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Guatemala

Coordinates: 15°30′N 90°15′W / 15.500°N 90.250°W / 15.500; -90.250

Guatemala (/ˌɡwɑːtəˈmɑːlə/ (listen) GWAH-tə-MAH-lə; Spanish: [ɡwateˈmala] (listen)), officially the Republic of Guatemala (Spanish: República de Guatemala), is a country in Central America. It is bordered to the north and west by Mexico; to the northeast by Belize and the Caribbean; to the east by Honduras; to the southeast by El Salvador and to the south by the Pacific Ocean. With an estimated population of around 17.6 million,[8][9] Guatemala is the most populous country in Central America and the 11th most populous country in the Americas. It is a representative democracy with its capital and largest city being Nueva Guatemala de la Asunción, also known as Guatemala City, the most populous city in Central America.

Republic of Guatemala
República de Guatemala (Spanish)
Motto: 
  • "Libre Crezca Fecundo"[1] (Spanish)
    (English: "Grow Free and Fertile")
Anthem: 
Himno Nacional de Guatemala
(English: "National Anthem of Guatemala")
March:
La Granadera
(English: "The Song of the Grenadier")
Location of Guatemala (dark green)

in the Western Hemisphere (grey)

Capital
and largest city
Guatemala City
14°38′N 90°30′W / 14.633°N 90.500°W / 14.633; -90.500
Official languagesSpanish
Ethnic groups
(2018[2])
Religion
(2017)[3]
Demonym(s)Guatemalan
Chapín
GovernmentUnitary presidential republic
• President
Alejandro Giammattei
Guillermo Castillo
Shirley Rivera
LegislatureCongress of the Republic
Independence
• Declared
from the Spanish Empire
15 September 1821
• Declared from the
First Mexican Empire
1 July 1823
• Declared from the Federal Republic of Central America
17 April 1839
• Current constitution
31 May 1985
Area
• Total
108,889 km2 (42,042 sq mi) (105th)
• Water (%)
0.4
Population
• 2022 estimate
17,703,190[4] (69th)
• Density
129/km2 (334.1/sq mi) (85th)
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
• Total
$185.8 billion[5] (77th)
• Per capita
$9,931[5] (121nd)
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$91.3 billion[5] (70th)
• Per capita
$4,880[5] (108th)
Gini (2014)48.3[6]
high
HDI (2021) 0.627[7]
medium · 135th
CurrencyQuetzal (GTQ)
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy
Driving sideright
Calling code+502
ISO 3166 codeGT
Internet TLD.gt

The territory of modern Guatemala hosted the core of the Maya civilization, which extended across Mesoamerica. In the 16th century, most of this area was conquered by the Spanish and claimed as part of the viceroyalty of New Spain. Guatemala attained independence in 1821 from Spain and Mexico. In 1823, it became part of the Federal Republic of Central America, which dissolved by 1841.

From the mid- to late 19th century, Guatemala suffered chronic instability and civil strife. Beginning in the early 20th century, it was ruled by a series of dictators backed by the United Fruit Company and the United States government. In 1944, authoritarian leader Jorge Ubico was overthrown by a pro-democratic military coup, initiating a decade-long revolution that led to sweeping social and economic reforms. A U.S.-backed military coup in 1954 ended the revolution and installed a dictatorship.[10]

From 1960 to 1996, Guatemala endured a bloody civil war fought between the U.S.-backed government and leftist rebels, including genocidal massacres of the Maya population perpetrated by the military.[11][12][13] A peace accord negotiated by the United Nations has resulted in continued economic growth and successful democratic elections, although poverty, crime, drug trafficking, and civil instability remain major issues.

