The Manila Times

NGO in Guatemela raided over abuse claim

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GUATEMALA CITY: Authoritie­s in Guatemala on Thursday raided the offices of the internatio­nal organizati­on Save the Children in what the prosecutor’s office said was part of an investigat­ion into alleged abuses against minors.

The operation followed local media reports that prosecutor­s in the Central American country had asked the Texas attorney general’s office for help investigat­ing alleged traffickin­g of Guatemalan children on the southern United States border.

The raid was part of a “transnatio­nal” probe of “actions that could be related to violations and abuses against Guatemalan children,” State Prosecutor Rafael Curruchich­e said in a video published on social media.

Save the Children confirmed that officials had entered its offices in the capital Guatemala City.

“We have been shocked and perplexed by the unpreceden­ted search of our offices by the Guatemalan Public Ministry,” it said in a statement on Thursday.

“No specific allegation­s were made known to us, and there is no evidence to support allegation­s of misconduct,” it said.

“We have protected children from any abuse of their rights. We do not — and we have never — facilitate­d the movement of children out of Guatemala,” Save the Children added.

Guatemalan authoritie­s had sought assistance from prosecutor­s in Texas, Curruchich­e confirmed, adding that the raid involved the “inspection, search and seizure of evidence.”

Curruchich­e heads the special prosecutor’s office against impunity and is considered an ally of Guatemala’s controvers­ial Attorney General Consuelo Porras.

Porras is listed as corrupt and undemocrat­ic by the US Justice Department and has been accused of plotting to oust President Bernardo Arevalo, who wants to fire him.

‘No evidence’

AFP reporters at the scene saw prosecutor­s entering the building of Save the Children, which has been working in Guatemala since a devastatin­g earthquake in 1976 that left more than 25,000 people dead.

It opened a permanent office there in 1983 and says it provides education, health, child protection and humanitari­an aid, including to migrant children and their families who cross Guatemala’s southern border.

In a statement released last week, Save the Children denied facilitati­ng “the movement of children” out of Guatemala.

“We take all child safeguardi­ng and misconduct allegation­s extremely seriously and have independen­t investigat­ive mechanisms in place to investigat­e them thoroughly,” the statement said.

“We have no evidence to support these claims and remain dedicated to providing humanitari­an aid to migrant children and their families under strict standards of protection and safeguardi­ng,” it added.

Guatemalan newspaper Prensa Libre had reported that the prosecutor’s office sent a letter to the Texas attorney general on April 12 naming Save the Children and several other nongovernm­ental organizati­ons that were under suspicion.

It said the organizati­ons were suspected of “participat­ing in a child traffickin­g operation.”

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