Tag Archives: Guatemala

Looking Back at Mexico's Masked Guerilla Uprising

By Nathaniel Parish Flannery, Contributor

On January 1, 1994 three thousand wiry rebels, dressed in black vests, carrying a mix of ancient hunting shotguns, homemade rifles, and modern AK-47s descended from the hills into the cloud-covered cobblestone streets of San Cristobal, a colonial city in the state of Chiapas, Mexico. As the rebel fighters clashed with police and army units, they succeeded in bringing their state and their political movement out from an isolated corner of Mexico’s southern border onto the global stage.  After being ignored for years, they were making their voices heard. Over the course of the twentieth century, Mexico’s central state expanded into the periphery, building roads and encouraging the development of large-scale farms and the cultivation of cash crops for export. At the same time, many of the farmhands who had worked on Chiapas plantations for hundreds of years, forayed out into the unpopulated stretches of jungle on Chiapas’ southern border with Guatemala. As the century progressed, Mexico’s government implemented a set of policies that favored industrial development, cash crop cultivation, and the prioritization of the urban political exigencies over rural residents’ interests. With the help of export earnings and oil revenues, from World War II until the 1970s Mexico’s government jerry-horned a policy mix that pulled together Mexico’s disparate political interests under the umbrella of the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI). In the 1980s, however, as the global economy sputtered and Mexico buckled and nearly broke under the weight of debt accumulated during the boom years. Tested by economic crisis in the eighties, the PRI’s pathological mix of urban industrialization and politically motivated pro-poor policies in the rural periphery began to fall apart. Over the course of the 1980s Mexico’s government scaled back subsidies for small farmers in the south but continued to work to attract investment in the industrial north. As Mexico’s public chaffed at the continued rule of the PRI, Mexico’s long-time ruling elite pushed forward a new agenda of populist transfer programs and election-rigging to maintain power. Over the course of the 1980s under the strain of rising debt obligations and a slowing global economy, the gulf between the official rhetoric and the political reality opened into a wide crevasse. The Zapatistas’ uprising forced the government to acknowledge the existence of the disaffected rural poor in Chiapas and admit that many communities in Mexico had been left behind as the country modernized. Even today, despite the fact that Starbucks, a company which earned nearly $1.4 billion in net income in fiscal 2012 sources much of its shade-grown Mexican coffee in Chiapas, the state remains the poorest in Mexico.  …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Discovery of stone monument at El Perú-Waka' adds new chapter to ancient Maya history

Archaeologist tunneling beneath the main temple of the ancient Maya city of El Perú-Waka’ in northern Guatemala have discovered an intricately carved stone monument with hieroglyphic text detailing the exploits of a little-known sixth-century princess whose progeny prevailed in a bloody, back-and-forth struggle between two of the civilization’s most powerful royal dynasties, Guatemalan cultural officials announced July 16. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

High court to decide on Guatemala genocide trial

Judges presiding over the landmark genocide trial of a former dictator have asked the Constitutional Court to decide if it should continue.

Tribunal president Yasmin Barrios says judges overseeing the trial won’t accept another judge’s ruling that the case should start over, at a point before charges were filed against Efrain Rios Montt. The Constitutional Court has 10 days to rule on the dispute.

The trial had been nearing closing arguments and U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said Friday that the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay is concerned over the suspensión.

Nesirky says it “is a blow to the numerous victims of the atrocities committed during Guatemala‘s civil war.”

Rios Montt is accused in the killing of 1,771 indigenous people after taking power in a 1982 coup.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/84ZQqAhwUtQ/

Guatemalan judge orders Rios Montt trial suspended

A Guatemalan judge on Thursday ordered the suspension of the genocide trial of former U.S.-backed dictator Efrain Rios Montt, a move protested by prosecutors who vowed that proceedings would continue as planned.

Judge Carol Patricia Flores was recently reinstated to the case after being recused from it in February 2012. She ruled that all actions taken in the case since she was first asked to step down in late 2011 are now null, sending the trial back to square one.

“I am not doing this because I want to, but because it has been ordered by the Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court,” said Flores, while relatives of the victims cried and shouted at her that she was “a sold-out judge.”

She made the announcement after the day’s proceedings ended abruptly when the defense lawyers for Rios Montt stormed out of the court room arguing that the trial is illegal and needs to go back to the pre-trial phase.

