Ixil genocide trial2019-01-31T17:25:34+00:00

Ixil Genocide Trial

On May 10, 2013, former Guatemalan de facto dictator José Efraín Ríos Montt was found guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity and sentenced to 80 years in prison. The conviction was the first in the world to charge an ex-head of state for genocide in the national court system of the country in which the crimes took place. This marked the culmination of 12 years of dedication and determination by the Association for Justice and Reconciliation (AJR) and their legal team, the Center for Human Rights Legal Action (CALDH).

Just 10 days later, Guatemala’s highest court, the Constitutional Court, illegally voted in a 3-2 decision to annul trial proceedings that took place after April 19, 2013 – effectively overturning the historic sentence and sending the case back to a retrial. Guatemala’s legacy of impunity had once again reared its head: deeply rooted power structures undermine the will of the survivors, the competence of the judges, and the integrity of the process.

On April 1, 2017, Efraín Ríos Montt died under house arrest, with a guilty sentence against him, and awaiting the culmination of the retrial. On September 27, 2018, a three judge tribunal unanimously declared that the military committed genocide against Mayan peoples from 1982-1983, essentially confirming the validity of the original decision against Ríos Montt. However, the tribunal voted 2-1 to find José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez, Head of Military Intelligence 1982-1983, not guilty. In her dissent to the 2-1 vote, Judge Sara Yoc Yoc declared “Who determined [the Ixil people] were the enemy? Who carried out the intelligence? HE DID!”

Episode 24 of Skylight Picture’s “Dictator in the Dock” shows the May 10, 2013 verdict against Ríos Montt – the moment he is found guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity. See other episodes from the trial by visiting Skylight Pictures.

“When the trial started, I was pleased because I knew that the truth had reached the people of Guatemala, and not just Guatemala but the world… They were able to annul the sentence politically but historically no one will take it away from us, the sentence remains in our hearts.”

Benjamín Manuel Gerónimo, 2013 President of the Association for Justice and Reconciliation (AJR)

In-depth NISGUA reports

Members of the Association for Justice and Reconciliation share their reflections in 2017 as Ríos Montt is tried for genocide again.

Our complete collection of daily coverage from inside the courtroom, during the 27-day trial that led to a guilty verdict against Ríos Montt in 2013. Photo credit: Xeni Jardin.

Over the course of three weeks in 2013, AJR President Anselmo Roldán met with over 1,000 individuals in 13 cities in some 40 speaking events during the 2013 NISGUA tour.

In Solidarity

In the lead-up to the 2013 genocide trial, hundreds of members of the NISGUA network voiced their support for survivors and members of the Association for Justice and Reconciliation and pledged to follow all trial proceedings and call for justice for genocide. We gathered 215 photos and 1,767 pledges from across the United States and many other parts of the world. 

Latest from our blog

5December, 2017

Youth add their voices to the cry for justice

Young Ixil university students stand in solidarity with genocide survivors outside of court.Photo credit: Ixil University students, Chemol txumb'al, FUNDEBASE, y AJR Friday, December 1, marked the seventh trial date since the [...]

10November, 2017

AJR ¡Presente! in ongoing genocide retrial

Today, Survivors of massacres in the 80s from Chimaltenango traveled to participate in the trial against Rodríguez Sánchez for the Ixil genocide. The AJR (Association for Justice and Reconciliation) is made up of [...]

11May, 2016

CALDH reports from the closed-door retrial of Ríos Montt

The following are translations from the Center for Human Rights Legal Action (CALDH), plaintiff in the genocide case against former dictator Ríos Montt and his Head of Military Intelligence, Rodríguez Sánchez. CALDH and the [...]

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