Rios Montt allowed to run for Guatemalan presidency

Source Upside Down World

The Guatemalan Supreme Court rejected an appeal by activists to block the candidacy of former dictator José Efraín Ríos Montt in presidential elections this September. However, Supreme Court Spokesman Guillermo Melgar said that that the ruling can be appealed for reconsideration. According to polls released by Angus Reid on May 30, Montt is not currently one of the top four contenders in the election. The legal status of "candidate," according to Guatemalan legislation, grants judicial immunity to Montt, which would make ineffective the charges initiated against him in Spain in 1999 for crimes of genocide, torture and state terrorism. During his rule, over 200,000 mostly indigenous Guatemalans were killed by government military actions. Similar charges against the dictator in Guatemala have stalled due to lack of initiative on the part of authorities. Laws don't prohibit the inscription of candidates with open proceedings against them, only those who have already been sentenced. Presidential candidate and Nobel Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú, who brought the charges against Montt, has led the appeal against him. A spokesman of the right-wing party Frente Republicano Guatemalteco, who supports Montt's candidacy told EFE that the appeal never "worried them, because it was inadmissible," and affirmed that "the general will be candidate-elect whether his adversaries like it or not." IPS quotes Montt in a press conference mentioning that "he lacked immunity from prosecution for four years, after quitting Congress to run for president in 2003 (he came in third), saying, "I was available for four years, and if the others are useless and failed to take legal action, that's their problem." Several of the human rights organizations that presented the appeal against Montt have said that they will continue to pursue the issue. Prensa Latina reports that the Association of Relatives of Detained-Disappeared in Guatemala spoke out against his run, citing an arrest warrant against the former general for genocide. Association of Justice and Reconciliation president Antonio Caba stated that Montt must be tried, instead of being accepted as a candidate. Centro de Acción Legal en Derechos Humanos director Edda Gaviola told IPS that the "candidacy is an international disgrace." Gaviola lamented that the retired general was "playing with the justice system to ensure his immunity."