A Guatemalan Tragedy of Unspeakable Proportions
"All of the villagers in the well were ultimately killed ... I find those killings were done under the watch and orders of Mr. Sosa.""When the well was being covered up, screams and cries of victims could still be heard. They were left to die a horrible death.""Members of the patrol unit laughed, as if nothing had happened.""Mr. Sosa denies that he was present at Las Dos Erres when the massacre took place; however, I place no credence in anything he says.""Indeed, I consider Mr. Sosa to be a consummate liar."Federal Court Justice Roger Lafreniere
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| Graduation ceremony at the Kaibil, counterinsurgency unit |
"On January 18, 2011, Jorge Vinicio Sosa Orantes was arrested in Alberta, Canada on charges of naturalization fraud in the United States.""Sosa Orantes, 52, is a former commanding officer of the Guatemalan Special Forces, or Kaibil unit, which brutally murdered more than 250 men, women and children during the 1982 massacre.""The massacre was part of the Guatemalan military's "scorched earth campaign" and was carried out by the Kaibiles ranger unit. The Kaibiles were specially trained soldiers who became notorious for their use of torture and brutal killing tactics. ""According to witness testimony, and corroborated through U.S. declassified archives, the Kaibiles entered the town of Dos Erres on the morning of December 6, 1982, and separated the men from women and children. They started torturing the men and raping the women and by the afternoon they had killed almost the entire community, including the children.""Nearly the entire town was murdered, their bodies thrown into a well and left in nearby fields. The U.S. documents reveal that American officials deliberated over theories of how an entire town could just "disappear," and concluded that the Army was the only force capable of such an organized atrocity. More than 250 people are believed to have died in the massacre."U.S. National Security Archive
Harrowing
testimony of 'extreme cruelty' perpetrated by unit commanders like
Sosa, who ordered the entire village be slaughtered detailed the horror
of that fateful day in extinguishing an entire village. The government
military force called the Kaibiles had entered the village of Las Dos
Erres, in 1982, home to 200 people, searching for weapons said to have
been stolen by guerilla forces from the military, and hidden at the
village, during the decades-long Guatemalan civil war. No weapons were
found, but the order to butcher the entire population of the village
commenced over an agonizing period of hours.
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A
baby was thrown into a well to drown, children were smashed against
trees, and countless other members of the community were flung into that
well, some alive, many dead, their skulls crushed or shot. Women were
raped and murdered in front of their children. Sosa, in charge, shot a
man and threw a grenade into the well to still the wailing cries of
people in their death throes. Ten years after the atrocity investigators
exhuming the remains found 'a minimum' of 162 had died in the well; the
first victims lying at the bottom were children under age 12, and
women.
Jorge
Vinicio Sosa Orantes was fourth in command of the unit at the time,
known to have personally committed murder at the time, and who had also
ordered the slaughter of civilians. Testimony from one of Sosa's former
military colleagues spoke of his having taught his special military unit
techniques of torture on live victims at a zone set aside for practise;
the "zombie area".
He
has been living in Canada for 34 years. Guatemalan authorities, after a
prolonged investigation, had issued an arrest warrant against the man
in 2000, long after he had left the country. Sosa had moved to the
United States where he applied for asylum, in 1985. His claim was denied
and he turned to Canada in 1987, applying for asylum at the San
Francisco-based Canadian consulate. He withheld the vital information
from immigration officials that he had served in the Guatemalan
military. Granted refugee status, he achieved citizenship in Canada in
1992.
Sosa
married an American citizen, then applied and received U.S. citizenship
in 1997. U.S. officials became aware of his subterfuge of withholding
critical background information in his refugee claims --leading to his
extradition from Canada to the U.S. where he was sentenced to ten years
in an American prison for immigration fraud, in 2014. Canadian
immigration officials three years later initiated a legal process asking
a court to revoke Sosa's citizenship, declaring him inadmissible to
Canada.
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| Schoolchildren gather in Dos Erres for an Independence Day celebration on Sept. 15, 1982. (Submitted by Sara Romero) |
Finally,
Canadian citizenship was revoked on the basis of Jorge Vinicio Sosa
Orantes having committed unspeakable crimes in Guatemala forty years
ago. Federal Court Justice Roger Lafreniere revoked that 34-year-old
citizenship, declaring the man inadmissible to the country. Sosa was
ordered to pay close to $250,000 to cover costs for the trial expended
by the federal government. Costs related to arranging testimony of one
of two massacre survivors, of two of Sosa's former military colleagues
present at the bloodbath, and eight expert witnesses including Canadian
immigration officials.
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| The well in Dos Erres was examined during a dig by forensic anthropologists that was organized by Aura Elana Farfan. (Submitted by FAMDEGUA) |
Labels: Canadian Citizenship, Civil War, Guatemala, Jorge Sosa, Refugee Claimant, Village Atrocity




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