Los Angeles Times

Guatemalan­s skeptical on vote

In a nation devastated by corruption, crime and poverty, there is little faith in leaders.

- By Marisa Gerber marisa. gerber @ latimes. com

GUATEMALA CITY — One woman blurted her idea for capturing the attention of Guatemala’s power brokers: Let’s stop paying taxes.

A man sitting nearby suggested staging a labor strike in Guatemala City, the capital. Another woman wondered whether sit- ins worked better than marches in emphasizin­g the myriad problems faced in a nation devastated by poverty, corruption and crime.

The 30 or so members of Otra Guatemala Ya, a citizen collective, asked one another: What can we do to help create a better nation?

“People are so fed up,” said Gabriela Carrera, 28, an activist and political scientist.

For many Guatemalan­s, the prospects for a better life do not look good. The country’s status as a favored U. S. ally has not kept it from suffering the devastatio­n of high crime rates, violence and weak leadership. It is one of several Central American countries from which huge numbers of migrants, including unaccompan­ied children, are leaving their homelands and heading north to the United States.

The disruptive conditions, which include a corruption scandal that led President Otto Perez Molina to resign this week, have left many voters skeptical about whether anything beneficial will come from national elections scheduled Sunday.

The political pandemoniu­m marked a dramatic coda to an election cycle defined by candidates’ promises to steer the country from wrongdoing, but also one in which no presidenti­al contender emerged as a clear favorite ready to lead the country in a newdirecti­on.

Longtime front- runner Manuel Baldizon, a business tycoon who came in second in the 2011 election, has dropped in the polls. Despite a strong advertisin­g presence in much of the countrysid­e and campaign videos painting him as the right candidate for a “moment of change,” some see Baldizon as the newest face of the status quo. His vice presidenti­al running mate is accused in what authoritie­s say was a scheme involving moneylaund­ering.

In recent weeks, comedian and actor Jimmy Morales appeared to tighten the race by capitalizi­ng on an outsider image. His likeness appears on billboards across the country next to the slogan “Ni corrupto, ni ladron” — Not corrupt, not a crook— and he posted a message for “traditiona­l politician­s” on Facebook, calling them “liars” and cackling at their promises of change.

Former First Lady Sandra Torres rounds out the top three candidates, with a poll released Thursday by Prensa Libre, one of the country’s leading newspapers, painting the race as a tossup. The poll placed Morales in the lead with 25%, trailed by Baldizon with nearly 23% and Torres at 18%.

None of the candidates is expected to get more than 50% of the vote, whichwould result in a run- off in October.

But the campaign has been overshadow­ed by the controvers­y that surrounded the Perez Molina administra­tion for months. A protest movement emerged, helping to keep suspicion about the president in the public eye.

Meanwhile, Perez Molina, who was ineligible to seek reelection because of term limits, had recently released a filmed message posted online scoffing at accusation­s of wrongdoing and saying he refused to resign. He planned to remain as president until his term ended in January.

Unexpected­ly, he changed his mind after a congressio­nal vote Tuesday stripped him of his immunity from prosecutio­n and the attorney general issued an arrest warrant for him Wednesday in connection with the scandal.

On Thursday, Perez Molina, a general during the country’s 36- year civil war that ended in 1996, was in custody facing charges of illicit associatio­n, customs fraud and bribery.

Vice President Alejandro Maldonado, a former high court justice, became interim president Thursday and immediatel­y called for all top government officials to submit their resignatio­ns. Maldonado became vice president after his predecesso­r, Roxana Baldetti, who is in jail facing charges in the same scandal, resigned in May.

Perez Molina and Baldetti have denied involvemen­t in the scandal, which prosecutor­s say involved officials in the customs department receiving kickbacks in return for reducing import taxes for companies.

In April, the Internatio­nal Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala— a United Nations initiative started in 2007 to ferret out corruption and fight organized crime— revealed amassive customs fraud scandal that led to the arrests of the country’s current and former tax chiefs, along with moret han a dozen other officials. Investigat­ors accused Baldetti’s personal secretary, Juan Carlos Monzon, of being the ringleader. He is still a fugitive.

The scandal, known as La Linea, or “the line,” for a hotline used in the graft scheme, rocked the country and, before long, everyone seemed to have given it their own nickname: the bomb, the crisis, the vice president’s big problem.

In the months that followed, the commission, known by its Spanish initials, CICIG, revealed that the country’s social security institute had awarded a $ 15million contract for dialysis to an unqualifie­d company in exchange for kickbacks. It said a quarter of the cash that fuels Guatemalan politics comes from criminal rings, mainly from drug traffickin­g.

Last month, prosecutor­s and the U. N. commission said the scheme appeared to go all theway to the top. The person referred to as “No. 1,” “The Owner of the Farm” and “The Main Man” insome taped calls in the scheme, said CICIG’s chief, Ivan Velasquez, was almost certainly Perez Molina. The same day, authoritie­s arrested Baldetti. Officials say she is believed to be the woman referred to as “No. 2” in recordings.

The investigat­ion, which included almost 89,000 tapped phone calls, some 6,000 emails, 175,000 documents and 17 raids, turned up documents that authoritie­s say link Perez Molina and Baldetti to members of the corruption ring.

The day after CICIG publicly linked Perez Molina to the scandal, thousands of people jammed into Constituti­on Square, some carrying signs that read, “# Yo NoTengoPre­sidente” — I don’t have a president — and burning effigies of Perez Molina.

During a court hearing Friday, the ex-president proclaimed his innocence in a fiery declaratio­n broadcast live by local media.

Delivered with the same finger pointing and firm tone used in his presidenti­al speeches, Perez Molina told the judge that his lawyer had told him not to answer any questions but that he hadn’t stolen money fromthe Guatemalan people.

“That,” he said, shouting, “I have never done.”

The leading presidenti­al candidates, meanwhile, spent at least some of their time Friday campaignin­g on social media.

 ??  ?? in Guatemala’s presidenti­al election are comedian Jimmy Morales, left, former First Lady Sandra Torres and tycoon Manuel Baldizon.
in Guatemala’s presidenti­al election are comedian Jimmy Morales, left, former First Lady Sandra Torres and tycoon Manuel Baldizon.
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Orlando Sierra AFP/ Getty Images
Moises Castillo Associated Press ?? THE CANDIDATES
Orlando Estrada AFP/ Getty Orlando Sierra AFP/ Getty Images Moises Castillo Associated Press THE CANDIDATES
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AP ?? FORMER President Otto Perez Molina was placed in custody this week after he resigned.
Moises Castillo AP FORMER President Otto Perez Molina was placed in custody this week after he resigned.
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