to the special commission, that the body belonged to a guerrilla who was acquainted with the Callejas family and refused to take part in their mass murder, whereupon he was himself murdered by the perpetrators of the massacre in order to prevent him from revealing what he knew. 95.
As regards the complainants' explanation of the 22nd victim, the
Commission was provided with a written statement to this effect by a witness who
claimed to have heard the victim-soldier-guard state that indeed
some or all of the Callejas were being held in the garrison.
He also claims to have told this to Col. Quilo.
Finally he claims to have recognized the 22nd victims's cadaver when it
was returned from its mountain top grave to Zone 302. 96.
It should be mentioned that this written declaration was received almost
one year after special commission's visit to Guatemala.
The complainants explained that he didn't come forward personally or
earlier out of fear for himself and his loved ones. 97. Because the Commission has been unable to personally interview this witness, it is difficult to evaluate his statements. The Commission is doubtful that a common soldier, who allegedly is from Chimaltenango and thus presumably well known, could be killed by fellow soldiers and passed off as another victim of a guerrilla massacre. In sum, the Commission is not persuaded by this individual's written statement. 98.
Rejection of the complainants' explanation does not mean acceptance by
the Commission, however, of the other version.
The truth is that the evidence on the identity of the 22nd victim is
insufficient to permit a firm appreciation by the Commission. 99.
With respect to the Guatemalan judiciary, it should be noted that in
Guatemala no one can be tried "in absentia."
To be convicted, even where there is circumstantial evidence or proof of
culpability, a person has to appear before the court and have the opportunity to
learn what he is being accused of, to deny it and to defend himself.
Lacking physical presence he cannot be convicted.
In this case, even though the alleged perpetrators of the massacre are
named in the case file, there has been no court ruling on the charges against
them because they have not appeared in court.
This explains why, even though the proceedings have ended, the case
against them is still open and they remain under investigation. 100.
At the end of its investigation, which dealt only with case No. 10.400
concerning the massacre of the El Aguacate villagers and no other aspect of
human rights in Guatemala, the IACHR special commission filed its report to the
full Inter-American Commission on Human Rights at its 77th Session. 101.
The Commission thereafter sent its draft report on this case to the
Government of Guatemala and to the complainants requesting their respective
observations. 102.
At its 78th and 79th Periods of Sessions
the Commission continued to study this case in light of the written
observations of the parties and the oral submissions made by both sides at those
meetings.
FINDINGS A.
Procedural Aspects 103.
With regard to the exhaustion of internal remedies, as a precon-
dition for admissibility, as required under Article 46.1.a of the Convention,
the Commission finds that there has been an unwarranted delay in rendering a
final judgment by the competent authorities of Guatemala.
Therefore, the Commission finds this case admissible. B.
Substantive Aspect 104.
On the merits of the case, the Commission, having carefully examined the
matter, pursuant to Article 48.1.b, determines that grounds for the petition do
not exist, and accordingly, orders the record to be closed. 105.
The Commission further orders the publication of this finding in its
1990-91 Annual Report.
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