As of 2021, Guatemala ranks 31st of 33 Latin American and Caribbean countries in the Human Development Index.[14] Although rich in export goods, around a quarter of the population (4.6 million) face food insecurity, which has been worsened by the ongoing food crisis resulting from the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[15]

Guatemala's abundance of biologically significant and unique ecosystems includes many endemic species and contributes to Mesoamerica's designation as a biodiversity hotspot.[16]

Etymology

The name "Guatemala" comes from the Nahuatl word Cuauhtēmallān, or "place of many trees", a derivative of the K'iche' Mayan word for "many trees"[17][18] or, perhaps more specifically, for the Cuate/Cuatli tree Eysenhardtia. This was the name that the Tlaxcaltecan warriors who accompanied Pedro de Alvarado during the Spanish Conquest gave to this territory.[19]

History

Pre-Columbian

The first evidence of human habitation in Guatemala dates to 12,000 BC. Archaeological evidence, such as obsidian arrowheads found in various parts of the country, suggests a human presence as early as 18,000 BC.[20] There is archaeological proof that early Guatemalan settlers were hunter-gatherers. Pollen samples from Petén and the Pacific coast indicate that maize cultivation had been developed by the people by 3500 BC.[21] Sites dating to 6500 BC have been found in the Quiché region in the Highlands, and Sipacate and Escuintla on the central Pacific coast.

Archaeologists divide the pre-Columbian history of Mesoamerica into the Preclassic period (3000 BC to 250 AD), the Classic period (250 to 900 AD), and the Postclassic period (900 to 1500 AD).[22] Until recently, the Preclassic was regarded by researchers as a formative period, in which the peoples typically lived in huts in small villages of farmers, with few permanent buildings. This notion has been challenged since the late 20th century by discoveries of monumental architecture from that period, such as an altar in La Blanca, San Marcos, from 1000 BC; ceremonial sites at Miraflores and Naranjo from 801 BC; the earliest monumental masks; and the Mirador Basin cities of Nakbé, Xulnal, El Tintal, Wakná and El Mirador.

On 3 June 2020, researchers published an article in Nature describing their discovery of the oldest and largest Maya site, known as Aguada Fénix, in Mexico. It features monumental architecture, an elevated, rectangular plateau measuring about 1,400 meters long and nearly 400 meters wide, constructed of a mixture of earth and clay. To the west is a 10-meter-tall earthen mound. Remains of other structures and reservoirs were also detected through the Lidar technology. It is estimated to have been built from 1000 to 800 BC, demonstrating that the Maya built large, monumental complexes from their early period.[23]

 
Maya city of Tikal

The Classic period of Mesoamerican civilization corresponds to the height of the Maya civilization. It is represented by countless sites throughout Guatemala, although the largest concentration is in Petén. This period is characterized by urbanisation, the emergence of independent city-states, and contact with other Mesoamerican cultures.[24]

This lasted until approximately 900 AD, when the Classic Maya civilization collapsed.[25] The Maya abandoned many of the cities of the central lowlands or were killed by a drought-induced famine.[25] The cause of the collapse is debated, but the drought theory is gaining currency, supported by evidence such as lakebeds, ancient pollen, and others.[25] A series of prolonged droughts in what is otherwise a seasonal desert is thought to have decimated the Maya, who relied on regular rainfall to support their dense population.[26]

The Post-Classic period is represented by regional kingdoms, such as the Itza, Kowoj, Yalain and Kejache in Petén, and the Mam, Ki'che', Kackchiquel, Chajoma, Tz'utujil, Poqomchi', Q'eqchi' and Ch'orti' peoples in the highlands. Their cities preserved many aspects of Maya culture.

The Maya civilization shares many features with other Mesoamerican civilizations due to the high degree of interaction and cultural diffusion that characterized the region. Advances such as writing, epigraphy, and the calendar did not originate with the Maya; however, their civilization fully developed them. Maya influence can be detected from Honduras, Belize, Guatemala, and Northern El Salvador to as far north as central Mexico, more than 1,000 km (620 mi) from the Maya area. Many outside influences are found in Maya art and architecture, which are thought to have resulted from trade and cultural exchange rather than direct external conquest.

