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Indigenous Latin America - Sexual Exploitation - Racial Oppression

.Guatemalan Women Face Discrimination and Abuse in Job Market 
February 12, 2002
Jim Lobe, OneWorld US
From: http://www.imadr.org/project/guatemala/news3.html

 
Tens of thousands of women and girls, many of them indigenous Mayans, face persistent discrimination and other abuses working in Guatemala's export sector and as maids and servants in private homes, according to a report released Tuesday by Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Although Guatemalan laws forbid discrimination in the workplace, they do not apply to domestic work. Their enforcement in the country's maquiladoras, or export-processing plants, is very weak, according to the report. "Women workers are getting a very raw deal in Guatemala," says LaShawn Jefferson, executive director of HRW's Women's Rights Division. "The country's labor law has some major gaps, and in many cases it's not being enforced anyway."

The 147-page report, 'From the Household to the Factory: Sex Discrimination in the Guatemalan Labor Force,' comes amid major changes in Guatemala where a 1996 peace accord meant to end some 30 years of civil war has brought increased demands for human and labor rights, as well as growing resistance from the still-powerful armed forces and key economic interests.

Women's participation in the Guatemalan workforce has increased sharply over the past decade, from about 22 percent to about 35 percent of the active working population in 1999. The increase has occurred primarily in the economy's least-protected sectors, including the informal sector, where women and girls constitute about 55 percent of the workforce, and in paid domestic labor, where 98 out of 100 workers are women.

Domestic workers are often recruited at the age of only 14, according to the report, which notes that they receive virtually no protection from national labor laws. The result is that they are often required to work 14 hours a day or more, rarely get one day off a week, and lack access to healthcare.

They also often suffer sexual harassment and even assaults, said the report, which cites the cases of 29 domestic workers, of whom one third said they had been harassed sexually during their work. Mayan girls and women are particularly susceptible to verbal and emotional abuse, even from children, as a result of the racism that pervades much of Guatemala's non-Indian, or ladino, population, according to the report. While generally more attractive than domestic work, Guatemala's apparel-assembly industry--which employs tens of thousands of women in some 250 maquila plants--is also rife with discrimination, the report finds.

Women workers in the plants are often required to reveal whether they are pregnant as a condition of employment. Sometimes, women applicants are asked direct questions about whether they are pregnant; in some plants they may be subjected to physical examinations. Such practices are illegal under Guatemala's labor code, but enforcement is woefully lacking and sanctions inadequate, according to the government's own response to the report.

The same practices are also banned by codes of conduct of U.S.-based manufacturers and retailers which have contracts with Guatemalan maquilas, including Target, The Limited, Wal-Mart, GEAR for Sports, Liz Claiborne, and Lee Jeans, says the report. Such codes can be helpful in pressing plants to end discriminatory practices and other abuses but only if they are "properly implemented and independently monitored," said Jefferson, who added that they cannot "substitute for government enforcement of national and international law."

Maquilas, many of which are foreign-owned, also often make it difficult for workers to gain access to the national employee healthcare system or to take time off for medical visits. The plants have also gained a reputation for being quite hostile to efforts by trade unions to organize workers, according to the Brussels-based International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers Federation, whose Guatemalan affiliate has tried to operate in two Korean-owned plants over the last year.

In a report released last month, the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, of which the Textile Federation is a part, charged that management had incited non-union workers to attack union supporters and threatened and bribed workers to resign from the union. When union organizing efforts have succeeded, factory owners have closed down their plants and moved them elsewhere, according to the report which noted that there are currently no collective bargaining agreements in force in the maquila sector.

 

 
 
     

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LibertadLatina

Raids Versus Rescue

Read our new section on the human rights advocacy conflict that exists between the goals of the defense of undocumented immigrants from the threat of deportation on the one hand, and the urgent need to protect Latina sex trafficking victims through law enforcement action...

...As the global economic crisis throws more women and children into severe poverty, and as ruthless trafficking gangs and mafias seek to increase their profits by kidnapping, raping, prostituting and murdering more women and girls (especially non-citizen migrants passing through Mexico to the U.S.), the level of sex trafficking activity will increase dramatically. 

Society must respond and protect those who are at risk...

