In 1982, investigative journalist Allan Nairn interviewed a Guatemalan general named "Tito" on camera during the height of the indigenous
massacres. It turns out the man was actually Otto Pérez Molina, the
current Guatemalan president. We air the original interview footage and
speak to Nairn about the U.S. role backing the Guatemalan dictatorship.
Last week, Nairn flew to Guatemala
where he had been scheduled to testify in the trial of former
U.S.-backed dictator Efraín Ríos Montt, the first head of state in the
Americas to stand trial for genocide. Ríos Montt was charged in
connection with the slaughter of more than 1,700 people in Guatemala’s
Ixil region after he seized power in 1982. His 17-month rule is seen as
one of the bloodiest chapters in Guatemala’s decades-long campaign
against Maya indigenous people, which resulted in the deaths of hundreds
of thousands. The trial took a surprising turn last week when Guatemala
President Gen. Otto Pérez Molina was directly accused of ordering
executions. A former military mechanic named Hugo Reyes told the court that Pérez Molina, then serving as an army major and using the name Tito Arias, ordered soldiers to burn and pillage a Maya Ixil area in the 1980s.
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: -
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: -
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