Document #1176028
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Information on military service and forced
recruitment in Guatemala can be found in the following Responses to
Information Requests: GTM17710.F of 15 June 1994, GTM17785.E of 4
July 1995 and GTM21776.E of 25 September 1995.
A military attaché at the Embassy of
the Republic of Guatemala in Washington, DC, during a 29 January
1996 telephone interview stated that the military service law has
not been amended since 1988. Under the current conscription law,
all male Guatemalan citizens of 18 years and above must register
for military service. The length of service is still 30 months and
there are grounds for permanent and temporary exemptions.
The military attaché added that the
bill for a new military service law submitted under the Carpio
government is still being discussed in the Guatemalan Congress.
According to a 23 December 1994 Guatemala Human Rights Update
report, the bill proposed to reduce the obligatory period of
military service from 30 to 18 months (6).
The military attaché also stated
that a 25-year-old Guatemalan who was not drafted when he was in
Guatemala will be required to register for military service upon
his return to Guatemala. The military attaché noted,
however, that it is unlikely that such an individual would be
called up by the army. According to the military attaché,
the Guatemalan army is going through a process of downsizing and is
"not recruiting" new soldiers except for volunteers. According to a
22 July 1994 Inter Press Service (IPS) report on forced military
recruitment, on 30 June 1994 De León "announced that he had
ordered the suspension of the draft until the Congress can pass
[the] new law currently under discussion" (6).
Additional information to the above can not
be found among the sources consulted by the DIRB.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This Response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum. Please find below the list of
additional sources consulted in researching this Information
Request.
References
Inter Press Service (IPS). 22 July 1994.
"President Accused of Forced Recruitment." (Central America Newspak
[Austin, Tex]. 11-24 July 1994. No. 220. p. 6)
Embassy of the Republic of Guatemala in
Washington, DC. 29 January 1996. Telephone interview with a
military attaché.
Guatemala Human Rights Update
[Washington, DC]. 23 December 1994. No. 25. "De León Carpio
Introduces New Military Service Law."
Attachments
Inter Press Service (IPS). 22 July 1994.
"President Accused of Forced Recruitment." (Central America Newspak
[Austin, Tex]. 11-24 July 1994. No. 220. p. 6)
Guatemala Human Rights Update
[Washington, DC]. 23 December 1994. No. 25. "De León Carpio
Introduces New Military Service Law," p. 6.
Sources Consulted
Amnesty International "Guatemala"
country file. January 1991-Present.
Caribbean and Central America Report
[London]. 17 January 1991-25 January 1996.
Central America Newspak [Austin, Tex].
13 January 1991-7 January 1996.
Central America Report [Guatemala City].
11 January 1991-15 December 1995.
Foreign Broadcasts Information Services
(FBIS) Daily Reports. 2 January 1991-16 January 1996.
Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA
[Washington, DC]. Vol. 10, No. 2-Vol. 13, No. 3 and 4.
Guatemala Human Rights Update
[Washington, DC]. 14 January 1991-29 December 1995.