- Chuck Goolsby

LibertadLatina

Dec. 18, 2008



Noticias de Dic., 2008

Dec. 2008 News

(News Added During Dec., 2008)



Added: Jan. 5, 2009

Mexico

“No nos quedó de otra, más que salir de nuestro pueblo”, Floriana García

Premio Nacional de la Juventud 2005-2006

Winner of the 2005-2006 National Youth Award: "We have no other choice but leave our homes"

According to Beatriz Floriana Garcia Cortes, a migrant from Mexico's southern state of Oaxaca, now living in Guadalajara, the indigenous population in the region has two options: to move or to die. Floriana won Mexico's National Youth Award for 2005-2006for her work in promoting the efforts of women artisans among the Mixtec indigenous people.

Like many Oaxacans, Floriana had to leave her village to look for opportunities to study and work. She, along with her eight brothers and her parents migrated, adding to the swelling ranks of Oaxacans who represent one of the largest migrant communities now living outside of Mexico.

Floriana moved to Guadalajara when she was six years old. In time, she achieved her goal of getting an education. She completed a degree in computer management at the Western Technological Institute of Higher Studies (ITESO).

After graduation she had the opportunity to work in a company, but chose instead to open a store to promote employment for women artisans.

"Upon leaving the university you can work in any business, but I was concerned about how mothers left their children alone to go out and work."

It was then that she decided, together with Catalina Acevedo Olea and Francisco Acevedo, who had studied law, to start-up a micro enterprise - Bordados (flowers in Spanish) Mixtecos [Mixtec Flowers]. Their goal was to create jobs.

Floriana wins the National Youth Award

[As a result of her project] Floriana was honored with the National Youth Award for 2005-2006 in the category of productive activities. She had been nominated by the Jalisco Institute of Crafts...

Floriana notes that the Oaxacan people love their land, but the conditions of  poverty and misery force them to choose between two options: move or die. They choose to move. By doing so, they face barriers including an inability to speak Spanish well, and the fact that they do not have basic identification documents such as a birth certificate, a voter card or an immunization card.

The lack of these documents has been an obstacle for both women and men. Neither public nor private employers will hire them. Their only choice has been self employment, from selling on street corners to begging, to working as domestics...

Floriana recounts that, upon completion of her primary education, her grandparents asked her: "Why do you study? Women don't need to study."

Looking back on the path she has traveled, Floriana knows that she has had success, but that she still has a long way to go.

En Oaxaca, la población indígena tiene dos opciones: emigrar o morir, expresó Beatriz Floriana García Cortés, migrante oaxaqueña en Guadalajara y Premio Nacional de la Juventud 2005-2006 por su labor en el impulso de las mujeres artesanas mixtecas.

Al igual que muchos oaxaqueños, Floriana tuvo que salir de su pueblo para ir en búsqueda de oportunidades de estudio y trabajo. Junto con sus ocho hermanos y sus padres, engrosaron las cifras de personas que emigran del estado de Oaxaca, al sur de México, una de las entidades federativas con más comunidades de migrantes fuera del país.

Floriana llegó a Guadalajara cuando tenía seis años. Al paso del tiempo encontró lo que buscaba: estudiar. Logró concluir la licenciatura en Informática Administrativa en el Instituto Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Occidente (ITESO).

Olga Rosario Avendaño

CIMAC Noticias

Dec. 18, 2008


Added: Jan. 5, 2009

Mexico

Atentado del ejército colombiano iba dirigido a mí: Aída Quilcué

Consejera del CRIC había recibido amenazas de muerte

Aída Quilcué: "The Colombian army's attack was directed at me." Indigenous leaders had received death threats

Mexico City - "I think the attack was meant for me," said Aida Quilcué, head counsel for the Greater Regional Indigenous Council of [the province of] Cauca (CRIC).

Quilcué was referring to a Colombian Army attack last Tuesday that resulted in the death of her husband, Edwin Legarda, who had been riding in a van that Quilcué used for her travels.

Quilcué, after analyzing what had occured, stated that the murder was a premeditated crime, and that she was the intended target.

Quilcué has received numerous death threats.

In a communiqué from the CRIC, Quilcué stated that the threats to her life increased after she submitted reports nationally and internationally about the violence to which indigenous peoples are being subjected in Colombia.

Aída Quilcué, along with other leaders of the CRIC, recently spearheaded a "Minga" (meet-up or mobilization) of the aboriginal peoples of the southwest of the country, from October to November, that included a march to [the nation's capitol,] Bogota, to demand the return of their [stolen] land and an end to the violence against their communities...

The CRIC's vehicle, which is widely known on the roads of the region, was attacked from three sides and had 17 bullet impacts. According to witnesses, there was no checkpoint on the road, nor was an order given by troops to stop...