Rios Montt ruled Guatemala in 1982-83 following a military coup and governed during one of the bloodiest periods of the country’s civil war. He is accused of presiding over the killing of 1,771 indigenous Ixiles in a “scorched earth” campaign aimed at wiping out support for leftist guerrillas.

Rios Montt‘s defense lawyers in November 2011 filed a complaint to remove Flores from the case alleging she was biased. Flores charged Rios Montt with genocide and war crimes in January 2012, a month before she was recused from the case.

Flores did not explain why she threw out all actions since the process to remove her began, instead of since when she actually stepped down.

Guatemala‘s constitutional court reinstated her to the case last week. By setting the legal process back to November 2011, she is forcing prosecutors to start over again.

But Attorney General Claudia Paz y Paz called Flores’ decision illegal and said that prosecutors would use all available resources to stop the judge from interfering in the trial headed by a three-judge panel.

“We have been asked to be in the court room tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. and we will be there to continue the trial,” Paz y Paz said.

Guatemalan human rights activist Helen Mack said Rios

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/iCZahIKNJHI/

Image: Fires in the Yucatan Peninsula

Dozens of red hot spots cluster at the tip of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. To the south, fires also speckle the neck of the Yucatan, Guatemala, and Belize. Each hot spot, which appears as a red mark, is an area where the thermal detectors on the MODIS instrument recognized temperatures higher than background. When accompanied by plumes of smoke, as in this image, such hot spots are diagnostic for fire.

From: http://phys.org/news284904300.html

Employers Eager for New Foreign Worker Program to Fill Jobs

By The Associated Press

Filed under: , , ,

Rich Pedroncelli/AP

By SAM HANANEL

WASHINGTON — As desperate as unemployed Americans are to find work, there are still some jobs that many would never consider applying for because they are seen as too dirty, too demanding or just plain unappealing.

But employers that struggle to fill those jobs — washing dishes, cleaning hotels, caring for the elderly — could soon get help now that business groups and labor unions have agreed on a plan to allow thousands of new low-skilled foreign workers into the workforce.

The deal, which still needs final agreement from lawmakers, is one of the last major hurdles to completing immigration overhaul legislation this year, one of President Barack Obama‘s highest priorities. It is expected to be part of a broader measure that would address the status of the 11 million immigrants who either arrived in the U.S. illegally or overstayed their visas.

The new program, called the “W” visa, is crucial for companies like Medicalodges Inc., a Kansas-based company that wants foreign workers to help run its chain of nursing homes and assisted-living facilities and perform in-home care for the elderly and people with developmental disabilities.

“We’ve offered signing bonuses, set up tables in grocery stores, sent direct mail, posted job openings on the Web, even laundromats, and it’s still not enough to fill positions,” said Fred Benjamin, chief operating officer for the company that operates in Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.

“It’s tough work taking care of people with Alzheimer’s and dementia that may strike somebody or scream at people, may be incontinent, have difficulty getting in and out of bed, or need help feeding,” he said. “But we believe there are a lot of people from other countries who would gladly take these jobs.”

Sponsored Linksadsonar_placementId=1505951;adsonar_pid=1990767;adsonar_ps=-1;adsonar_zw=242;adsonar_zh=252;adsonar_jv=’ads.tw.adsonar.com’;

The average salary for nursing assistants is $9.50 an hour, while licensed practical nurses with at least two years of college training can earn about $16.50 an hour. But the company says it has little room to increase wages to attract workers because most of the patients they care for receive fixed Medicaid or Medicare payments.

The new W visa program would admit 20,000 low-skilled foreign workers starting in 2015 and could gradually grow up to a cap of 200,000 after five years. The number of visas would fluctuate, depending on unemployment rates, job openings, employer demand and other data.

It would fill a gap in current law, which doesn’t give employers a good way to bring in such workers for year-round positions. The existing H-2B visa program for low-wage nonagricultural workers is capped at 66,000 a year and applies only to seasonal or temporary jobs.

If other temporary worker programs are any indication, most of the foreign workers taking advantage of the new W-visa program would come from Mexico, Jamaica and Guatemala. About 80 …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Guatemala court upholds decision absolving ex-prez

An appeals court has upheld a decision that absolved former President Alfonso Portillo of charges that he stole $15 million from Guatemala‘s Defense Department, bringing an end to the case.

