GUATEMALA CITY, Mar (IPS) – The Guatemalan Congress must decide, after Mar. 26, whether to overrule President Álvaro Colom’s veto of a law that gave the green light to resuming executions of prisoners on death row.Pressure from the international community and human rights groups prompted the social democratic Colom to veto the “pardon law”, approved by Congress on Feb. 12 by 140 of the legislature’s 158 lawmakers, including the president’s supporters, even though immediately after its passage Colom had said he had no plans to pardon
“If Congress approves the law as it stands, it will be shocking, as it contains a number of inconsistencies, such as not guaranteeing an effective appeal mechanism for the condemned prisoners and contravening principles of international law,” David Dávila, of the Guatemalan Institute for Comparative Studies in Penal Sciences, told IPS.
The law restores the possibility of an appeal for a presidential pardon or commutation of sentence, a right which was revoked under the government of Alfonso Portillo (2000-2004).
Since then the lack of a final appeal procedure has meant a de facto moratorium on executions in
The American Convention on Human Rights, which was ratified by
Colom stated on Friday that he has the support of legislators from his party, the National Union of Hope (UNE), and those of three other unspecified parties.
Of the 158 members of Congress, 51 belong to UNE, 29 to the rightwing Patriot Party (PP), 24 to another rightwing party, the Grand National Alliance (GANA), 14 to the Guatemalan Republican Front (FRG), and the remaining 40 to seven smaller opposition parties.
Mario Taracena, head of the government party in Congress, told the press that the bloc will respect the president’s veto because when they first voted in February, they had not taken international pressure into account, nor
PP lawmaker Gudy Rivera, however, announced that if Congress does not overturn the veto, his party will introduce a draft law to transfer the power to grant or deny pardons to the Supreme Court.
The pardon law was approved in February on the initiative of the PP, joined by UNE lawmakers who, according to some observers, had not consulted the president.
Congress passed the law making executions possible once again at a time when feelings ran particularly high, because “maras” or youth gangs had murdered at least seven bus drivers who refused to pay bribes, in the space of just four days.
Only the small leftwing Encuentro por
Mario Polanco, of the Mutual Support Group (GAM), a local human rights organisation, also called on the president to do away with the death penalty.
Analysts, however, emphasise that neither the president nor UNE lawmakers are contemplating abolition. In his election campaign, Colom said the death penalty was not a solution to the country’s soaring rates of violent crime, but clarified that it formed part of the country’s laws, which he would respect.
Polls indicate that a majority of
He called for security institutions and the justice system to be strengthened in order to reduce crime.
In this Central American country, which has one of the highest homicide rates in the world, the justice system clears up less than 10 percent of all murders.