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Guatemalan journalist José Rubén Zamora receives diplomatic visit amid unresolved charges

Guatemalan court decides Wednesday whether to convict journalist José Rubén Zamora

The ambassadors of Spain and France in Guatemala visited Guatemalan journalist José Rubén Zamora Marroquín in prison, where he has been held since 2022 without a sentence.

The visit took place at the Mariscal Zavala military barracks prison, located in the western part of Guatemala City, where Zamora Marroquín has been detained since July 2022, diplomatic sources confirmed Wednesday.

Spain’s ambassador to Guatemala, Clara Girbau, and France’s ambassador, Frédéric Clavier, also visited former anti-corruption prosecutor Stuardo Campo at the same prison.

“José Rubén Zamora fights for press freedom and the right of all citizens to express their opinions,” the French embassy said on social media regarding the diplomats’ visit. Regarding Campo, the Spanish embassy recalled that the former prosecutor “worked decisively against corruption” and “remains in preventive detention.”

Similarly, the ambassadors “listened to and conveyed the European Union’s concern about the politicization of justice” to Campo.

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Zamora Marroquín, 67, was arrested by the Public Prosecutor’s Office on July 29, 2022, after openly criticizing corruption linked to President Alejandro Giammattei (2020-2024) and Miguel Martínez, a close official to the president.

Since then, he has remained in custody by order of the Judiciary, except for a few months when he was placed under house arrest.

The charges against him, alleging money laundering, have not progressed, but he remains imprisoned by order of the Supreme Court of Justice.

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Central America

Petro condemns guatemalan legal action against former colombian anti-corruption officials

Colombian President Gustavo Petro criticized Guatemala’s controversial prosecutor’s office on Tuesday, which is responsible for an investigation that led to an arrest warrant against his former Defense Minister and the Colombian Attorney General on charges of alleged corruption.

On Monday, a Guatemalan court ordered the arrest of former minister Iván Velásquez and Attorney Luz Adriana Camargo, both former members of the UN anti-mafia commission in Guatemala, according to the country’s prosecutor’s office.

The Colombian officials are accused of corruption in favor of the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht.

On the social network X, Petro compared the Guatemalan prosecutor’s office to others in the region that, according to him, “obey crime, not the citizens.” He added, “The multinational drug trafficking organizations try to take over judicial powers and governments to carry out and launder their hidden businesses with impunity.”

Velásquez served as head of the now-disbanded International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) from 2013 to 2019, while Camargo was the head of investigation and litigation at the entity from 2014 to 2017. Both enjoy immunity as the commission was sponsored by the UN.

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Camargo said in a press conference that the arrest warrant “lacks legal basis and represents a risk to cooperation between countries and international organizations in the fight against impunity, corruption, and organized crime.”

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Central America

Chiquita Panama seeks approval to lay off remaining staff after mass dismissals

Administrative staff of Chiquita Panama have left the country, and the company will request government authorization to lay off the remaining employees in Panama, the nation’s Labor Minister Jackeline Muñoz reported on Monday.

This news follows the company’s dismissal last month of approximately 5,000 workers out of a total of 6,500 employees nationwide, in response to a strike at its banana plantations.

Chiquita Panama did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

On May 22, the company stated it had terminated workers in the western province of Bocas del Toro following what it described as an “unjustified abandonment of duties” at its banana plantations, which began in late April. At that time, the company reported losses amounting to US$75 million caused by the strike.

Thousands of banana sector workers have been on strike while Panamanians across the country protest various issues, including a social security reform that they believe will negatively impact their future pensions.

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Central America

Guterres condemns judicial pursuit of anti-corruption officials in Guatemala

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres reiterated on Tuesday that Colombian lawyers Luz Adriana Camargo and Iván Velásquez, against whom Guatemala’s judiciary has issued arrest warrants, enjoy immunity related to their roles in the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG).

“(Guterres) reiterates that the international staff of the Commission, by virtue of the agreement between the United Nations and the Government of Guatemala, enjoys immunity from judicial proceedings regarding acts performed in the course of their mission,” said Guterres’ spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric during his daily press briefing.

Dujarric emphasized that this immunity continues even after their work with the Commission has ended, and reminded that the Guatemalan government committed to protecting the Commission’s personnel “from abuse, threats, retaliation, or acts of intimidation.”

He also conveyed that Guterres expressed concern about numerous reports indicating that those who sought to shed light on corruption cases and work to strengthen the rule of law and the justice system in Guatemala are being criminally prosecuted.

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