Archaeological investigation

In 2018, 60,000 uncharted structures were revealed in northern Guatemala by archaeologists with the help of Lidar technology lasers. The project applied Lidar technology on an area of 2,100 square kilometers in the Maya Biosphere Reserve in the Petén region of Guatemala. Thanks to the new findings, archaeologists believe that 7–11 million Maya people inhabited northern Guatemala during the late classical period from 650 to 800 A.D., twice the estimated population of medieval England.[27] Lidar technology digitally removed the tree canopy to reveal ancient remains and showed that Maya cities, such as Tikal, were larger than previously assumed. The use of Lidar revealed numerous houses, palaces, elevated highways, and defensive fortifications. According to archaeologist Stephen Houston, it is one of the most overwhelming findings in over 150 years of Maya archaeology.[28][27][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37]

Spanish era (1519–1821)

 
The Conquistador Pedro de Alvarado led the initial Spanish efforts to conquer Guatemala.[38]

After they arrived in the New World, the Spanish started several expeditions to Guatemala, beginning in 1519. Before long, Spanish contact resulted in an epidemic that devastated native populations. Hernán Cortés, who had led the Spanish conquest of Mexico, granted a permit to Captains Gonzalo de Alvarado and his brother, Pedro de Alvarado, to conquer this land. Alvarado at first allied himself with the Kaqchikel nation to fight against their traditional rivals the K'iche' (Quiché) nation. Alvarado later turned against the Kaqchikel, and eventually brought the entire region under Spanish domination.[39]

During the colonial period, Guatemala was an audiencia, a captaincy-general (Capitanía General de Guatemala) of Spain, and a part of New Spain (Mexico).[40] The first capital, Villa de Santiago de Guatemala (now known as Tecpan Guatemala), was founded on 25 July 1524 near Iximché, the Kaqchikel capital city. The capital was moved to Ciudad Vieja on 22 November 1527, as a result of a Kaqchikel attack on Villa de Santiago de Guatemala. Owing to its strategic location on the American Pacific Coast, Guatemala became a supplementary node to the Transpacific Manila Galleon trade connecting Latin America to Asia via the Spanish owned Philippines.[41]

On 11 September 1541, the new capital was flooded when the lagoon in the crater of the Agua Volcano collapsed due to heavy rains and earthquakes; the capital was then moved 6 km (4 mi) to Antigua in the Panchoy Valley, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This city was destroyed by several earthquakes in 1773–1774. The King of Spain authorized moving the capital to its current location in the Ermita Valley, which is named after a Catholic church dedicated to the Virgen del Carmen. This new capital was founded on 2 January 1776.

Independence and the 19th century (1821–1847)

 
Criollos rejoice upon learning about the declaration of independence from Spain on 15 September 1821.

On 15 September 1821, the Captaincy General of Guatemala, an administrative region of the Spanish Empire consisting of Chiapas, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Honduras, officially proclaimed its independence from Spain at a public meeting in Guatemala City. Independence from Spain was gained, and the Captaincy General of Guatemala joined the First Mexican Empire under Agustín de Iturbide.

Under the First Empire, Mexico reached its greatest territorial extent, stretching from northern California to the provinces of Central America (excluding Panama, which was then part of Colombia), which had not initially approved becoming part of the Mexican Empire but joined the Empire shortly after their independence. This region was formally a part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain throughout the colonial period, but as a practical matter had been administered separately. It was not until 1825 that Guatemala created its own flag.[42]

In 1838 the liberal forces of Honduran leader Francisco Morazán and Guatemalan José Francisco Barrundia invaded Guatemala and reached San Sur, where they executed Chúa Alvarez, father-in-law of Rafael Carrera, then a military commander and later the first president of Guatemala. The liberal forces impaled Alvarez's head on a pike as a warning to followers of the Guatemalan caudillo.[43] Carrera and his wife Petrona – who had come to confront Morazán as soon as they learned of the invasion and were in Mataquescuintla – swore they would never forgive Morazán even in his grave; they felt it impossible to respect anyone who would not avenge family members.[44]

