WUNRN
Femicide On
the Rise in Latin America
Kent Paterson -
3/10/2006
On the eve of International Women's Day 2006, a delegation
of Latin American women made a historic journey to Washington, DC. Rather than
celebrating the gains women have made through their many struggles, the group
arrived at the headquarters of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
(IACHR) of the Organization of American States with an alarming message:
Femicide, the murder of women, is spreading.
“(Femicide) is not only
present in Ciudad Juarez and most of Mexico, it's a regional problem,” warns
Marimar Monroy, a representative of the non-governmental Mexican Commission for
the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights and one of the delegates to the IACHR.
Joined by grassroots delegates from Guatemala, Colombia, Peru, and other
nations, Monroy presented a report to the IACHR commissioners that sketched
widespread violence against women from multiple causes, rampant failures in the
procurement of justice for victims and relatives, the prevalence of impunity,
and the absence of standard statistical gathering and record-keeping methods to
document gender violence. Monroy and her Latin American colleagues delivered
their femicide report as one piece of a campaign aimed at making “the problem
more visible in the region.”
Incomplete murder rates cited in the NGO
report mention 373 murders of women in Bolivia from 2003 to 2004, 143 in Peru
during 2003, and more than 2,000 in Guatemala. In Colombia , a woman is
reportedly killed every 6 days by her partner or ex-partner. Ciudad Juarez and
Chihuahua City , Mexico , two cities where the femicide trend was first widely
noticed, have suffered the murder of more than 500 women from multiple causes
since 1993, according to press and other sources. Dozens more remain missing.
Latin American women's organizations contend that member nations of the
Organization of American States are in widespread violation of international
treaties and declarations that protect the rights of women , including the
American Convention on Human Rights, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
the Belem do Para Convention, and others. Appealing to the IACHR to follow-up on
previous recommendations the human rights institution has made about eradicating
femicide, delegation representatives considered the Washington hearing a
positive step.
“Given the kinds of questions (from the commissioners) it
opened a door to initiating a process with the participation of civil society,”
said Adriana Beltran of the non-profit Washington Office on Latin America
(WOLA), which facilitated the delegation's U.S. visit. The IACHR conducted
previous trips to Ciudad Juarez in 2002 and Guatemala in 2004 to investigate the
femicides. Additionally, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence against
Women Yakin Ertuk traveled to Guatemala in 2004.
Femicide—a Form of
Gender Violence
The Mexican Commission's Monroy says a broad debate exists
about the definition of femicide, which in her analysis is “gender
violence,”—violence specifically directed against a person because she is
female. Femicide in Latin America first became a major issue in 1993 after
women's activists in Ciudad Juarez raised protests about a growing number of
unidentified women discovered raped, tortured, and murdered on the outskirts of
this Mexican border city.
A sampling of recent cases reveals how the
murder of women has become gruesomely routine in other parts of Mexico as well.
In the month of February 2006 alone, Nora Rocio Ruiz, a 16-year-old Internet
cafe employee, was found tortured and murdered close to a garbage dump near the
drug-infested town of Uruapan , Michoacan. Eighteen-year-old Daniela Martinez,
an indigenous Nahua high school student and domestic worker in Chilpancingo,
Guerrero, was found shot to death and partially burned on the city's outskirts.
Martinez had been holding down a second job at a stationery store and was
described as a hard-working student who had dreams of emigrating to the United
States . Meanwhile, hundreds of mile north of Guerrero, 17-year-old Fabiola
Cuevas Coral was found raped and strangled near Cuauhtémoc , Chihuahua .
Guatemala: Ciudad Juarez South
Angelica Gonzalez, a member of
Guatemala's Network to Oppose Violence against Women, says more than 2,400 women
have been murdered in Guatemala since the year 2000. Killings have occurred
throughout the Central American nation, with most concentrated in and around
Guatemala City, Escuintla, and San Marcos, a department bordering Mexico.
Despite the establishment of a special prosecutor's office for women's
homicides, statistics compiled by WOLA indicate the slaughter is worsening.
According to Adriana Beltran, more than 300 women were murdered in 2003, 527 in
2004, and 624 in 2005. Often portrayed in the press as faceless statistics, the
victims had names and lives like Claudia Isabel Velazquez, a 19-year-old law
student raped and shot to death, or 15-year-old Maria Isabel, a retail shop
employee who was found raped with her hands and feet bound together with barbed
wire.
