Monday, March 8, 2010

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EL SALVADOR: The wounds of war. Viva Chile Mierda

A Salvadoran army operation executed on April 25, 1984 killed 26 civilians fleeing the war. Nearly three decades later, their families can close the circle of grief over his absence. "We knew where they were buried because I went to just buried," says German Sunday, while accommodating the boxes containing the remains of 26 victims of the slaughter of the village of Las Peñas.

"I remember we had parties at ground and the others were pieces that I collected in a old hat ... and then buried where the rest of my mom, my brothers ... just buried what was left: clothing, bits of members ... So I was sure where they were buried, "shares the BBC.

25 years ago, the battalion counterinsurgency Atlacatl implemented a scorched-earth operation in the San Cristóbal, jurisdiction of Suchitoto, a little over 40 miles north of the capital, San Salvador.

On the horizon rises the hill of Guazapa, one of the most bloody of the Salvadoran civil war that took place between 1980 and 1992.

"We saw it all"
"When captured my family I was at a distance of about 40 yards away. No longer a valley between us," recalls Domingo, who at that time was a teenager newly listed on the guerrillas.

not stop ordering the small coffins of 50 centimeters in length, where the remains of his father, his mother, his brothers. In total, 14 members of his family.

Remember all that day, he watched everything.

We found remains as clothing, children's teething
Carolina Constanza, human rights center Madeleine Lagadec

"We saw when the army found them in the place where they had hidden and how they were taken by force, we my brothers crying little ones clinging to the skirt of my mother. And we no longer watching, helplessly, "he told the BBC.

Crouched in the undergrowth, he thought that if he opened fire would endanger the lives of their brothers and believed that soldiers would not do anything against women and children, even three year old.

But he was wrong and spent 25 years living with that memory.

Maria Teresa, 68, lost his daughter Evelyn and her niece that day and confessed to the BBC "it is not easy to accept the facts that gave death but I can only make do, right?". For victims


The human rights center Madeleine Lagadec is one of the few organizations that specialize in digging up the remains of victims of the war in El Salvador.


The peace agreement was signed in El Salvador in 1992.

Since 1992, when the former guerrillas of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) signed peace agreements with the government of then-President Alfredo Cristiani, the memory of the victims inside the country has not been state policy.

Eli Hernandez, who is promoting human rights, criticized the BBC that "there is no official support to repair the pain of the victims, but international aid. Inside the country, this has not been a priority, where many cases like this. "

Carolina Constanza, Lagadec center coordinator, said that to exhume the remains of these 26 persons, all started in January last year with documentation of the slaughter from the witness information.

Then, after filing the request to the Suchitoto Court, the judge set the date of the exhumation, which took place in three weeks, and the remains were transferred to the Institute of Legal Medicine for identification.

"This was not easy. These soldiers were caught alive and tortured, including children, what should? After them to pieces, and burnt using firewood so they were burned," says Constance told the BBC.

"We found remains and clothing, little teeth of children," he adds. Many claims



"Day after day demands keep coming to our office. Unfortunately we have no budget to meet all cases," says Constance.

NGO exhumations recognizes that all he has done since 1993 is only possible when international cooperation funds.

This time, exhumation was funded by the Directorate for International Cooperation, Solidarity and Peace of the City of Barcelona. Anna

Dionís, technical director of the program, told BBC News that the Barcelona City Council funded the project after being backed Salvadoran organization Jurists Catalan Solidarity.

"This project goes beyond the exhumation and what it claims is the struggle for human rights and peace regardless of the side, but giving priority to the victims."

What I see in El Salvador I am very close to the English context, where we still weighs the footprint of the Civil War. For me this experience is not open wounds, but they are closed because people have the right to honor their dead
Ana Dinis, Barcelona City Council

"What I see in El Salvador I am very close to the English context, where we are still weighing the footprint of the Civil War. For me this experience is not open wounds, but close because citizens have the right to honor their dead, "he argues.

Constance reiterates the importance of this point.

" This has been denied the right to know the truth thanks to the amnesty law. The unpunished believed be free of guilt, but relatives of the victims still await justice and moral reparation. "

in the slaughter of Las Peñas killed 11 children, 5 teenagers, 9 women and Manuel German, 49.

His remains were buried together in the cemetery of Suchitoto, where a plaque commemorates "the memory of children, women and men to whom life was torn away arbitrarily."

For Eric Lemus - BBC World.
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