After sending several envoys, whom Carrera would not receive – and especially not Barrundia whom Carrera did not want to murder in cold blood – Morazán began a scorched-earth offensive, destroying villages in his path and stripping them of assets. The Carrera forces had to hide in the mountains.[45] Believing Carrera totally defeated, Morazán and Barrundia marched to Guatemala City, and were welcomed as saviors by state governor Pedro Valenzuela and members of the conservative Aycinena clan [es], who proposed to sponsor one of the liberal battalions, while Valenzuela and Barrundia gave Morazán all the Guatemalan resources needed to solve any financial problem he had.[46] The criollos of both parties celebrated until dawn that they finally had a criollo caudillo like Morazán, who was able to crush the peasant rebellion.[47]

 
The Federal Republic of Central America (1823–1838) with its capital in Guatemala City.

Morazán used the proceeds to support Los Altos and then replaced Valenzuela with Mariano Rivera Paz, a member of the Aycinena clan, although he did not return to that clan any property confiscated in 1829. In revenge, Juan José de Aycinena y Piñol voted to dissolve the Central American Federation in San Salvador a little later, forcing Morazán to return to El Salvador to fight for his federal mandate. Along the way, Morazán increased repression in eastern Guatemala, as punishment for helping Carrera.[48] Knowing that Morazán had gone to El Salvador, Carrera tried to take Salamá with the small force that remained, but was defeated, and lost his brother Laureano in combat. With just a few men left, he managed to escape, badly wounded, to Sanarate.[49] After recovering somewhat, he attacked a detachment in Jutiapa and got a small amount of booty which he gave to the volunteers who accompanied him. He then prepared to attack Petapa near Guatemala City, where he was victorious, although with heavy casualties.[50]

In September of that year, Carrera attempted an assault on the capital of Guatemala, but the liberal general Carlos Salazar Castro defeated him in the fields of Villa Nueva and Carrera had to retreat.[51] After unsuccessfully trying to take Quetzaltenango, Carrera found himself both surrounded and wounded. He had to capitulate to Mexican General Agustin Guzman, who had been in Quetzaltenango since Vicente Filísola's arrival in 1823. Morazán had the opportunity to shoot Carrera, but did not, because he needed the support of the Guatemalan peasants to counter the attacks of Francisco Ferrera in El Salvador. Instead, Morazán left Carrera in charge of a small fort in Mita, without any weapons. Knowing that Morazán was going to attack El Salvador, Francisco Ferrera gave arms and ammunition to Carrera and convinced him to attack Guatemala City.[52]

Meanwhile, despite insistent advice to definitively crush Carrera and his forces, Salazar tried to negotiate with him diplomatically; he even went as far as to show that he neither feared nor distrusted Carrera by removing the fortifications of the Guatemalan capital, in place since the battle of Villa Nueva.[51] Taking advantage of Salazar's good faith and Ferrera's weapons, Carrera took Guatemala City by surprise on 13 April 1839; Salazar, Mariano Gálvez and Barrundia fled before the arrival of Carrera's militiamen. Salazar, in his nightshirt, vaulted roofs of neighboring houses and sought refuge,[53][54] reaching the border disguised as a peasant.[53][54] With Salazar gone, Carrera reinstated Rivera Paz as head of state.

Between 1838 and 1840 a secessionist movement in the city of Quetzaltenango founded the breakaway state of Los Altos and sought independence from Guatemala. The most important members of the Liberal Party of Guatemala and liberal enemies of the conservative régime moved to Los Altos, leaving their exile in El Salvador.[55] The liberals in Los Altos began severely criticizing the Conservative government of Rivera Paz.[55] Los Altos was the region with the main production and economic activity of the former state of Guatemala. Without Los Altos, conservatives lost many of the resources that had given Guatemala hegemony in Central America.[55] The government of Guatemala tried to reach a peaceful solution, but two years of bloody conflict followed.

