Join the Guatemala Accompaniment Project
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Intro to G.A.P.
What is accompaniment?
NISGUA is one of many organizations around the world that employs accompaniment
as a vital tool in the global struggle for the respect of human rights. In the
Guatemalan context, accompaniment creates a non-violent response to the threats,
harassment, and violence faced by survivors of Guatemala’s 36-year-long
civil war and grassroots organizations working for justice and human rights.
To this end, NISGUA’s Guatemala Accompaniment Project (G.A.P.) places long-term
volunteers side-by-side with people in rural communities and with organizations
in an effort to deter human rights violations. The dissuasive physical presence
of these volunteers, known as accompaniers, provides a measure of security and
creates space for Guatemalan communities and groups to organize in defense of
their rights. Accompaniers also monitor and report on the human rights situation
and alert the international community to abuses. In the U.S., ten G.A.P. Sponsoring
Communities are committed to immediately responding to abuses and providing ongoing
support to accompaniers.
Why is accompaniment necessary?
In the early 1980s, the Guatemalan military combined urban repression with
a rural counter-insurgency campaign that uprooted more than a million people – many
of whom fled to neighboring Mexico – and led to an estimated 200,000
dead and disappeared. According to the independent Historical Clarification
Commission, these actions constituted a campaign of genocide against Guatemala’s
indigenous population.
In 1993, organized groups of refugees began returning home and internally
displaced groups started to come out of hiding. Two years later, G.A.P. formed
in response to requests from these returnees for trained international observers
to accompany communities as they rebuilt after 36 years of violent civil war,
which formally ended with the signing of peace accords in 1996.
As the returned communities grew stronger, the need for accompaniment diminished.
At the same time, more individuals and organizations began stepping forward
to denounce the atrocities of the past. In a deteriorating human rights climate,
their actions, along with ongoing impunity in Guatemala, put them at a high
level of risk for human rights violations. Recognizing this, members of communities
and organizations involved in such efforts requested accompaniment, and G.A.P.
responded by gradually shifting our mandate to accompany them.
Who does G.A.P. accompany?
Association for Justice and Reconciliation: In 2000 and 2001, a courageous
group of war survivors filed charges of genocide, crimes against humanity and
war crimes against former military dictators Efraín Ríos Montt
and Romeo Lucas García and their military high commands in the Guatemalan
court system. The witnesses in these cases formed the Association for Justice
and Reconciliation and requested international accompaniment. G.A.P. has responded
to this request with accompaniers in the Ixcán, Ixil, and Rabinal regions.
Grassroots Organizations: Since the beginning of 2000, threats and
direct attacks have increased against Guatemalan labor unions, indigenous
groups, exhumation teams, and other organizations working for justice and human
rights. In response to this situation, NISGUA initiated its Organization
Accompaniment Program. A team based in Guatemala City, with previous experience accompanying
in the rural communities, responds to short-term requests for accompaniment
by organizations and individuals.