CREOMPAZ – ZM212019-01-31T18:36:42+00:00

Military Zone 21 – CREOMPAZ

On January 6, 2016, 14 former military officers were arrested on charges of forced disappearance and crimes against humanity based on evidence uncovered at the CREOMPAZ military center in Cobán, Alta Verapaz. Now a United Nations peacekeeper training base, CREOMPAZ (Regional Training Command for Peacekeeping Operations) operated as a detention and clandestine execution center during Guatemala’s Internal Armed Conflict, when it was known as Military Zone 21. Between 2012 and 2015, the Forensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala (FAFG) carried out 14 exhumations at CREOMPAZ and found 558 human remains in fourteen graves, representing the largest known case of forced disappearance in Latin America.

Spanning crimes committed from 1981 – 1988, the Military Zone 21 (CREOMPAZ) case sets the record in Guatemala, not only for the number of disappeared victims, but also for the time span over which the crimes were committed. Among the high-ranking individuals indicted is Manuel Benedicto Lucas García, who served as former Army Chief of Staff during his brother’s 1978-1982 military dictatorship, and who is currently imprisoned for his role in crimes against humanity committed against the Molina Theissen family. The trial is an important step in the legal trajectory seeking justice for crimes against humanity and represents more than 30 years of hard work by survivor organizations.

In-depth NISGUA reports

Left side shows a chalkboard reading "CREOMPAZ, Alta Verapaz" and the date, July 1, 2013. Next to the chalkboard are the uncovered human remains in an exhumed pit.

The largest case of forced disappearance in Latin America

Resilience and Creativity in the Defense of Memory and Search for Justice

The same people who carried out genocide in Nebaj were the same who carried out genocide in Plan de Sánchez and throughout Baja and Alta Verapaz. It’s important that the high- ranking military command are tried for these crimes.

Benjamín Jerónimo, survivor & representative from Plan de Sánchez

Latest from our blog

22December, 2020

Statement: THE ACTS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN THE CREOMPAZ CASE CANNOT REMAIN IN IMPUNITY

By |December 22nd, 2020|Categories: Justice and accountability|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

On December 9, 2020 a virtually public hearing was held in the Constitutional Court, to address an injunction presented by FAMDEGUA regarding the prosecution of the crimes of sexual violence and crimes against [...]

18December, 2020

Implementación del Acuerdo de Cooperación de Asilo vulnera derechos de las personas migrantes

By |December 18th, 2020|Categories: defensa del territorio, Justicia|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Escrito y originalmente publicado por nuestras camaradas del Comité en Solidaridad con el Pueblo de El Salvador (CISPES). Click here to read in English.   En respuesta al anuncio desde el Departamento de seguridad nacional [...]

18December, 2020

Implementation of Asylum Agreement Violates Human Rights of Migrants

By |December 18th, 2020|Categories: Defense of life and territory, Justice and accountability|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Written and originally posted by our comrades at the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES). Haz clic aquí para leer en español.   On December 18, International Day of the Migrant, [...]

27November, 2020

November solidarity update // Boletín de noviembre

By |November 27th, 2020|Categories: defensa del territorio, Justicia, Solidarity Update|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Picture from one of ACODET’s women’s leadership workshops. Photo credit: ACODET // Foto de uno de los talleres de ACODET de liderazgo de mujeres. Crédito de foto: ACODET Read our solidarity update [...]

24November, 2020

Statement: The Appointment of Roberto Molina as a Constitutional Court Judge is another action of the pact of the corrupts

By |November 24th, 2020|Categories: Justice and accountability|Tags: , , , , , , , |1 Comment

On November 10, the Guatemala Supreme Court elected Roberto Molina Barreto to the Constitutional Court (CC), replacing Judge Bonerge Mejía, who died of COVID-19 in September. In 2013, when Molina Barreto was also serving [...]

Go to Top