The appeals court announced its decision late Tuesday.

In 2011, a Guatemalan court ruled that prosecutors failed to prove through documents or witnesses that Portillo was personally involved in embezzling the Defense Department‘s funds while he governed the country from 2000 to 2004.

Portillo still faces extradition to the United States, where he faces charges of money laundering related to the alleged embezzlement of $1.5 million in foreign donations donated by Taiwan to buy schoolbooks for Guatemalan children.

He allegedly deposited the money in Miami and transferred it to a Paris account in the name of his ex-wife and daughter.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Guatemala war trial puts past closer to president

Guatemala‘s struggle to deal with the war crimes of the past, including bringing an aging former dictator and his officers to justice, has taken a sharp turn to the present.

A mechanic testifying at the genocide trial of ex-strongman Efrain Rios Montt, now 86, became the first person to directly accuse current President Otto Perez Molina of ordering pillaging and executions in the 36-year civil war, which killed a total of 200,000, mostly indigenous Maya.

Such rumors and accusations had surfaced about Perez before, but without proof or formal charges. He has called Thursday’s testimony “lies.”

But the national talk continued Monday, four days after Hugo Reyes told a stunned courtroom: “The soldiers, on orders from Major ‘Tito Arias,’ better known as Otto Perez Molina … coordinated the burning and looting, in order to later execute people.”

Prosecutor Orlando Lopez said Reyes’ testimony is 100 percent credible, but he has to study the accusations before he can say whether they would result in criminal action against Perez.

Right now I’m focused on the Rios Montt case,” Lopez said Monday. “I don’t know what will happen after that.”

Perez said he researched Reyes’ record with the Defense Ministry and the mechanic wasn’t in Nebaj, the base in western Quiche state where soldiers operated at the same time as Perez.

“I have nothing to hide. I did not participate in a single situation where someone died that was my responsibility,” Perez told reporters on Friday. “I’m not going to deny that I was in Nebaj; it’s true. But I was there to rescue the civilians, combat the armed guerrillas and help the civilians.”

The testimony is shaking up Guatemala‘s attempts to settle its past. A U.N. truth commission said state forces and related paramilitary groups were responsible for 93 percent of the killings and human rights violations that it documented. Yet until now, only low or middle-level officials have been prosecuted for a war that ended in 1996.

Rios Montt is the biggest by far, on trial along with his former head of intelligence, Jose Sanchez, in connection with the deaths of 1,771 Mayan Indians during the military dictatorship he headed from March 23, 1982, to Aug. 8, 1983, during which he led a U.S.-backed counterinsurgency against guerrillas.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Guatemala strongman trial hears litany of horrors

Witness have testified about a litany of horrors in the trial of Guatemala‘s former U.S.-backed military strongman, describing to judges the shelling of villages, beheadings and body parts kicked around like soccer balls.

After several days of testimony from women subjected to sexual violence, judges in the trial of Efrain Rios Montt heard Thursday from the victims of massacres, and from forensic experts.

Rios Montt is on trial along with his former head of intelligence in connection with the deaths of 1,771 Mayan Indians during the military dictatorship he led from March 23, 1982 to Aug. 8, 1983, during which he led a U.S.-backed counterinsurgency against leftist guerrillas.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Rape victims speak at Guatemala ex-strongman trial

Victims of sexual assault have told judges at the trial of Guatemala‘s former U.S.-backed strongman that indigenous women were systematically gang-raped by soldiers and members of paramilitary groups during the country’s 36-year civil war.

With their faces covered, the witnesses spoke in their native Ixil language on the eighth day of testimony in the trial of former Gen. Jose Efrain Rios Montt on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity. The court asked the media not to reveal their names or other identifying information.

One woman testified that she had found four soldiers raping her daughter.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

The Most Powerful Company You've Never Heard Of

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

On this day in economic and financial history …

The United Fruit Company was formed on March 30, 1899, the result of a merger between the nearly bankrupt Tropical Trading and Transport Company and Boston Fruit. On its formation, United Fruit was already a giant in its field, with railroads, steamships, and plantations spread across the tropics. It would grow into an enterprise that clashed with governments. The phrase “banana republic” arose from United Fruit‘s efforts to bend entire Central American nations to its purposes, particularly in the growing of bananas, which are notoriously quick to rot and thus require greater control over their production to ensure a uniform — and profitable — product.

