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News / Nation & World

Guatemalan president urged to resign

Perez Molina says he won't step down in fraud scandal

The Columbian
Published: August 27, 2015, 5:00pm
5 Photos
A protester waving a Guatemalan flag sits on a column at the Metropolitan Cathedral during a national strike demanding the resignation of Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina in Guatemala City, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2015.
A protester waving a Guatemalan flag sits on a column at the Metropolitan Cathedral during a national strike demanding the resignation of Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina in Guatemala City, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2015. Pressure grew on Perez Molina to resign as business and government offices closed, protesters marched and the attorney general's office urged him to step down "to prevent ungovernability that could destabilize the nation." (AP Photo/Luis Soto) Photo Gallery

GUATEMALA CITY — Pressure grew Thursday on Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina to resign as business and government offices closed, protesters marched by the thousands and the attorney general’s office urged him to step down “to prevent ungovernability that could destabilize the nation.”

Guatemala’s congress also named a commission of five legislators to consider whether to remove the president’s immunity from prosecution, a process somewhat like impeachment. But only one member of the commission was from the opposition, and a previous effort in congress failed.

In comments to a local radio station in the evening, Perez Molina reiterated that he does not intend to resign and will face the process against him.

“I am here and I am not going to turn my back on the Guatemalan people,” the president said. “I am not going to hide … I have nothing to hide.”

Perez Molina was monitoring the march from the Government Ministry, according to his office.

His government is on the ropes because of a fraud scandal involving bribes funneled to a chain of officials who helped businesses evade import duties, including allegedly his vice president, who was forced to resign and is now in jail awaiting trial.

Major government offices and businesses, the power base in Guatemala, have urged him to reconsider his resolve to stay, including the government comptrollers’ office.

Even Guatemala’s national Council of Bishops issued a statement saying “we believe the president should reconsider his decision not to resign … we fear that his current position could cause more polarization and conflict in the country.”

Seven cabinet members have resigned and two, his former defense and interior ministers, have left Guatemala, the country’s immigration service confirmed.

The massive protest Thursday followed days of intermittent roadblocks by demonstrators who want the president to resign and the Sept. 6 presidential elections to be postponed.

Perez Molina told the radio station that he respects protesters’ right to make that demand, but said delaying the vote would “go against the law.”

Guatemala City’s main square was a sea of blue-and-white national flags and white-clad protesters who chanted “Otto out!” The demonstrations drew a broad range of Guatemalans, from impoverished Indians to the country’s upper-middle class.

“We usually don’t go to protests, because of fear, but now this is sending a message of hope and an opportunity to educate our children, politically,” said Mario Ovalle, 48, a lawyer who attended the march with his daughters, aged 9 and 12. “The exciting thing is that this has brought together all classes of society, with a common objective.”

The marches included one by college students, and Eduardo Valdes, the rector of the Jesuit Rafael Landivar University, said “the corruption … has become unbearable for the people.”

Interior Minister Eunice Mendizabal ordered police guarding government buildings not to carry firearms.

“No violence, no provoking violence, no giving in to provocation,” Mendizabal said. “We must respect the people’s right to protest.”

A leading business, industrial and agricultural association added its voice to those calling for the president’s resignation.

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