The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Guatemala faces crisis after president turns on UN man

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GUATEMALA CITY: Guatemala faced a fresh political crisis Sunday as President Jimmy Morales tried to expel a UN official investigat­ing him for suspected corruption, but was overruled by the courts.

The row comes two years since another graft affair that toppled a former president in the Central American country of 15 million people.

The power play by the television comedian-turned-leader sparked internatio­nal criticism, from the United States and several European countries.

On Sunday, Moral es turned against UN anti-corruption official Ivan Velasquez, whose investigat­ions threatened to engulf the president in scandal.

Morales said he ordered Velasquez, a Colombian national, to be expelled from the country “in the interests of the Guatemalan people, for the strengthen­ing of the rule of law and our institutio­ns,” in a video published online.

“He meddled in domestic affairs that are the sole responsibi­lity of the Guatemalan state” and “he tried to pressure lawmakers top ass constituti­onal reforms,” Morales said in another message.

The Constituti­onal Court however temporaril­y suspended Morales’s order, its chairman Francisco Mata told reporters.

That put Morales on the spot as protests broke out against the president and in favor of Velasquez.

Health Minister Lucrecia Hernandez resigned in protest over Morales’s move, accusing him of supporting “impunity.”

Her three vice-ministers plus competitio­n commission­er Enrique Godoy followed her example in resigning.

An army spokesman said the force remained loyal to Morales.

Velasquez is the head of the UN Internatio­nal Committee Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG).

Morales cited articles of the constituti­on and internatio­nal convention­s, implying that Velasquez had interfered in Guatemala’s internal affairs.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres was “shocked” by Morales’s move and “has repeatedly reiterated his full confidence in Commission­er Velasquez,” Guterres’s spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in a statement.

“Mr. Velasquez has worked tirelessly to promote a culture that upholds the rule of law and rejects corruption.”

US State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said Washington was “deeply concerned” and said the CICIG had to be “permitted to work free from interferen­ce by the Guatemalan government.

The US also joined Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden and Switzerlan­d in condemning the move, in a joint statement issued by their embassies in Guatemala City.

The commission helped prosecutor­s investigat­e the corruption scandal that toppled president Otto Perez in 2015.

Morales, a former television comedian, won the subsequent elections and took over as president the following year.

Now investigat­ors say Morales is suspected of failing to declare electoral campaign funds. They estimate the value of the suspect transactio­ns at about 1.0 million.

On Friday, Velasquez and Guatemalan prosecutor­s applied to strip Morales of his immunity so he can be probed over the payments linked to his party, the National Convergenc­e Front.

That same day, Morales met with Guterres.

Morales also said he was firing his foreign minister Carlos Raul Morales.

The minister was involved in Friday’s meeting with the UN chief and denied having demanded Velasquez’s removal.

Reports of plans to expel Velasquez had already sparked angry protests outside the presidenti­al palace on Saturday.

That raised the prospect of a fresh wave of unrest like the one that broke out against Perez in 2015.

Protests against Velasquez’s removal erupted again Sunday at his commission’s headquarte­rs and the country’s constituti­onal court, with demonstrat­ors banging drums and blowing whistles.

“Velasquez is a man who came to make all those rotten corrupt people tremble,” said Javier Coyoy, 42, a shopkeeper in the capital. — AFP

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors protest against Morales in front of the National Palace in Guatemala City. — Reuters photo
Demonstrat­ors protest against Morales in front of the National Palace in Guatemala City. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows Morales (right) shaking hands with Ivan Velasquez in Guatemala City on Oct 28, 2015. — Reuters photo
File photo shows Morales (right) shaking hands with Ivan Velasquez in Guatemala City on Oct 28, 2015. — Reuters photo

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