CRISPAZ, Christians for Peace in El Salvador
Color bar
 

SALVANET
• Current Salva
net
• Salvanet Archive
• Subscribe to Salvanet

CRISPAZ E-News
Current E-news

E-news Archive
Subscribe to E-News

Links to Latin America News (in English)

Upsidedown World
Narco News
Resource Center of the Americas (RCTA)
Financial Times
BBC-Latin America

Salvadoran News Sites

Diario CoLatino
El Mundo
La Prensa Gráfica

El Diario de Hoy
El Faro
Raíces

Donate online!

 
 
      CRISPAZ Home Who is CRISPAZ? Volunteer Opportunities El Salvador Encounter Delegation Trips The People's Market: Shop Online News and Publications
 

CRISPAZ El Salvador Weekly News and Analysis
Dec. 11-17, 2006


In this edition:
1) Human Rights Champion Jon Cortina Remembered
2) El Mozote Remembered, 25 Years Later
3) Trans-gendered Youth Beaten by Nacional Civil Police

Human Rights Champion Jon Cortina Remembered
Marking the first anniversary since his passing, commemorative masses were held in San Salvador and Chalatenango to recognize the life of Jon Cortina, founder of the Pro-Busqueda Human Rights Organization. Cortina started the group to search for children who were kidnapped or otherwise separated from their families during El Salvador ’s 12-year civil war (1980-1992). To date, the group has reunited 172 youth with their biological families and found another 90, whom have not yet been reunited. According to Pro-Busqueda, 453 remain to be located.
Events recognizing “Padre Jon,” as he was known to the people of Guarjila, Chalatenango, took place as part of the 25 th anniversary of the massacre at El Mozote. A mass, cultural program and concert was held there last weekend. Another event was held in Guarjila, where the Jon Cortina Museum was inaugurated, along with a monument in his honor.
Last Sunday, at the UCA, a number of commemorative events were held, including a mass, concert and a procession to the cemetery where Cortina is buried. A new book, “With Jon Cortina, God passed through Guarjila” honoring Jon’s accompaniment with the people of that community will be presented today (Dec. 12).
El Mozote Remembered, 25 Years Later
On Dec. 10, 1981 the Atlacatl Battalion of the Salvadoran Army—led by the now deceased SOA graduate Col. Domingo Monterrosa--entered the village of El Mozote, Morazán and commenced a two-day bloodbath that resulted in the summary execution of the town’s population. The town was then burned to the ground. When all was done, over 1000 poor campesinos had been murdered. Resulting excavations of the area unearthed the skeletons of 136 children under six. There was one known survivor of the massacre, Rufina Amaya, whose story is recounted in "Massacre at El Mozote," by Mark Danner.
The act was perhaps the most gruesome of the 12-year civil war that gripped El Salvador from 1980-1992, but it came to symbolize a policy of collective punishment and human rights abuse exacted by the army against the civilian population. Despite this, no one has ever been tried or convicted of the horrendous acts that occurred in Mozote.
In honor of the 25 th anniversary of the massacre, the community held a commemorative mass and cultural event on December 9. The event was attended by thousands of Salvadorans and internationals.
The anniversary events fall as the Legal Council Office of the Archbishop of San Salvador filed a legal motion for the El Mozote case to be re-opened. A court in San Francisco Gotera, the municipal capital of Morazán, received the filing. According to Director María Julia Hernández, the Archdiocese has all the proof necessary to re-open the case on charges of “Crimes Against Humanity,” which were not covered by a 1993 Amnesty Law. In addition to Monterrosa, the suit names ex-Defense Minister José Guillermo García, and the ex-Chief of State Mayor Rafael Flores Lima as defendants.
Trans-gendered Youth Beaten by Nacional Civil Police
Four transgendered youth were attacked by agents of the National Civil Police on Monday Dec. 4. One victim was hospitalized with serious injuries.
Apparently, three PNC agents stopped the youth and began harassing them. Detectives then called for reinforcements and according William Hernandez, spokesman for the GLBT rights organization, Entre Amigos (Among Friends), “18 policemen joined in beating the youth so badly he wound up in a local hospital-a typical example of the excessive force police use when targeting gay people."
When the victims of the police assault decided to press charges with Hernandez’ help, "they were made to stand in line for five hours at the police station-only to be met with a refusal to take down their complaint. We then went to the unit that is supposed to investigate police abuses to file our complaint-only to be told that the police were very offended by our decision to press charges, and that instead of taking the complaint against the police, we were told that charges would be filed against the victims of the police abuse.”
"It is almost impossible to describe all the physical attacks on gay people here-both by police and by anti-gay vigilantes and homophobic thugs-because there are so many," said Hernandez. According to the New York-based Gay City News, Hernandez himself has been target of constant death threats.


home l contact us l current opportunities l donate
our focus areas: rural communities l south-north solidarity l volunteer
U.S. office: 215 E. 14 Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202-7330·
tel: (513) 381-4520· fax: (513) 672-2777· info@crispaz.org
E.S. office: Apdo. Postal 2944, Centro de Gobierno, San Salvador, El Salvador ·
tel/fax: 011-503-22-25-9031 · pazsal@crispaz.org