In Reason, Ira Stoll recently recounted the company’s sheer size:

It seems almost quaint to think that a company specializing in bananas might have once been considered a capitalist giant on the level of today’s firms, but so it was — at its height in the first half of the last century, United Fruit owned one of the largest private navies in the world. It owned 50% of the private land in Honduras and 70% of all private land and every mile of railroad in Guatemala.

The company’s transformation of the banana trade was a key element of Peter Chapman’s Bananas, which a New York Times article on United Fruit covered in 2008:

“[United Fruit was] more powerful than many nation states … a law unto itself and accustomed to regarding the republics as its private fiefdom.” United Fruit essentially invented not only “the concept and reality of the banana republic,” but also, as Chapman shows, the concept and reality of the modern banana. “If it weren’t for United Fruit,” he observes, “the banana would never have emerged from the dark, then arrived in such quantities as to bring prices that made it available to all.”

Today, “the banana is the world’s fourth major food, after rice, wheat, and milk.” But when a Brooklyn-born twentysomething named Minor Keith planted a few banana cuttings next to a railroad track in Costa Rica in the early 1870s, it was virtually unknown outside its native environs. … Until its demise a hundred years later, United Fruit controlled as much as 90 percent of the market.

United Fruit was fictionalized in Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude and managed to take part in multiple political uprisings and fiascos, including the “banana massacre” in 1928 Colombia and the 1954 Guatemalan coup d’etat. On both occasions, U.S. military forces intervened in Central America on the company’s behalf. United reached its apex in the years bookending World War II, after Sam “Banana Man” Zemurray took the reins — United Fruit‘s overextension before the Great Depression had jeopardized the wealth he’d gained from selling United his competing fruit company, prompting a takeover bid.

United Fruit became United Brands in 1970 and is now Chiquita …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Rios Montt supporters deny genocide in Guatemala

A group of retired soldiers and their relatives have launched a campaign to deny that a genocide occurred in Guatemala.

About 24 people began collecting 5,000 signatures Monday in support of their campaign outside the Supreme Court‘s building, where strongman Jose Efrain Rios Montt is being tried on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity.

The protesters are holding signs that read “There was no genocide here” as speakers blasted Guatemala‘s national anthem and military marches.

Retired army Gen. Victor Argueta, president of an association of war veterans, says they plan to collect signatures throughout the country and turn them in to the Supreme Court so there is “a fair trial according to the law and to prove there was no genocide here.”

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pollo Tropical® Opens Its 93rd Company-Owned Location in Fort Myers, Florida

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Pollo Tropical® Opens Its 93rd Company-Owned Location in Fort Myers, Florida

Gulf Coast Town Center Location marks the brand’s fourth location in Southwest Florida

MIAMI–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Pollo Tropical® recently opened its 93rd company-owned location in Fort Myers, Florida at the Gulf Coast Town Center, to much Florida fanfare! Pollo Tropical is a Caribbean-themed quick-casual restaurant, famous for its marinated flame-grilled chicken, guava barbecue riblets, roast pork and many more Caribbean-inspired favorites.

To celebrate its Fort Myers arrival, Pollo Tropical hosted a free Taste of the Tropics Beach Party.

Festivities began early in the morning, as the first 100 customers in line were entered to win free Pollo Tropical Chicken for a Year. Additionally, each of the first 100 customers received certificates good for a Create Your Own Family Meal on their next visit.

Fort Myers is a natural compliment for our Pollo Tropical brand presence in Southwest Florida,” said Danny Meisenheimer, Chief Operating Officer of Pollo Tropical. “We look forward to serving loyal fans of Pollo Tropical there as well as new customers for years to come.”

The Fort Myers Pollo Tropical location is open seven days a week, from 10:30 a.m. to Midnight, serving the ever-popular Pollo Tropical marinated, flame-grilled chicken, roast pork, made-from-scratch side dishes and much more. The restaurant also offers beer, wine, sangria, free limited table service, complimentary Wi-Fi and much more. Customers can dine in, take out or use the restaurant’s convenient “Pollo on the Go” drive thru. For more information, visit www.pollotropical.com.


