Yuri Melini, Director of CALAS, is an environmental campaigner for many years in Guatemala. Here in this film by Nicolas Bergeron about when he suffered an attempt on his life. Video is in Spanish with French subtitles.
We have reported before about the discovery and analysis of the National Police archive. Whilst there never was going to be the smoking gun of the direct, explicit and written order to disappear someone, nevertheless a careful study of the archive will undoubtedly find the pieces that can make a condemnatory picture.
Jose Marti has to be one of those cultural enigmas you come up against as an outsider in Guatemala. When you read or hear the poem 'La niña de Guatemala', perhaps like the hundreds of Guatemalan school kids who learn it, you might find yourself wondering: 'what's the human story behind this?'.
I like the way Francisco Goldman explains this issue, which kind of touches on the mysteries of Latin America and how they form, grow or disappear.
"And then one day I hear Mario Montefiore (sic) Toledo, who at that point was Guatemala's most revered writer. At the time he was ninety-three or something. He's still writing a weekly column in the best paper. He's got a PhD. He's a very serious guy. He was in exile for many years, returning after the signing of the peace accords. And someone tells me they had heard him tell a story at the dinner of the home of the owner of the best newspaper in Guatemala. I go to talk with him. He says, "Yes, my grandmother knew Martí." It makes perfect sense. He's ninety-three now. And he said that "when Martí came to Guatemala they had never seen anyone like him. He was just so dazzling and charming and brilliant." And, according to this guy, he [Martí] was engaged to be married but he was apparently not that in love with the woman with whom he was engaged. And he was loose in this city where all the woman adored him.