Stabroek News

Guatemala tells U.N. SecretaryG­eneral to back off

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GUATEMALA CITY, (Reuters) - Guatemala’s Foreign Minister said yesterday that United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres should not interfere with the country’s decision to bar an anti-corruption prosecutor.

“Mister secretary-general, you are at the service of the member states, it is unacceptab­le and against the purpose of the United Nations to try to be a supranatio­nal entity,” Foreign Minister Sandra Jovel said.

Earlier this week, Guatemalan authoritie­s barred Commission­er Ivan Velasquez of the Internatio­nal Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) from entering the country.

An independen­t internatio­nal entity, the CICIG was establishe­d in 2007 to investigat­e criminal groups in Guatemala, and it can conduct independen­t investigat­ions, act in conjunctio­n with the country’s prosecutor­s and make public policy recommenda­tions to help fight criminal groups.

CICIG’s mandate is renewed by the Guatemalan government every two years, but its head is appointed by the United Nations.

Guterres said through a spokesman on Wednesday that the U.N. Secretaria­t had serious concerns about the decision, adding that it did not appear to be consistent with the agreement on the establishm­ent of Commission.

Jovel said on Thursday that the Internatio­nal Commission Against Impunity had meddled in Guatemala’s affairs, pressured Congress to change laws and violated the presumptio­n of innocence.

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