Burning of the Spanish Embassy

The Burning of the Spanish Embassy (sometimes called the Spanish Embassy Massacre or the Spanish Embassy Fire) refers to the January 31, 1980 occupation of the Spanish Embassy in Guatemala City, Guatemala, by indigenous peasants and their allies and the subsequent police raid that resulted in a fire which destroyed the embassy and left 36 people dead. The incident has been called "the defining event" of the Guatemalan Civil War.[1]

Contents

History

Background

In January 1980 a group of K'iche' and Ixil peasant farmers organized a march to Guatemala City to protest the kidnapping and murder of peasants in Uspantán in El Quiché department by elements of the Guatemalan Army. The peasants were joined by members of the Comité de Unidad Campesina (Committee of Peasant Unity) and a radical student organization known as the Robin García Revolutionary Student Front, groups associated with the Ejército Guerrillero de los Pobres (EGP, the Guerrilla Army of the Poor). The protesters were denied a hearing in Congress and their legal adviser was assassinated.[2] On January 28, they briefly took over two radio stations.[3]

Incident

At 9:30 in the morning on January 31, 1980, the peasants, joined by workers and students, entered the Spanish Embassy in Guatemala City. According to police reports, some of the demonstrators were armed with machetes, pistols and Molotov cocktails.[4]

Spain was considered sympathetic to the indigenous cause, especially after the Guatemalan Army came to be suspected in the murder of Spanish priests in the indigenous regions.[5] Ambassador Máximo Cajal y López had been meeting with former vice president of Guatemala Eduardo Cáceres Lenhoff and former Minister of Foreign Affairs Adolfo Molina Orantes when the group entered the embassy. The protesters announced that they had come to peacefully occupy the embassy and that they would hold a press conference at noon. [4] They presented the ambassador with a letter that read in part, "We ... direct ourselves to you because we know you are honorable people who will tell the truth about the criminal repression suffered by the peasants of Guatemala."[6]

President Fernando Romeo Lucas García, Guatemala City police chief Germán Chupina Barahona, and Minister of the Interior Donaldo Álvarez Ruíz met in the National Palace. Despite pleas by the Spanish ambassador to negotiate, a decision was taken to forcibly expel the group occupying the embassy.[2] Shortly after noon, and before the protesters could air their grievances, about 50 policemen surrounded the building, proceeding to occupy the first and third floors of the building over the shouts of the ambassador that they were violating international law in doing so.[4] The peasants barricaded themselves, along with the captive embassy staff and the visiting Guatemalan officials, in the ambassador's office on the second floor.[3]

An order was given to charge the ambassador’s office. Police breached the doors with axes and may have introduced a substance, frequently identified as white phosphorus, which in turn ignited Molotov cocktails which had been carried in by the peasant group. Some academics and critics, including David Stoll and Jorge Palmieri, contend that it was the Molotov cocktails alone that started the blaze. Exactly how the fire started and who is responsible for it has been the subject of considerable polemics.[7] As fire consumed the second floor and the demonstrators and captive staff of the embassy were burned alive, police refused to unblock the door or allow firemen to combat the blaze.[2]

A total of 36 people died in the fire, including former vice president Eduardo Cáceres Lenhoff, former Minister of Foreign Affairs Adolfo Molina Orantes, and activist Vicente Menchú, father of Rigoberta Menchú, a future politician and Nobel Peace Prize-winner. Spanish Consul Jaime Ruiz del Árbol also died in the fire, along with other Spanish citizens employed by the embassy.

Ambassador Cajal y López survived by escaping through a window. The only other survivor, demonstrator Gregorio Yujá Xona, suffered third-degree burns. Both were sent to Herrera Llerandi Hospital for treatment. On February 1, at 7:30 a.m., the police guard at Herrera Llerandi Hospital was withdrawn. Shortly thereafter a band of twenty armed men, masked with bandanas, entered the hospital and kidnapped Gregorio Yuja Xona.[8] He was taken to an unknown location, tortured, and shot. His body was dumped on the campus of the University of San Carlos.[9]

Aftermath and legacy

The Guatemalan government issued a statement claiming that its forces had entered the embassy at the request of the Spanish Ambassador, and that the occupiers of the embassy, whom they referred to as "terrorists," had "sacrificed the hostages and immolated themselves afterward." Ambassador Cajal denied the claims of the Guatemalan government and Spain immediately terminated diplomatic relations with Guatemala, calling the action a violation of "the most elementary norms of international law."[4] Relations between Spain and Guatemala were not normalized until September 22, 1984.

Hundreds of thousands attended the funeral of the victims, and a new guerilla group was formed commemorating the date, the Frente patriótico 31 de enero (Popular Front of January 31).

In 1999, Rigoberta Menchú filed a criminal complaint in Spain accusing former government officials of responsibility for the incident, including former Presidents Romeo Lucas Garcia, Efraín Ríos Montt and Óscar Humberto Mejía Victores. In 2005, a Spanish judge issued an arrest warrant holding former Guatemalan Interior Minister Donaldo Álvarez responsible for the incident. Álvarez was last seen in Mexico, and is considered a fugitive.[10]

On January 30, 2009, the eve of the 29th anniversary of the incident, the Guatemalan government filed 3,350 criminal complaints alleging human rights violations against former soldiers and paramilitaries.[1]

The names of those who died in the burning of the Spanish embassy are commemorated in Guatemala City's main square, along with other victims of the Guatemalan Civil War.

References

General
Specific
  1. ^ Arias, Arturo (2007). Taking Their Word: Literature and the Signs of Central America. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 161. ISBN 0816648492. 
  2. ^ a b c Ball, Patrick; Paul Kobrak, Herbert F. Spirer (1999). State Violence in Guatemala, 1960-1996: A Quantitative Reflection. American Association for the Advancement of Science. pp. 23. ISBN 0871686309. http://shr.aaas.org/guatemala/ciidh/qr/english/en_qr.pdf. 
  3. ^ a b "30 are killed in Guatemala Embassy Battle". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: pp. 2. February 1, 1980. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Nk8NAAAAIBAJ&sjid=820DAAAAIBAJ&pg=6776,14157. 
  4. ^ a b c d "Outright Murder". Time. February 11, 1980. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,950248,00.html. 
  5. ^ Benz, Stephen Connely (1996). Guatemalan Journey. University of Texas Press. pp. 45. ISBN 0292708408. 
  6. ^ Wright, Ronald (2000). Time Among the Maya: Travels in Belize, Guatemala, and Mexico. Grove Press. pp. 110. ISBN 0802137288. 
  7. ^ Arias, Arturo (2007). Taking Their Word: Literature and the Signs of Central America. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 156–159. ISBN 0816648492. 
  8. ^ Arias, Arturo (2007). Taking Their Word: Literature and the Signs of Central America. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 152. ISBN 0816648492. 
  9. ^ Manz, Beatriz (2004). Paradise in Ashes: A Guatemalan Journey of Courage, Terror, and Hope. University of California Press. pp. 95. ISBN 0520240162. 
  10. ^ "Arrest Warrant Issued 25 Years After Spanish Embassy Fire in Guatemala". Voice of America. February 1, 2005. http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2005-02/2005-02-01-voa64.cfm. Retrieved February 18, 2009.