[NYTr] Despite Violence of Campaign, More Guatemalan Indigenous Women Voted
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Sep 18 17:21:04 EDT 2007
Womens eNews - Sep 16, 2007
http://www.womensenews.org
Guatemalan Poll Watchers Spot More Mayan Women
By Theresa Braine - WeNews correspondent
SAN MARTIN JILOTEPEQUE, Guatemala (WOMENSENEWS)--Dressed in a
traditional Mayan outfit--colorfully woven skirt, cummerbund, ruffled
eyelet blouse accented with embroidered flowers--Cecilia Alvarez stood
proudly in line a week ago waiting to cast the first vote of her life.
Leaving the polls, she glowed.
"I came because I wanted to learn how to vote," said the resident of
this village outside Guatemala City, brandishing her ink-stamped
fingertip as proof she had cast a ballot.
Cecilia was like many other first-time female voters this election
cycle in Guatemala; except that she's 10 and heard about the
"Elecciones Infantiles," or Children's Elections, through school.
Between July 21 and Aug. 12 several thousand children "registered,"
received civil-education materials, practiced voting and responded to a
poll about rights and responsibilities.
After Cecilia's simulated voting experience, her mother, Xmucanet
Alvarez, 33, a blood-bank technician who is studying psychology,
brought the fourth-grader to a real polling site to watch her vote.
"I believe it's good and it's very important that she is beginning to
understand and make decisions about the future of the country because
it's her future," said Alvarez. "She is learning what she has to do
when she grows up, as a citizen and the Guatemalan who she is, and she
should know her rights and obligations toward her country."
About 40 percent of Guatemalans are indigenous, from more than 20 Mayan
groups speaking as many languages. Most live below the poverty line,
surviving on just a few dollars a day. Traditionally excluded from the
political mainstream, they suffered the highest death toll of any
ethnic group during the nation's decades-long civil war.
Government statistics released earlier this week showed that just over
3 million people voted out of 6 million who were registered. A
breakdown of voters--male, female, indigenous--is not yet available.
Pushing Female Turnout
The children's training was just one front in a push by women's groups,
indigenous groups, government officials and nongovernmental
organizations to drive more women and more indigenous voters to the
polls during a deadly presidential campaign season that divided the
presidential field among 14 candidates and will be settled in a Nov. 4
run-off.
The 100 children's polls scattered around the country were sponsored by
the Foundation for the Analysis and Development of Central America, an
organization based in Guatemala City. The effort was supported by
Guatemala's Supreme Electoral Tribunal and other organizations.
Nearly 50 local candidates, party workers and activists were slain in
the months leading up to the election, two of them just a few days
before the election.
At least eight of those killed were affiliated with the Encounter for
Guatemala party, whose platform focuses on alleviating poverty,
increasing security and fighting corruption.
This is the party of 48-year-old Rigoberta Menchu, the country's first
Mayan female presidential candidate, who won a 1992 Nobel Peace Prize
for her work on indigenous rights during the latter years of the
1960-96 civil war. Up to 200,000 people were killed, the majority of
them Mayans, including members of Menchu's family.
No party was immune from the campaign violence, which has been
attributed to gangs and organized crime.
Menchu earned 3 percent of the tally, or about 98,000 votes, matching
polling projections throughout the campaign.
Heartened by Defeated Candidate
Maria Isabel Lux, a 37-year-old nun in the small town of Chimaltenango,
35 miles northwest of Guatemala City, says that even though Menchu
lost, she was heartened to see her and other women on the ballot. "I'm
happy and proud to see that yes, my sister women are taking off."
Dozens of women ran for lower offices throughout the country, from
congress to town council. Many of these women are indigenous. News
agency Prensa Latina reported that 20 congressional seats will now be
held by indigenous women, or 12 percent of the 158-person body, but did
not report how many seats were previously held by women.
Women made no inroads in municipal elections. They currently hold eight
of 332 mayoral positions nationwide.
More than 2,500 women have been brutally murdered in Guatemala since
2001 and few, if any, of the crimes have been solved, according to the
Washington Office on Latin America, a lobbying group and think tank.
The violence has been condemned by international human rights groups.
But femicide in particular did not become a major campaign issue,
falling instead under the general problem of combating the violence
that in 2006 led to the murder of 6,000 people in this country of about
12 million. All candidates addressed violence but differed in how they
would approach the issue.
In the presidential run-off the leading candidate, Alvaro Colom of the
National Union of Hope, a center-left party with a platform based on
social and economic change, faces tough-on-crime Otto Perez, a retired
general running with the Patriot Party. Menchu has so far not endorsed
either one.
The campaign violence--which claimed nearly 50 lives--prompted human
rights groups such as Amnesty International to appeal for calm ahead of
last week's vote.
Despite the alarming news, Jorge Darbin Marroquin, a polling
coordinator, thought turnout was good at his station in San Andres
Itzapa, a town near Guatemala City with a large indigenous population.
Poll Watcher Sees Higher Turnout
Marroquin, 42, estimates that women's voting participation at his
polling station was nearly 50 percent higher than in previous elections.
Marroquin thinks the rise in women coincided with an overall increase
of indigenous voters. "We believe they have realized that their
participation is important."
Political analyst Alvaro Pop agrees. He led 250 volunteer indigenous
electoral observers in Guatemala City--home to about 2 million--as well
as 50 more volunteers scattered around the country.
"There is a significant amount of participation of indigenous people in
general, especially women," he told Women's eNews on the floor of
Guatemala's election headquarters, where the government's Supreme
Electoral Tribunal announced the vote counts on election night.
Carolina Escobar Sarti, a Guatemalan journalist and author who
volunteered on Pop's team, said it helped that the government
decentralized the voting system for this election. Previously, polling
stations were in major municipal areas, making them inaccessible to
many who lived in remote regions. This time stations were set up
outside major municipal centers, making it easier for rural people to
reach a voting site.
In addition, the government simplified the voter registration process
by reducing the amount of paperwork required.
Several women selling produce at local markets, however, said such
efforts hadn't spurred them to the polls.
"I was never registered," said Maria Marta, 30, parceling out soccer
ball-sized, fragrant bundles of fresh cilantro from her stall in
Guatemala City's main produce market. "They never gave me my voting
papers. I don't know how to do it or where to go."
[Theresa Braine covers Mexico and Latin America. She has written for
Newsday, People, the Associated Press and other publications during
four years based in Mexico City.]
For more information:
"Guatemala Pressed to Investigate Surge in Killings": -
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2776/
Rigoberta Menchu's campaign Web site (in Spanish): -
http://www.rigobertapresidenta.org/
Amnesty International, "Guatemala: Presidential candidates - must
resolve legacy of conflict": -
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAMR340212007
Copyright 2007 Women's eNews.
More information about the NYTr
mailing list