About Pollo Tropical

Pollo Tropical, a part of Fiesta Restaurant Group® (NAS: FRGI) , owns and operates 93 locations in the United States (Florida, Georgia and Tennessee) plus four licensed units located on college campuses in Florida. The company has 32 international franchised locations in Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, Ecuador, Honduras, Panama, Trinidad & Tobago, Venezuela and Costa Rica and has agreements in place for additional franchised units in Aruba, Bonaire, Curacao, Guatemala and N. India. The first Pollo Tropical restaurant opened in 1988 in Miami, Florida. The unique restaurant concept is known for its fresh, never frozen, open-flame grilled chicken, marinated in a proprietary …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Call for justice opens Guatemala ex-leader trial

The lawyer for victims of Guatemala‘s 30-year civil war says the trial of the country’s former U.S.-backed dictator will offer his clients the chance to tell the truth about the devastating conflict.

Gen. Efrain Rios Montt sat facing a group of victims and their families as his trial opened Tuesday morning in a Guatemala City courtroom.

He is accused of genocide and crimes against humanity for his role in the conflict between the right-wing government and leftist guerrillas, a civil that left some 200,000 people dead.

“Through this trial the victims can tell you their story, the truth that they’ve carried for more than 30 years, truth that some officials today want to deny,” victims’ lawyer Edgar Perez told the judges who will rule on the case.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Ex-Guatemala strongman on trial after 30 years

There is no smoking gun in the case files, no direct order from Guatemala‘s then military dictator to carry out the slaughter of civilians during one of the bloodiest phases of the country’s long civil war.

In its absence, with trial set to start Tuesday, prosecutors hope to painstakingly prove through a detailed recreation of the military chain of command that Gen. Efrain Rios Montt must have had knowledge of the massacres of Mayan Indians and others in the Guatemalan highlands. Because he held absolute power over the U.S.-backed military government, his failure to stop the slaughter is proof of his guilt, prosecutors and lawyers for victims say.

Survivors and relatives of victims have sought for 30 years to bring punishment for Rios Montt, now 86, who is the first Latin American strongman to stand trial on genocide charges in his own country. For international observers and Guatemalans on both sides of the war, the trial could be a turning point in a nation still wrestling with the trauma of a conflict that killed some 200,000 people.

“So much time has passed and we haven’t gotten justice. What I want is that they put him in prison. It isn’t revenge; it’s justice,” said Antonio Caba, who was 11 when soldiers arrived in his highlands village in 1982, killing 95 Mayas and driving countless others into the countryside without food or clothing. His 2-month-old sister and grandmother died of malnutrition.

“I ask him, ‘What type of weapon were the children carrying, the women and old people your army massacred?’ All we want is justice,” said Caba, who is scheduled to testify at the trial.

Rios Montt seized power in a March 23, 1982, coup, and ruled until he himself was overthrown just over a year later. Prosecutors say that while in power he was aware of, and thus responsible for, the slaughter by subordinates of at least 1,771 Ixil Mayas in San Juan Cotzal, San Gaspar Chajul and Santa Maria Nebaj, towns in the Quiche department of Guatemala‘s western highlands.

Those military offensives were part of a brutal, decades-long counterinsurgency against a leftist uprising that brought massacres in the Mayan heartland where the guerrillas were based.

Prosecutors and advocates for victims have built their case on thousands of green folders stuffed with military documents, victims’ testimony and ballistic and forensic examinations of more than 800 sets of human remains, mostly women or children.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Mexico is Implementing Reforms, But Still Faces a Challenging Security Dynamic

By Nathaniel Parish Flannery, Contributor

A few weeks after Enrique Peña Nieto was elected as Mexico’s new president, I walked through the gate in the heavy metal security fence and into the modern, high-tech campus of Mexico’s Public Security Ministry in Mexico City. I watched Francisco Niembro González, who then served as former president Felipe Calderon‘s vice-secretary of Information Technology at the security ministry, or SSP for its initials in Spanish, enter into the federal government’s crisis-planning center inside a hermetically sealed bunker. He pulled up a map showing the flight trajectories of cocaine-carrying planes leaving Colombia.  Curved red lines marked the flight paths of the smuggling routes between Colombia, one of the world’s top cocaine producers, and Guatemala and Honduras, two countries to the south of Mexico, the gateway country to the United States, the world’s number one cocaine consumer.  “Planes with drugs no longer enter Mexico,” Niembro explained, aiming a laser pointer at one of the conference room’s massive display screens. Another room shows graphics of cartel hierarchies. “Evolution of the Michoacán Cartel,” said one poster. “La Familia Michoacána,” said another. The faces in the photos were marked with labels explaining which leaders had been killed or captured. “We’ve invested in technology and the results are there,” Niembro said. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Soldiers stole children during El Salvador's war

One of Gregoria Contreras‘ first childhood memories was the moment she last saw her parents.

