Los Angeles Times

Guatemalan voters in bleak mood

With presidenti­al balloting set Sunday, optimism has given way to mass distrust.

- By Kate Linthicum and Maya Averbuch Times staff writer Linthicum reported from Mexico City and special correspond­ent Averbuch from La Mesilla.

LA MESILLA, Guatemala — Four years ago, Guatemalan­s went to the polls with jubilation.

Widespread street protests had just forced the resignatio­n of President Otto Perez Molina, who had been accused of graft by a pioneering anti-corruption body.

A record number of voters turned out to elect Perez’s replacemen­t: a wellknown television comedian named Jimmy Morales, who had vowed to continue fighting corruption.

But this weekend, as Guatemalan­s head back to the ballot box to choose the successor to the termed-out Morales, the mood among voters is downright bleak.

“Many of us thought there would be a change, but there wasn’t one,” Nimsi Abac, a 20-year-old medical student in the northern border town of La Mesilla, said Friday. She plans to sit out Sunday’s presidenti­al runoff.

A series of recent political developmen­ts has eroded optimism here, deepening voter distrust in the country’s elected leaders and sparking concerns among some that Guatemala’s democracy may be at risk.

The election process has been marred by controvers­y, and there has been little enthusiasm for the two finalists — former First Lady Sandra Torres, of the centerleft National Unity of Hope party, and Alejandro Giammattei, with the rightwing Vamos party.

Also fueling mass skepticism has been the performanc­e of Morales, once a source of hope, but now, for many, a symbol of disappoint­ment.

Instead of fighting corruption, Morales has dismantled the United Nations-backed Internatio­nal Commission against Impunity in Guatemala, known as the CICIG.

He began his assault on the anti-graft body after it implicated him and several family members on allegation­s of illegal campaign financing. As time has gone on, he and his allies in Congress have pulled out all stops to impede the body’s work, accusing the commission of being politicall­y motivated. Earlier this year, for example, they sought to impeach judges on the country’s highest court who had previously ruled in favor of the commission.

Morales has shown repeated disregard for the country’s democratic institutio­ns. Last month, his government defied a high court ruling when it agreed to a controvers­ial “safe third country” accord with the U.S., a move that could force tens of thousands of asylum seekers from Honduras and El Salvador to seek refuge in Guatemala instead of in the United States.

Many believe the presidenti­al election was flawed from the start, when several popular leading candidates were disqualifi­ed by electoral officials.

One of them, former Atty. Gen. Thelma Aldana, had led multiple high-level corruption investigat­ions, including the one that landed Perez and his vice president, Roxana Baldetti, in jail.

Aldana, who says the claims of financial impropriet­y used to disqualify her were fabricated, was the only major candidate who vowed to reinstate the antigraft commission.

The first round of voting on June 16 drew a dismal turnout, and no candidate won a majority.

The top two finishers, Torres and Giammattei, will face off Sunday. Both are veteran Guatemalan politician­s who have made multiple previous unsuccessf­ul bids for the presidency.

“Most people don’t trust either of them,” said Claudia Escobar, a former Guatemalan appellate court judge. “There is a sense that both of them will take the same path as so many previous Guatemalan leaders and use their position to steal for themselves.”

Torres, who served as first lady during the presidency of Alvaro Colom until their 2011 divorce, has sought to appeal to rural voters with her promise to aid agricultur­al regions hurt by falling coffee prices and the effects of climate change.

She was recently accused by the anti-corruption commission of receiving $2.5 million in illicit campaign contributi­ons for her unsuccessf­ul 2015 presidenti­al bid. Torres denies those allegation­s.

Giammattei has sought to win over urban voters with a pledge to militarize public security to reduce crime. The former director of the country’s prison system was investigat­ed in the extrajudic­ial killings of several prisoners, but the charges against him were dropped.

Neither candidate has called for the anti-corruption body to be reinstated, although both have expressed reservatio­ns about the third-country agreement that Morales’ government agreed to last month.

Major questions remain about how such a deal would be carried out; Trump has said it would require asylum seekers transiting the Central American country to make their claim in Guatemala instead of in the U.S.

On Thursday, a delegation of congressio­nal Democrats touring Central America said one thing was clear: Guatemala does not appear to have the resources to handle a surge in asylum applicatio­ns.

“My personal position is that Guatemala is in no way capable of being a [safe] third country,” said U.S. Rep. Norma Torres (D-Pomona), speaking in Guatemala City with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic leaders.

Torres, who was born in Guatemala, has criticized the Trump administra­tion for helping to destabiliz­e the Central American nation by pushing for the third-country agreement and not doing more to defend anti-corruption efforts.

The U.S. helped create and fund the CICIG more than a decade ago, and President Obama put diplomatic pressure on previous Guatemalan presidents to support the commission’s efforts.

The Trump administra­tion, however, responded with ambivalenc­e as Morales first expelled the commission’s leader and then decided to end its mandate altogether.

Such ambivalenc­e is shortsight­ed, said Jo-Marie Burt, a Latin American studies professor at George Mason University.

“The surge of migration you’ve seen in the last couple of years is absolutely related to the lack of governing of the Morales government,” she said. “This is a country that’s been absolutely abandoned by its leaders.”

 ?? Esteban Biba EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? OPPONENTS of President Jimmy Morales show their backing for a U.N.-endorsed anti-corruption commission he disbanded. Support is tepid for two candidates vying to succeed the termed-out Guatemalan leader.
Esteban Biba EPA/Shuttersto­ck OPPONENTS of President Jimmy Morales show their backing for a U.N.-endorsed anti-corruption commission he disbanded. Support is tepid for two candidates vying to succeed the termed-out Guatemalan leader.

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