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The founder and publisher of elPeriódico, one of the most important oppositional newspapers in Guatemala, was ordered to return to jail after a appeals court overturned the order of freeing him.
 
He was convicted last year of money laundering, sentenced to six years in prison and fined about $40,000. He called the charges politically motivated and said they were retaliation for his newspaper’s focus on public corruption. The case became a sign of crumbling democracy in Guatemala and a symbol of threats against press freedom across Latin America.
 
The IRTF wrote several letters about Zamora as part of the Rapid Response Network, these are two of them:
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During the country’s civil war, in November 1989, a military commando stormed the Jesuit Central American University (Uca) campus, killing its rector, the Spanish priest Ignacio Ellacuría, five of his colleagues – Ignacio Martín Baró, Segundo Montes, Juan Ramón Moreno, Joaquín López y López, Amando López, along with Elba and Celina Ramos.

Now the former president Alfredo Cristiani, a former congressman and nine retired military officials are charged with murder and acts of terrorism over one of the most notorious crimes committed during the 12-year war, which left 75,000 civilians dead and only formally ended in 1992.

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IRTF is grateful to the 200 supporters who gathered on October 27 at Pilgrim Church in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood for IRTF’s annual Commemoration of the Martyrs. In addition to marking the 44th anniversary of the martyrdom of Cleveland’s missioners in El Salvador (Jean Donovan and Sister Dorothy Kazel, alongside Maryknoll Sisters Ita Ford and Maura Clarke), we commemorated 36 human rights defenders killed in Central America and Colombia this past year because they dared to speak truth to power.

Our keynote speaker, Lorena Araujo of the largest campesino organization in El Salvador (CRIPDES), held the crowd’s attention with horrific stories of mass arrests, detentions and deaths currently happening under their government’s State of Exception, now in its third year. With more 88,000 imprisoned (and more than 300 deaths in prison), El Salvador now has the highest incarceration rate in the world—surpassing the astronomical rate of incarceration in the United States. 

As the people of El Salvador face the greatest challenge to their democracy since the end of the civil war in 1992, they invite us to renew and deepen our solidarity.

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