On 17 April 1839, Guatemala declared itself independent from the United Provinces of Central America. In 1840, Belgium began to act as an external source of support for Carrera's independence movement, in an effort to exert influence in Central America. The Compagnie belge de colonisation (Belgian Colonization Company), commissioned by Belgian King Leopold I, became the administrator of Santo Tomas de Castilla[56] replacing the failed British Eastern Coast of Central America Commercial and Agricultural Company.[56] Even though the colony eventually crumbled, Belgium continued to support Carrera in the mid-19th century, although Britain continued to be the main business and political partner to Carrera.[57] Rafael Carrera was elected Guatemalan Governor in 1844.

Settlers from Germany arrived in the mid-19th century. German settlers acquired land and grew coffee plantations in Alta Verapaz and Quetzaltenango.[citation needed]

Republic (1847–1851)

On 21 March 1847, Guatemala declared itself an independent republic and Carrera became its first president.

 
Proclamation Coin 1847 of the independent Republic of Guatemala

During the first term as president, Carrera brought the country back from extreme conservatism to a traditional moderation; in 1848, the liberals were able to drive him from office, after the country had been in turmoil for several months.[58][59] Carrera resigned of his own free will and left for México. The new liberal regime allied itself with the Aycinena family and swiftly passed a law ordering Carrera's execution if he returned to Guatemalan soil.[58]

The liberal criollos from Quetzaltenango were led by general Agustín Guzmán who occupied the city after Corregidor general Mariano Paredes was called to Guatemala City to take over the presidential office.[60] They declared on 26 August 1848 that Los Altos was an independent state once again. The new state had the support of Doroteo Vasconcelos' régime in El Salvador and the rebel guerrilla army of Vicente and Serapio Cruz, who were sworn enemies of Carrera.[61] The interim government was led by Guzmán himself and had Florencio Molina and the priest Fernando Davila as his Cabinet members.[62] On 5 September 1848, the criollos altenses chose a formal government led by Fernando Antonio Martínez.

In the meantime, Carrera decided to return to Guatemala and did so, entering at Huehuetenango, where he met with native leaders and told them that they must remain united to prevail; the leaders agreed and slowly the segregated native communities started developing a new Indian identity under Carrera's leadership.[63] In the meantime, in the eastern part of Guatemala, the Jalapa region became increasingly dangerous; former president Mariano Rivera Paz and rebel leader Vicente Cruz were both murdered there after trying to take over the Corregidor office in 1849.[63]

When Carrera arrived to Chiantla in Huehuetenango, he received two altenses emissaries who told him that their soldiers were not going to fight his forces because that would lead to a native revolt, much like that of 1840; their only request from Carrera was to keep the natives under control.[63] The altenses did not comply, and led by Guzmán and his forces, they started chasing Carrera; the caudillo hid, helped by his native allies and remained under their protection when the forces of Miguel Garcia Granados arrived from Guatemala City looking for him.[63]

On learning that officer José Víctor Zavala had been appointed as Corregidor in Suchitepéquez, Carrera and his hundred jacalteco bodyguards crossed a dangerous jungle infested with jaguars to meet his former friend. Zavala not only did not capture him, he agreed to serve under his orders, thus sending a strong message to both liberal and conservatives in Guatemala City that they would have to negotiate with Carrera or battle on two fronts – Quetzaltenango and Jalapa.[64] Carrera went back to the Quetzaltenango area, while Zavala remained in Suchitepéquez as a tactical maneuver.[65] Carrera received a visit from a cabinet member of Paredes and told him that he had control of the native population and that he assured Paredes that he would keep them appeased.[64] When the emissary returned to Guatemala City, he told the president everything Carrera said, and added that the native forces were formidable.[66]