Fighting between government troops and guerrillas had broken out around the 4-year-old girl’s family home in the countryside of this Central American country. The soldiers took advantage of the confusion and seized Contreras and her two siblings, who were under the age of 2.

“We all fled the house and suddenly it all ended because they captured us and our parents disappeared,” said Contreras, now 35 and living in neighboring Guatemala.

Contreras was just one of hundreds of children who disappeared under a variety of circumstances during El Salvador‘s brutal, 13-year civil war, which left some 75,000 people dead and thousands more missing. In most cases, the parents have yet to find out what happened to their children, while a few hundred of the missing have been identified after giving investigators DNA samples and other evidence.

Now, a human rights group, Probusqueda, is uncovering another macabre, and mostly unknown twist to the tragedy. In Contreras’ and at least nine other cases, low-to-mid-ranking soldiers abducted children in what an international court says was a “systematic pattern of forced disappearances.” Some of the soldiers raised the children as their own, while others gave them away or sold them to lucrative illegal adoption networks. In Contreras’ case, an army private spirited her away, raped her and gave her his own surname.

The crimes make El Salvador the second Latin American country proven to engage in such child abductions during internal Cold War-era conflicts. Argentina‘s military kidnapped hundreds of children of political opponents, and the prosecution of those responsible three decades later led to the indictment of top officers, including army Gen. Jorge Rafael Videla, then-head of Argentina‘s military junta.

No one has revealed the full scope of the child abductions in El Salvador. The number of confirmed abductions will likely rise if the country’s Defense Department makes public files from the civil war era.

Contreras and eight other victims of military abductions successfully sued their government in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, demanding the military release more information. Three years later, the military hasn’t turned over the requested files and the officers, most of them retired, suspected of adopting stolen children have refused DNA tests.

“Without those files we can’t say this or that officer is responsible,” said the country’s attorney general, Oscar …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Rumors Swirl Drug Lord Joaquín Guzmán Shot Dead

By Mark Russell An intense gun battle yesterday in the remote jungle of northern Guatemala has people wondering if notorious drug lord Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera could be dead, reports the Los Angeles Times . Guatemalan authorities are sending in security forces to investigate, but at this point officials cannot even confirm whether a… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Guatemala: Probing reports drug lord may be dead

Guatemalan authorities are mobilizing security forces to scour a remote, rural area where residents reported a gunbattle between drug gangs and said one of the dead resembled Mexico‘s most-wanted drug lord, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

But officials stressed late Thursday that they had not yet found any bodies or even confirmed a shootout happened.

Interior Minister Mauricio Lopez Bonilla told The Associated Press that police and soldiers would begin searching on foot and in the air at first light Friday, looking for the scene of the reported gunfight in Peten province near the border with Mexico.

Authorities initially said Thursday night that they were investigating whether Guzman was one of at least two men killed in the remote area, but hours later backtracked and said they had only received reports of a battle from local people.

Government spokesman Francisco Cuevas first told Guatevision Television that two drug gangs had clashed in Peten, an area that has seen an increase in drug violence and that at least two men had died in the shootout.

“We have to wait for all the technical information in order to determine if, in fact, one of the dead is of Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman,” Cuevas said.

Later, Cuevas told Mexico‘s Televisa network that authorities hadn’t yet found a body or the scene where reports said a shootout took place.

He never said what led officials to think that one of the dead men might be Guzman.

But Interior Department spokeswoman Carla Herrera told The Associated Press that one of the victims physically resembled the drug lord. She said officials had asked the Mexican government to send Guzman’s fingerprints to compare them to the man found inside a vehicle and to send investigators.

However, Herrera’s boss, Lopez Bonilla, told the AP that it was residents of the town of San Francisco who had told officials of a gunbattle and reported that one of the people killed looked like Guzman.

“The fact is we don’t have any of this information confirmed,” Lopez Bonilla said.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto said late Thursday that he had no information on the case.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News