A 2005 report by Amnesty International listed housewives,
professionals, students, domestic employees, unskilled workers, sex workers,
former and current street gang members, and migrants from other countries as
among the victims. The human rights group cited class as another common
denominator of the femicides. Most of the victims were very young and poor , and
many were horribly tortured before their deaths. Like Ciudad Juarez , Gonzalez
says sexual aggression, the mutilation of body parts like breasts, torture, and
the dumping of victims in empty lots are trademarks of the killings. The cutting
of women's skin is a common trait in many crimes throughout the hemisphere,
according to Gonzalez. In Guatemala, firearms, knives, and strangulation are the
most common methods of killing women, she adds.
Other similarities stand
out between the situations in Ciudad Juarez and Guatemala. Amnesty International
highlights foot-dragging, poorly-protected evidence scenes, ignoring concrete
leads, and failing to gather forensic evidence as characterizing the police
investigations. Many crimes have been pinned on the Mara street gangs, but
Gonzalez says the real perpetrators aren't always readily identified. The
women's advocate criticizes investigators for frequently focusing their probes
on family members of victims rather than examining the bigger picture. “There's
no clear information about the victimizers of women,” Gonzalez says. Similar to
Mexico , police are suspected as being the authors of more than one killing in
Guatemala . Only 15 sentences have been handed down for the more than 2,000
murders in Guatemala during the last six years, Gonzalez adds.
The Wars
Against Women
The roots of the present gender crimes in Guatemala can be
traced back to the civil war that ended in 1996 with a peace agreement between
the Guatemalan government and opposition guerrilla groups. A report by the Roman
Catholic Church's Project for the Recuperation of Historical Memory said
one-fourth of the 200,000 people who disappeared during the conflict were women.
As in the former Yugoslavia and the Darfur region of Sudan , government soldiers
and pro-government paramilitary groups committed widespread human rights
violations against women. “Rape and sexual violence were an integral part of the
counterinsurgency strategy,” the church concluded. The present crimes reflect
this pattern of hatred and domination of women .
Similar patterns have
been observed in Colombia, Peru, and Chiapas, Mexico. In Colombia , suspected
right-wing paramilitaries working with the Colombian military raped 16-year-old
Omaira Fernandez and tore her unborn child from her womb before tossing the
bodies of the teenager and baby into a river in 2003. In Peru , the country's
Truth and Reconciliation Commission identified rape as a form of torture during
the 1980-2000 armed conflict.
In Guatemala violence against women
continued in the years after the war ended, a period when international drug
cartels and Mexican transnational corporations moved into the country. After a
2004 visit, the IACHR's Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women said there
were indications that some women were being killed by organized criminal bands
intent on carving up national territory into zones of influence. Young women who
were in a gang's territory and rejected the passes of gang members were at risk,
as well as those who resided in rival territory and were sometimes killed and
exhibited in a lurid manner to send a “message.”
One former female gang
member told Amnesty International: “Such murders can be used to show which gang
has the most power. The one that does the most brutal things has the most
power—all the more so if nothing happens to them as a result.”
Killing
women as a means of projecting power is also evident in the neighboring nations
of El Salvador and Honduras, where defiant messages and challenges to
politicians have been found scrawled next to murdered (sometimes mutilated)
women. South American anthropologist Rita Laura Segato, who has studied
underworld sub-cultures, has pointed to the possibility of mafia blood pacts and
territorial claims as features of some of the Ciudad Juarez killings.
A
Transnational, Parallel State
In a globalized world, femicide is not just a
local horror. The social, economic, and political forces transforming the globe
and expelling populations across borders likewise put their stamp on the killing
of women. Femicides flourish in areas experiencing social upheavals marked by
previous or current armed conflicts, violent rivalries between internationally
organized criminal groups, the displacement of old economies in favor of
new—often illicit—ones, and the corruption and weakening of traditional forms of
state power.
At the same time, killers now frequently jump borders. Jose
Manuel Torres Yake, a Peruvian national, was arrested in Hiroshima , Japan ,
last year for raping and murdering a 6-year-old girl. The suspect had a previous
criminal record in Peru for raping two other minors.
