Irma Flaquer
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Irma Flaquer Azurdia (Born in Guatemala City, Guatemala in 1938), a psychologist and reporter known for her vicious critiques against the Guatemalan government. Born to a Catalan, theater producer father, Fernando Flaquer, and Guatemalan opera singer mother, Olga Azurdia. She spent her childhood traveling and living through Central and South America Married Fernando Valle Avizpe in 1955 and later divorced in 1958. That same year (1958) she started a column in the Guatemalan newspaper, La Hora, entitled "Lo que otros callan" in which she would later transfer over to La Nacion in the years 1971 to 1980. She had two sons, Sergio Valle and Fernando Valle.
In 1970 she had a hand grenade thrown into her car, injuring only her hand. On October 6, 1980, Irma attended her grandson's 4th birthday party. It was also believed to be a last farewell to her son Fernanando, his wife, Mayra Rosales, and her grandson, Fernando, before she left for Nicaragua the next day. While Fernando and her drove back to her apartment, they were stopped a block away from her apartment by two cars surrounding their car. Fernando was shot in the head and Irma cried out for a doctor for her son. She was grabbed and taken away. Her body has not been recovered and it is believed she was executed. She had been the first white, middle-class, professional woman to have been abducted and presumably murdered in Guatemala during that time. Her son, Sergio, who had been sent to live in a kibbutz in Israel in 1970 after the grenade incident, had received menacing, anonymous phone calls in Israel after his mother's disappearance for two years, claiming that she had gone crazy and was living in a basement.