Luis Andrade Evelis Casamada, Director of the the National Indigenous Organization of Colombia (ONIC), pointed to these facts and declared that an attack on the CRIC is an attack on ONIC, on the Colombian indigenous movement and against any and all who dare to and engage the people by proposing new ideas.

Evelis Casamada said that with this murder, we confirm once again that efforts by the Colombian state to kill indigenous leaders are a component of its security policy, as was also demonstrated during the recent Minga act of resistance.

The state calls these events acts that are carried out by isolated individuals, to distance themselves. In reality, these events for part of the massacre against the Colombian people...

The CRIC has reiterated the position of their past statements. They reject bullets, terror and war, wherever they come from. Impunity, they say, cannot be allowed to continue in this painful situation. "This is a war against the people, and against the indigenous movement for dignity, including the right of peoples to build a country without bosses, that can live in peace."

The CRIC has demanded that soldiers leave their territories so that they can live in peace.

“Creo que el atentado era para mí”, expresó Aída Quilcué, Consejera Mayor del Consejo Regional Indígena del Cauca (CRIC), al referirse al ataque del ejército colombiano el pasado martes en el que murió su compañero Edwin Legarda, quien iba en la camioneta que ella utilizaba para sus recorridos.

La Consejera del CRIC, al analizar las circunstancias del asesinato de su esposo, denunció este hecho como un acto premeditado que en realidad la tenía a ella como objetivo, pues Aida Quilcué ha recibido múltiples amenazas de muerte. Su riesgo aumentó a raíz de sus denuncias nacionales e internacionales sobre la violencia contra los pueblos indígenas, expresó un comunicado del CRIC.

Aída Quilcué, junto a otros líderes del CRIC, encabezó recientemente la "Minga" (marcha o movilización) de los pueblos aborígenes del suroeste del país, que de octubre a noviembre pasados caminaron hasta Bogotá para exigir la devolución de tierras y el fin de la violencia contra sus comunidades.

CIMAC Noticias

Dec. 18, 2008


Added: Jan. 5, 2009

Mexico

En Ecuador, Conaie condena asesinato del líder indígena Edwin Legarda

Pide investigación internacional

In Ecuador, CONAIE indigenous leader condemns killing of Edwin Legarda in Colombia, and requests an international investigation

Mexico City - The Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE), has made a strong public condemnation of the murder of Colombian indigenous leader Edwin Legarda on December 16th, and calls for the establishment of an international commission of Inquiry into this event, that has affected indigenous peoples in Colombia and across the Continent.

Given the number of acts of violence in Colombia against indigenous peoples and their organizations, CONAIE believes it is imperative and urgent that international action be taken to investigate the facts, so that those responsible are punished to the full extent of the law .

CONAIE's statement went on to say that the murder of Edwin Legarda is not an isolated incident. They note that International human rights organizations have shown that leaders of Ecuador's social organizations and its Afro-Ecuadorian and indigenous communities are also the victims of gross violations of their fundamental human rights.

The self-defense of indigenous territories remains the major cause of these conflicts and associated crimes against humanity, which can not and should not continue with impunity. For our peoples, territories are crucial in the exercise of our right to life.

In the short-term, CONAIE calls upon the UN Special Rapporteur for Indigenous Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, [Mayan] Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú Tum, to speak on the proposal of the commission of inquiry and to ensure its creation.

La Confederación de Nacionalidades Indígenas del Ecuador ­(Conaie), hace pública su firme condena al asesinato en Colombia del líder indígena Edwin Legarda el pasado 16 de diciembre, y pide el establecimiento de una Comisión Internacional de Investigación sobre un hecho que afecta a los Pueblos Indígenas de Colombia y del Continente, informó un boletín de CONAIE.

Ante la serie de hechos de violencia acaecidos en Colombia contra los pueblos indígenas y sus expresiones organizativas, la Conaie considera que es imperativa y urgente una acción internacional que investigue estos hechos con la finalidad de que sus responsables sean sancionados con todo el rigor de la ley.

Debe señalarse que el asesinato de Edwin Legarda no es un hecho aislado, pues los organismos de derechos humanos internacionales han señalado que en ese país dirigentes sociales, organizativos, afroecuatorianos e indígenas, son víctimas de graves violaciones a sus derechos fundamentales.

