home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0419>
- <title>
- Apr. 18, 1994: Dangerous Rumors
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 18, 1994 Is It All Over for Smokers?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GUATEMALA, Page 48
- Dangerous Rumors
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Suspicions rise over the origin of antiforeigner hostility that
- provoked assaults on American women
- </p>
- <p>By Laura Lopez/Mexico City--Reported by Trish O'Kane/Guatemala City
- </p>
- <p> The word-of-mouth allegations spread rapidly throughout Guatemala:
- gringos are snatching babies and ripping out their vital organs
- for sale abroad. Eight babies, the whispers assured, were found
- with their stomachs slashed open. One had a $100 bill stuck
- in its abdomen, plus a note that said in English, "Thanks for
- your cooperation."
- </p>
- <p> There was no evidence that such gruesome trade exists. But an
- anti-foreigner paranoia took root swiftly and with savage results.
- Two American women wrongly suspected of kidnapping children
- suffered attacks that left one victim near death.
- </p>
- <p> The reasons for the hysteria are uncertain. Diplomats and fearful
- foreign residents believe the rumors are being deliberately
- spread to incite violence and derail the civilian government's
- fast-moving peace negotiations with leftist guerrillas of the
- Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity, who have fought a 33-year
- civil war. In recent years hundreds of human-rights observers
- and peace supporters--the majority from the U.S. and Europe--have flocked to Guatemala to work with and help protect local
- activists. Some conservatives and editorialists have called
- for these foreigners to be thrown out of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Long resentful of what they view as outsider meddling, army
- officers were further angered by a March 29 agreement on human
- rights that will allow a U.N. verification team to move freely
- within the country to inspect military bases and guerrilla camps.
- </p>
- <p> First victim of the disinformation was Melissa Larson, 37, a
- jewelrymaker from Taos, New Mexico. For two weeks prior to her
- arrival, worried mothers had been passing on the story that
- someone had seen the butchered cadavers of eight children. For
- undisclosed reasons Larson was detained by police on March 7
- in Santa Lucia Cotzumalguapa, 55 miles south of Guatemala City.
- An angry crowd of several hundred people soon gathered outside
- the jail, shouting, "Hang the gringa!" forcing police to evacuate
- Larson to another jail. The enraged rioters burned down the
- police station, set fire to vehicles and fought police until
- tanks rolled in to restore order. Larson was kept in "protective
- custody" for 19 days before she was found innocent of baby-trafficking
- charges and released. "One thing I've learned from this experience
- is the power of the lie," she said. "It was an assault because
- I am a foreigner, a racial attack. God knows why."
- </p>
- <p> The next case was worse. June Weinstock, 52, a journalist and
- environmentalist from Fairbanks, Alaska, had innocently caressed
- a boy's head on March 29 after taking photographs of children
- at a market in the northeastern town of San Cristobal Verapaz.
- Suddenly, a peasant woman shouted that her son had disappeared.
- A crowd gathered and began to beat Weinstock. Moments later
- when the missing boy reappeared, the mother tried to stop the
- attack. But the mob was egged on, according to a government
- investigator, by state road workers who threatened to burn Weinstock
- alive. She was stripped, stoned, stabbed repeatedly, then left
- for dead. The army arrived nearly six hours after the incident
- began. Police later took Weinstock to a hospital. Late last
- week her condition was upgraded from coma to "stupor."
- </p>
- <p> In the wake of the attacks, the U.S. State Department issued
- a traveler's advisory warning American citizens to stay away
- from Guatemala, and the U.S. Peace Corps has ordered its more
- than 200 workers in the country back to the capital. Even there,
- the assassination April 1 of the president of the Constitutional
- Court and the sniper bullet that wounded a Congressman five
- days later have added to the instability. "Whoever is behind
- all this wants to provoke a state of emergency," says government
- investigator Claudio Porres. "They want us to return to a dark
- past when everything was resolved through a military coup."
- President Ramiro de Leon Carpio stepped back from declaring
- a state of emergency but promised to take severe measures to
- ensure security.
- </p>
- <p> Investigators believe the incidents were planned by one group.
- Diplomatic sources say two military intelligence agents were
- reported among the rioters in Santa Lucia. "The only institution
- with the capacity to act in various areas of the country, that
- can spread the rumors and incite the population through a vast
- network of civilian collaborators, is the army," contends a
- local human-rights expert.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, though illegal trafficking in babies for adoption
- abroad is a major business in Guatemala, foreign involvement
- is said to be minimal. In fact, attorney general Telesforo Guerra
- Cahn alleges that 20 local gangs are engaged in buying or stealing
- children and that one of the biggest illegal-baby-trafficking
- lawyers is the current president of the Supreme Court, Juan
- Jose Rodil Peralta. "We've tried to prosecute him, but it's
- hopeless because he controls the court system and the judges,"
- says Cahn. "He's also protected under parliamentary immunity."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever officials like Cahn may have concluded, however, average
- Guatemalans continue to clutch their children when they see
- foreigners on the streets.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-