Guzmán went to Antigua to meet with another group of Paredes emissaries; they agreed that Los Altos would rejoin Guatemala, and that the latter would help Guzmán defeat his enemy and also build a port on the Pacific Ocean.[66] Guzmán was sure of victory this time, but his plan evaporated when in his absence Carrera and his native allies occupied Quetzaltenango; Carrera appointed Ignacio Yrigoyen as Corregidor and convinced him that he should work with the K'iche', Q'anjobal and Mam leaders to keep the region under control.[67] On his way out, Yrigoyen murmured to a friend: "Now he is the king of the Indians, indeed!"[67]

Guzmán then left for Jalapa, where he struck a deal with the rebels, while Luis Batres Juarros convinced President Paredes to deal with Carrera. Back in Guatemala City within a few months, Carrera was commander-in-chief, backed by military and political support of the Indian communities from the densely populated western highlands.[68] During the first presidency, from 1844 to 1848, he brought the country back from excessive conservatism to a moderate regime, and – with the advice of Juan José de Aycinena y Piñol and Pedro de Aycinena – restored relations with the Church in Rome with a Concordat ratified in 1854.[69]

Second Carrera government (1851–1865)

 
Captain General Rafael Carrera after being appointed president for Life in 1854.

After Carrera returned from exile in 1849 the president of El Salvador, Doroteo Vasconcelos, granted asylum to the Guatemalan liberals, who harassed the Guatemalan government in several different ways. José Francisco Barrundia established a liberal newspaper for that specific purpose. Vasconcelos supported a rebel faction named "La Montaña" in eastern Guatemala, providing and distributing money and weapons. By late 1850, Vasconcelos was getting impatient at the slow progress of the war with Guatemala and decided to plan an open attack. Under that circumstance, the Salvadorean head of state started a campaign against the conservative Guatemalan regime, inviting Honduras and Nicaragua to participate in the alliance; only the Honduran government led by Juan Lindo accepted.[58] In 1851 Guatemala defeated an Allied army from Honduras and El Salvador at the Battle of La Arada.

In 1854 Carrera was declared "supreme and perpetual leader of the nation" for life, with the power to choose his successor. He held that position until he died on 14 April 1865. While he pursued some measures to set up a foundation for economic prosperity to please the conservative landowners, military challenges at home and a three-year war with Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua dominated his presidency.

His rivalry with Gerardo Barrios, President of El Salvador, resulted in open war in 1863. At Coatepeque the Guatemalans suffered a severe defeat, which was followed by a truce. Honduras joined with El Salvador, and Nicaragua and Costa Rica with Guatemala. The contest was finally settled in favor of Carrera, who besieged and occupied San Salvador, and dominated Honduras and Nicaragua. He continued to act in concert with the Clerical Party, and tried to maintain friendly relations with European governments. Before he died, Carrera nominated his friend and loyal soldier, Army Marshall Vicente Cerna y Cerna, as his successor.

Vicente Cerna y Cerna regime (1865–1871)

 
Vicente Cerna y Cerna was the president of Guatemala from 1865 to 1871.

Vicente Cerna y Cerna was president of Guatemala from 24 May 1865 to 29 June 1871.[70] Liberal author Alfonso Enrique Barrientos [es],[71][full citation needed] described Marshall Cerna's government in the following manner:[72][full citation needed]

A conservative and archaic government, badly organized and with worse intentions, was in charge of the country, centralizing all powers in Vicente Cerna, ambitious military man, who not happy with the general rank, had promoted himself to the Army Marshall rank, even though that rank did not exist and it does not exist in the Guatemalan military. The Marshall called himself President of the Republic, but in reality he was the foreman of oppressed and savaged people, cowardly enough that they had not dared to tell the dictator to leave threatening him with a revolution.