CIMAC Noticias

Dec. 18, 2008


Added: Jan. 5, 2009

Mexico

Desempleo exacerba violencia contra las mujeres

Concluye informe de la CEPAL

Unemployment exacerbates violence against women

Mexico City - Violence against women takes a high toll on public health and increases the risk of sexually transmitted infections, according to a study: Latin American Social Panorama 2008, developed by the Economic Commission for Latin America (CEPAL) of the United Nations. The report devoted one chapter to the topic of youth and family violence in Latin America.

The CEPAL study shows a clear relationship between violent abuse and the deterioration of the health of women victims and their children. For example, women who had suffered abuse from their partners had greater number of unwanted births and deaths of children (between 33 percent and 72 percent) than those who never experienced such violence.

There is evidence that violence is associated with conditions such as low birth weight, premature delivery and miscarriage. Women victims of violence showed a greater chance of having sexually transmitted infections and were much less likely than other women to receive prenatal care during the first trimester of pregnancy.

Abused women were also less likely to vaccinate their children from 12 to 35 months of age. Their children were also more likely to die before reaching 5 years old.

The report also notes that manifestations of gender violence in the home are associated with patterns of unequal power relations within the family...

The [global] financial crisis could aggravate the factors that fuel youth violence in Latin America, to the extent that it causes an increase in youth unemployment and increased frustration of the expectations of social mobility among young people.

La violencia contra la mujer representa una alta carga para la salud pública y conlleva riesgos asociados a infecciones de transmisión sexual, así lo informó el estudio Panorama social de América Latina 2008, de la Comisión Económica para América Latina (CEPAL) de Naciones Unidas, que dedica un capítulo al tema de la violencia juvenil y familiar en Latinoamérica.

El estudio de CEPAL muestra una clara relación entre los maltratos y el deterioro de la salud de las mujeres víctimas y sus hijas e hijos. Por ejemplo, las mujeres que habían sufrido maltratos de sus parejas tenían mayor número de partos no deseados y partos de niños muertos (entre un 33 por ciento y un 72 por ciento) que las que nunca sufrieron violencia de este tipo.

Hay evidencias que asocian la violencia con patologías como bajo peso al nacer, parto prematuro y aborto. Las mujeres víctimas de violencia mostraban mayores probabilidades de tener infecciones de transmisión sexual y, por el otro lado, menos probabilidades tanto de recibir atención prenatal durante el primer trimestre del embarazo como de vacunar correctamente a sus hijas e hijos de 12 a 35 meses.

CIMAC Noticias

Dec. 16, 2008


Added: Jan. 5, 2009

Guatemala

Discriminación hacia indígenas es ejercida por el Estado y funcionarios públicos

Discrimination against indigenous peoples is perpetrated largely by  public employees

The Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) has revealed that the majority of complaints of racism [by the majority indigenous population] have been filed against public officials.

According to information from the newspaper Prensa Libre, the Presidential Commission Against Discrimination and Racism (CODISRA), which coordinated the drafting of the document, reviewed 35 legal complaints by indigenous peoples, which are in the process of resolution, as well as 131cases that have been closed.

Most of the accusation involved public employees, particularly in educational establishments. Forty eight of those cases involved administrative resolutions including public apologies, dismissals or agreements.

Antonio Curuchich of CODISRA said there has been progress in regard to those cases of racial discrimination that are punishable by imprisonment (with penalties of up to three years), however much still remains to be done in the educational and health fields, where discrimination is most obvious.

Los informes 12 y 13 del Estado, solicitados por el Comité para la Eliminación de la Discriminación Racial (CERD) revelan que la mayoría de las denuncias presentadas por racismo han sido en contra de funcionarios públicos.

Según una información del matutino Prensa Libre, la Comisión Presidencial contra la Discriminación y el Racismo (CODISRA), que coordinó la redacción del documento, recogió por medio de su asesoría jurídica 35 denuncias de pueblos indígenas, las cuales están en proceso de resolución, y otras 131que ya fueron cerradas.

La mayor parte de los hechos cerrados fueron cometidos por empleados públicos; 48 de esos casos fueron resueltos en el área administrativa, lo que implicó sanciones como disculpas públicas, despidos o acuerdos, sobre todo en establecimientos educativos.

