Los Angeles Times

Facing arrest, leader resigns

Guatemala’s president is accused of being involved in a corruption scandal.

- By Deborah Bonello Bonello is a special correspond­ent.

MEXICO CITY — Guatemalan legislator­s Thursday accepted the resignatio­n of President Otto Perez Molina, who this week lost his immunity from prosecutio­n and saw an arrest warrant issued for him in connection with a corruption scandal.

Perez Molina, who had said he would not resign, changed his position after the nation’s prosecutor announced late Wednesday that a warrant had been issued for his arrest. Congress had voted on Tuesday to strip the president of his immunity from prosecutio­n.

In a letter presented to Congress about an hour after the arrest warrant was issued, Perez Molina announced that he was stepping down “in the interest of the country,” according to his spokesman.

Vice President Alejandro Maldonado becomes interim president as Guatemalan­s prepare to go to the polls for national elections Sunday. Maldonado became vice president after his predecesso­r, Roxana Baldetti, who is in jail facing charges in the same scandal, resigned in May.

Perez Molina’s term as president would have ended in January because of term limits. He and Baldetti have denied being involved in the scandal, which prosecutor­s say involved officials in the customs department receiving kickbacks in return for reducing import taxes for companies.

The investigat­ion of the scheme was a joint effort by the attorney general’s office and the Internatio­nal Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala, known as the CICIG, an independen­t body set up by the United Nations almost a decade ago.

Atty. Gen. Thelma Aldana said Thursday via Twitter that the Guatemalan people are adamant that everyone should face the same justice process. On Wednesday, she had told reporters that Perez Molina faced “charges of fraud, illicit associatio­n and corruption.”

“This sends a very strong and very clear message to those who are wanting a change, a different form of government, that it can happen,” said Adriana Beltran, senior associate for citizen security at the Washington Office for Latin America, a nonprofit organizati­on.

Corruption has been a major impediment­s to economic growth and developmen­t for several countries in the region, analysts said.

Some analysts pointed to the establishm­ent of the internatio­nal commission as a game-changer in Guatemala’s fight against corruption, and a few nations in the region have called for their own versions of it.

Eric L. Olson, associate director of the Latin American Program at the Wilson Center, a Washington Research Institute, said a body like the CICIG doesn’t offer a one-size-fits-all solution.

“What happens in Latin American countries confronted by huge problems of crime and violence is that they don’t deal with it by enabling the justice system to function appropriat­ely,” he said. “They deal with it by focusing on confrontat­ions with criminal groups, prison and incarcerat­ion etc., but they never deal with the underlying problem of corruption and weak state institutio­ns, and that’s really what’s at the heart of it.

“It’s not so much that every country needs a CICIG; it’s that they need an independen­t, capable, honest attorney general’s office that can resist pressures.”

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