The assorted,
possible transnational paths of femicide are mind-boggling. In recent comments,
Alicia Perez Duarte, the newly-appointed federal special prosecutor for women's
homicides in Mexico , departed from previous denials by the Chihuahua Office of
the State Attorney General and her own agency, the Office of the Federal
Attorney General, that organized crime and drug traffickers were not involved in
the Ciudad Juarez rape murders. Perez links the murders to the rise of the
Carrillo Fuentes drug cartel in 1993, even though evidence exists that the
murders began somewhat earlier. The Mexican special prosecutor does not discount
a possible link between the Ciudad Juarez murders and international
money-laundering, prostitution, pornographic and pedophile rings that use
modeling agencies, Internet cafes, and computer education schools as covers.
According to Perez, coincidences exist in the modus operandi of a ring
exposed two years ago in Ciudad Juarez that recruited teenagers for sex with
prominent businessmen and the international network of pedophiles involving Jean
Succar Kuri, the Cancun businessman detained in Arizona. Perez recently said
it's within these circles that murder victims “presumably met those who killed
them.” Perez added, “There you have the leads. The forms are very similar in the
state of Mexico , in Ciudad Juarez , in Cancun , in Tapachula.”
Spanning
the globe from Asia to Europe to the Americas, the economic clout of human and
sex trafficking networks is estimated by some observers to be only surpassed by
illegal drug and arms trading. Latin America is a hot spot in the international
sex economy. Recent pedophile investigations in Germany and Spain, for example,
traced back to Guatemala where pornographic videos featuring children as young
as three years old engaging in sexual acts were produced. Earlier this year, a
scandal erupted in the Guatemalan town of Jutiapa bordering El Salvador when a
pedophile ring was exposed. Suspects, including the son of an official of the
Guatemalan Justice Ministry, were accused of using a high school to recruit 15
youth aged 11 to 16 to act in porn flicks. As in Ciudad Juarez , family members
of the youths were threatened after pressing legal action.
In the view
of Adriana Beltran, the power of organized criminal groups and the persistence
of femicide serve to undermine the democratic transition Guatemala was supposed
to experience after the peace accords. In former military dictatorships like
Guatemala where civilian government institutions are still fragile, the security
threats posed by organized criminal bands and their impunity are paradoxically
reviving the former national security state apparatus as the military is being
drawn into law enforcement. Beltran believes that this is a temptation that
should be resisted at all costs. “We strongly believe that the lines between
police and military should be kept separate, especially in countries that had
armed conflicts,” she says.
The WOLA is supporting proposals to convene
an international commission to investigate clandestine armed groups that grew
out of the civil war years, and focus attention on the root causes of
rapidly-proliferating organized crime.
Internationalizing the
Anti-Femicide Movement
While the bad news is that femicide seems to be
spreading throughout the hemisphere, the good news is that growing movements are
emerging to counter the violent tide. In Chilpancingo, Guerrero, students of
Daniela Martinez's high school demand justice in their slain friend's case.
Another movement is being organized around the brutal December slaying of high
school student Sara Benazir in Tijuana , linking activists in the Mexican border
city with activists in San Francisco , California .
Meanwhile, the
pro-Juarez women's movement has gone global. In Holland, activists outraged by
the lack of progress in the 1998 Ciudad Juarez murder of Dutch citizen Hestor
Van Nierop and other women are organizing to pressure the transnational
electronics company Philips, which has maquiladora plants in the border city, to
push for action, and has targeted the human rights clause of the free trade
agreement signed between Mexico and the European Union as a pressure point for
demanding an end to impunity. A growing roster of international celebrities
including Jane Fonda, Salma Hayek, Joan Manuel Serrat, and the Mexican rock
group Jaguares, among others, are giving mass exposure to the issue of femicide.
In the United States, the Mexico Solidarity Network and the Washington
Office on Latin America are organizing tours and speaking engagements to educate
the public about femicide in Mexico and Guatemala. Last year, U.S. Congressional
briefings about the Guatemalan femicide attended by Democratic representatives
Hilda Solis and Barbara Lee were held on Capitol Hill. “We're trying to raise
the level of awareness, of concern,” says the WOLA's Beltran. “There is
increasing concern from members of Congress about the situation,” she says.
“Ciudad Juarez sparked interest … this is a situation that affects not only
Ciudad Juarez.”
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