Cerigua

Dec. 16, 2008


Added: Jan. 5, 2009

Mexico, Spain

Los crímenes de Ciudad Juárez, impunes por 'la corrupción' de las autoridades

The murders in Ciudad Juárez represent the impunity of 'corruption' on the part of authorities

During a recent visit to Madrid, Spain, Efe Marisela Ortiz, director of the organization Bring Our Daughters Home, stated that since 1993, more than 600 young women have been raped and tortured to death in the streets of Juarez. These crimes remain unpunished because 'there is corruption on the part of the authorities, and mafias have taken over, leaving the city in a state of social decay.

According to a woman named Marisela, who together with her three daughters has faced death threats, some 2,500 men and more than 130 girls and women have been killed in this city during 2008, the result of an internal turf war between drug gangs.

A side effect is an increase in crime in Juárez, where business owners and even teachers are blackmailed if they do not pay a fee for their protection.

Some who refused to pay have had their shops burned down, or they have been killed, with their bodies left on the streets for all to see...

Marisela added that nothing positive has come from having more than 1,000 federal police and 2,000 army soldiers stationed in the city. Not only do residents have to tolerate soldiers bursting into their homes and then stealing whatever they want, but some people believe that the soldiers have killed. Entire families have disappeared...

Over the years the profile of the victims has remained the same. They are teenagers between 15 and 18-years-of-age. They have similar physical traits, and they are kidnapped as they walk to school or work. Before they are killed they are raped by several men, tortured and sometimes mutilated.

Desde 1993, más de 600 mujeres jóvenes han sido violadas y torturadas hasta la muerte en las calles de la mexicana Ciudad Juárez, unos crímenes aún impunes porque 'hay corrupción por parte de la autoridad' y las mafias se han adueñado de este lugar que vive 'una tremenda descomposición'.

Así habla en una entrevista con Efe Marisela Ortiz, coordinadora de la organización 'Nuestras hijas de regreso a casa', quien visita Madrid para recibir el Premio de Derechos Humanos del Consejo General de la Abogacía Española.

En lo que va de año, unos 2.500 hombres han sido ejecutados y más de 130 chicas han sido asesinadas en esta ciudad fronteriza con Estados Unidos, el balance de una guerra interna entre las mafias de narcotraficantes que luchan por conquistar el territorio, según Marisela, amenazada de muerte junto a sus tres hijas.

EFE

Dec. 14, 2008


Added: Jan. 1, 2009

Mexico

Lydia Cacho: tres años de lucha contra la impunidad

Su caso, en la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos

Lydia Cacho: three years of combating impunity

She will soon present her case to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights

Mexico City - "My dear Spanish poet Angel Petisme wrote: It is forbidden to mourn without learning. I have cried tears to wash away the sadness for my violent and corrupt country. But I have learned ... tears healed my pain ... they made me stronger ... "

This is an excerpt from a letter written by the journalist Lydia Cacho in February 2006, two months after her arrest on December 16, 2005 by judicial agents from Puebla state who went to Cancun, Quintana Roo, to execute an arrest warrant.

In her letter Cacho defends the right to freedom of expression and the importance that such work has for allowing her to show the legality [...only in Mexico...] of journalism...

Three years after the fact [of official state retaliation against her for exposing a child sex trafficking ring run by two millionaires in Cancun], Cacho Ribeiro's hopes of obtaining justice have focused on the international arena, where no later than next February she will submit her case, and the cases of other human rights activists before the Inter-American Human Rights system.

Cacho is now at the end of her struggle for justice. She has had to [seek a fair hearing] outside of Mexico after having exhausted all of its legal avenues.

"And when we win this trial, we will continue to complete two tasks: the  decriminal-ization of journalism in Mexico and the demand for justice in the case of Jean Succar Kuri the pedophile [a textile millionaire and one of two targets of Cacho's accusations in her exposé, The Demons of Eden].

"And then, sisters and friends [amigas and amigos], we will celebrate the fact that none of us, because we speak the truth, should have to live in situations of 'conditional freedom.'

Although Cacho filed a formal complaint of torture [while in state Puebla state police detention] before a FEVIM panel chaired by Pérez Duarte, at this point in time, three years later, the federal case has [disappeared]... nobody knows what happened to the investigatory materials that were developed by FEVIM, that could have helped in the prosecution of the agents from Puebla state who tortured Cacho.

Full Article in English

“Mi querido poeta español Ángel Petisme escribió: Queda prohibido llorar sin aprender. Sí he llorado y con las lágrimas lavé la tristeza por mi país violento y corrupto. Pero he aprendido…las lágrimas sanaron mi dolor…me hicieron más fuerte…”