The State and Church were a single unit, and the conservative régime was strongly allied to the power of regular clergy of the Catholic Church, who were then among the largest landowners in Guatemala. The tight relationship between church and state had been ratified by the Concordat of 1852, which was the law until Cerna was deposed in 1871.[73] Even liberal generals like Serapio Cruz [es] realized that Rafael Carrera's political and military presence made him practically invincible. Thus the generals fought under his command,[58] and waited—for a long time—until Carrera's death before beginning their revolt against the tamer Cerna.[74] During Cerna's presidency, liberal party members were prosecuted and sent into exile; among them, those who started the Liberal Revolution of 1871.[58]

In 1871, the merchants guild, Consulado de Comercio, lost their exclusive court privilege. They had major effects on the economics of the time, and therefore land management. From 1839 to 1871, the Consulado held a consistent monopolistic position in the regime.[75]

Liberal governments (1871–1898)

Guatemala's "Liberal Revolution" came in 1871 under the leadership of Justo Rufino Barrios, who worked to modernize the country, improve trade, and introduce new crops and manufacturing. During this era coffee became an important crop for Guatemala.[76] Barrios had ambitions of reuniting Central America and took the country to war in an unsuccessful attempt to attain it, losing his life on the battlefield in 1885 against forces in El Salvador.

Manuel Barillas was president from 16 March 1886 to 15 March 1892. Manuel Barillas was unique among liberal presidents of Guatemala between 1871 and 1944: he handed over power to his successor peacefully. When election time approached, he sent for the three Liberal candidates to ask them what their government plan would be.[77] Happy with what he heard from general Reyna Barrios,[77] Barillas made sure that a huge column of Quetzaltenango and Totonicapán indigenous people came down from the mountains to vote for him. Reyna was elected president. [78]

José María Reina Barrios was president between 1892 and 1898. During Barrios's first term in office, the power of the landowners over the rural peasantry increased. He oversaw the rebuilding of parts of Guatemala City on a grander scale, with wide, Parisian-style avenues. He oversaw Guatemala hosting the first "Exposición Centroamericana" ("Central American Fair") in 1897. During his second term, Barrios printed bonds to fund his ambitious plans, fueling monetary inflation and the rise of popular opposition to his regime.

His administration also worked on improving the roads, installing national and international telegraphs and introducing electricity to Guatemala City. Completing a transoceanic railway was a main objective of his government, with a goal to attract international investors at a time when the Panama Canal was not yet built.

Manuel Estrada Cabrera regime (1898–1920)

 
Manuel Estrada Cabrera ruled Guatemala between 1898 and 1920.

After the assassination of general José María Reina Barrios on 8 February 1898, the Guatemalan cabinet called an emergency meeting to appoint a new successor, but declined to invite Estrada Cabrera to the meeting, even though he was the designated successor to the presidency. There are two different descriptions of how Cabrera was able to become president. The first states that Cabrera entered the cabinet meeting "with pistol drawn" to assert his entitlement to the presidency,[79] while the second states that he showed up unarmed to the meeting and demanded the presidency by virtue of being the designated successor.[80]

The first civilian Guatemalan head of state in over 50 years, Estrada Cabrera overcame resistance to his regime by August 1898 and called for elections in September, which he won handily.[81] In 1898 the legislature convened for the election of President Estrada Cabrera, who triumphed thanks to the large number of soldiers and policemen who went to vote in civilian clothes and to the large number of illiterate family that they brought with them to the polls.[82]

One of Estrada Cabrera's most famous and most bitter legacies was allowing the entry of the United Fruit Company (UFCO) into the Guatemalan economic and political arena. As a member of the Liberal Party, he sought to encourage development of the nation's infrastructure of highways, railroads, and sea ports for the sake of expanding the export economy. By the time Estrada Cabrera assumed the presidency there had been repeated efforts to construct a railroad from the major port of Puerto Barrios to the capital, Guatemala City. Owing to lack of funding exacerbated by the collapse of the internal coffee trade, the railway fell 100 kilometres (60 mi) short of its goal. Estrada Cabrera decided, without consulting the legislature or judiciary, that striking a deal with the UFCO was the only way to finish the railway.[83] Cabrera signed a contract with UFCO's Minor Cooper Keith in 1904 that gave the company tax exemptions, land grants, and control of all railroads on the Atlantic side.[84]

