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EL
SALVADOR-GUATEMALA:
Lawmakers' Murders Point to Web
of Corruption
Raúl
Gutiérrez
SAN SALVADOR, (IPS) - The
capture of four Guatemalan
police officers suspected of
killing three Salvadoran
legislators has heightened the
sensation of insecurity among
Central Americans, who are now
more than ever asking themselves
just who they can trust.
The four police officers are
Luis Herrera López, the head of
the Guatemalan National Civil
Police (PNC) organised crime
unit, another high-ranking
officer and two organised crime
investigators. Two other police
officers from that country are
also being sought in connection
with the crime.
Authorities in Guatemala also
reported that two vehicles have
been seized in connection with
the murders, one of which
belonged to the PNC.
The intellectual authors of the
murders were presumably
Salvadoran.
Both Guatemalan President Oscar
Berger and his Salvadoran
counterpart, Antonio Saca,
confirmed that the police
officers involved have ties to
drug trafficking rings.
"The latest report I received is
that a band of drug traffickers
with ties in both countries (was
responsible for the killings),
and that elements of Guatemala's
National Civil Police form part
of the gang," said Berger.
Saca added that "all of the
evidence indicates that a
specific group touched political
structures in El Salvador."
"Organised crime is a reality in
Central America and can be
related to contraband, and to
drug trafficking," he said.
No authorities have so far
referred to the motivation for
the murders.
However, the Guatemalan
newspaper Prensa Libre reported
that "The police officers who
were arrested told investigators
that they had been paid to
intercept the vehicle driven by
the legislators and steal the
drug shipment that they were
supposedly carrying or the money
from its sale."
Salvadoran Minister of Security
and Justice René Figueroa
promised "to get to the bottom
of what happened and bring those
responsible for the murders to
justice."
In a press conference he said
the Guatemalan and Salvadoran
police were working together in
the investigation.
The U.S. Federal Bureau of
Investigations (FBI) plans to
assist the local security forces
in clarifying the murders of
Eduardo d'Aubuisson, 32, William
Pichinte, 49, and José Ramón
González, 57, all of whom
belonged to the Central American
Parliament (Parlacen).
The lawmakers, who belonged to
the governing rightwing
Republican Nationalist Alliance
(ARENA), and their chauffeur
Gerardo Ramírez, a PNC police
officer with the VIP protection
unit, were intercepted at noon
on Monday on their way from El
Salvador to Guatemala City,
where they were to take part in
the monthly plenary session of
Parlacen.
A few minutes earlier, they had
pulled away from a motorcade
made up of four vehicles in
which other legislators were
driving and two police vehicles
that were acting as escorts
since the lawmakers crossed the
border between the two
countries. There was no apparent
explanation for the decision to
leave the caravan.
After the victims' vehicle was
intercepted, they were taken to
a house in the village of El
Jocotillo, southeast of the
Guatemalan capital, where they
were shot, reportedly with M-16
and AK-47 assault rifles, inside
their car, which was then set on
fire.
The killers also set fire to the
bushes around the car, to
eliminate any evidence,
according to the police.
The murders came at a time when
Deputy Roberto Silva of the
National Conciliation party, an
ally of ARENA, is a fugitive
from justice, accused of shady
business deals and money
laundering.
Also implicated in the scandal
is Parlacen Deputy Mario Osorto
of ARENA, who is currently under
arrest for irregularities in a
public works contract that he
granted, while serving as mayor
of the eastern city of La Unión
(2003-2006), to Silva's
construction company, as well as
other acts of corruption.
Silva and Osorto lost their
parliamentary immunity from
prosecution in order to be
brought to justice. In both
cases ARENA lawmakers voted to
strip them of immunity.
Saca will visit the United
States next Tuesday to meet with
President George W. Bush, to
discuss "a range of issues,
including our common commitment
to strengthening democracy and
our joint effort to address the
problem of criminal gangs, and
recent regional developments,"
according to a press release
from the U.S. Embassy in El
Salvador.
Apart from vague hints from
President Saca and ARENA leaders
about the crime being "a clear
message for ARENA," without
specifying from whom, or why,
most analysts and opposition
party leaders are keeping their
opinions about the possible
motive for the murders to
themselves.
The doors are thus open to
"several lines of
investigation," although the
president and ARENA leaders
showed concern about the
participation of PNC officers in
the murders.
Salvadoran Attorney-General
Félix Garrid Safie said on
television that authorities in
El Salvador and Guatemala have
agreed not to make remarks about
the incident, to avoid
"unfounded theories a priori."
"We are handling this very
cautiously and prudently," the
attorney-general said, shortly
before the presidents of both
countries said that the arrested
police officers may have been
involved in the drug trade.
Political scientist Napoleón
Campos told IPS that the arrest
of the Guatemalan police
officers tends to make the idea
of any political connection less
likely, and said that in his
opinion the murders "were not
directed" against anyone in
particular, as was speculated
two days after the crime.
In any case, the triple murder
"is an alarm bell for stability
in Central America," the analyst
said.
Experts reviewed the long
history of police involvement in
criminal activities in both El
Salvador and Guatemala, where
dozens of officers have been
captured, prosecuted, convicted
and sentenced.
Salvadoran police
Inspector-General Romeo Melara
Granilla confirmed to IPS that
in 2006 alone, 400 agents and
officers were dismissed for
serious crimes, including
extorsion, robbery, kidnapping
and collaborating with criminal
gangs.
D'Aubuisson was buried on
Wednesday in a private cemetery,
where some 200 mourners, ARENA
leaders and two former
Salvadoran presidents paid him
homage. A military band played a
funeral march and a trumpet was
blown for a minute's silence
before the coffin, draped with
the flags of El Salvador,
Parlacen and ARENA.
When his coffin arrived at party
headquarters, Saca said that "El
Salvador is in mourning," and
that all three parliamentarians
were "exemplary members of
ARENA," and had worked for the
party's highest ideals.
"Like his father, Eduardo was a
great patriot, and today he has
become an example for our
country's youth," he said.
The murdered deputy was the son
of the late Major Roberto
d'Aubuisson, who founded ARENA
in 1981. He was known in
political circles by his
nickname "Veneno" (Poison),
allegedly because of his temper.
Eduardo d'Aubuisson practically
grew up in political rallies and
party meetings, where he was
often to be seen with his
father. When he was just 18, he
was involved in a shoot-out with
police and got a bullet through
his leg.
Major d'Aubuisson spearheaded a
bloody campaign against the left
in the 1980s, during the civil
war (1980-1992). He was known
for founding the country's
brutal death squads.
The United Nations Commission on
the Truth in El Salvador, which
was created by the peace
agreements in 1992 to
investigate human rights
violations and crimes against
humanity, also accused him of
masterminding the March 1980
assassination of the archbishop
of San Salvador, Oscar Arnulfo
Romero.
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