Estrada Cabrera often employed brutal methods to assert his authority. Right at the beginning of his first presidential period he started prosecuting his political rivals and soon established a well-organized web of spies. One American ambassador returned to the United States after he learned the dictator had given orders to poison him. Former president Manuel Barillas was stabbed to death in Mexico City. Estrada Cabrera responded violently to workers' strikes against UFCO. In one incident, when UFCO went directly to Estrada Cabrera to resolve a strike (after the armed forces refused to respond), the president ordered an armed unit to enter a workers' compound. The forces "arrived in the night, firing indiscriminately into the workers' sleeping quarters, wounding and killing an unspecified number."[85]

In 1906 Estrada faced serious revolts against his rule; the rebels were supported by the governments of some of the other Central American nations, but Estrada succeeded in putting them down. Elections were held by the people against the will of Estrada Cabrera and thus he had the president-elect murdered in retaliation. In 1907 Estrada narrowly survived an assassination attempt when a bomb exploded near his carriage.[86] It has been suggested that the extreme despotic characteristics of Estrada did not emerge until after an attempt on his life in 1907.[87]

Guatemala City was badly damaged in the 1917 Guatemala earthquake.

Estrada Cabrera continued in power until forced to resign after new revolts in 1920. By that time his power had declined drastically and he was reliant upon the loyalty of a few generals. While the United States threatened intervention if he was removed through revolution, a bipartisan coalition came together to remove him from the presidency. He was removed from office after the national assembly charged that he was mentally incompetent, and appointed Carlos Herrera in his place on 8 April 1920.[88]

Guatemala joined with El Salvador and Honduras in the Federation of Central America from 9 September 1921 until 14 January 1922.

Carlos Herrera served as President of Guatemala from 1920 until 1921. He was succeeded by José María Orellana, who served from 1921 until 1926. Lázaro Chacón González then served until 1931.

Jorge Ubico regime (1931–1944)

The Great Depression began in 1929 and badly damaged the Guatemalan economy, causing a rise in unemployment, and leading to unrest among workers and laborers. Afraid of a popular revolt, the Guatemalan landed elite lent their support to Jorge Ubico, who had become well known for "efficiency and cruelty" as a provincial governor. Ubico won the election that followed in 1931, in which he was the only candidate.[89][90] After his election his policies quickly became authoritarian. He replaced the system of debt peonage with a brutally enforced vagrancy law, requiring all men of working age who did not own land to work a minimum of 100 days of hard labor.[91] His government used unpaid Indian labor to build roads and railways. Ubico also froze wages at very low levels, and passed a law allowing land-owners complete immunity from prosecution for any action they took to defend their property,[91] an action described by historians as legalizing murder.[92] He greatly strengthened the police force, turning it into one of the most efficient and ruthless in Latin America.[93] He gave them greater authority to shoot and imprison people suspected of breaking the labor laws. These laws created tremendous resentment against him among agricultural laborers.[94] The government became highly militarized; under his rule, every provincial governor was a general in the army.[95]

Ubico continued his predecessor's policy of making massive concessions to the United Fruit Company, often at a cost to Guatemala. He granted the company 200,000 hectares (490,000 acres) of public land in exchange for a promise to build a port, a promise he later waived.[96] Since its entry into Guatemala, the United Fruit Company had expanded its land-holdings by displacing farmers and converting their farmland to banana plantations. This process accelerated under Ubico's presidency, with the government doing nothing to stop it.[97] The company received import duty and real estate tax exemptions from the government and controlled more land than any other individual or group. It also controlled the sole railroad in the country, the sole facilities capable of producing electricity, and the port facilities at Puerto Barrios on the Atlantic coast.[98]

Ubico saw the United States as an ally against the supposed communist threat of Mexico, and made efforts to gain its support. When the US declared war against Germany in 1941, Ubico acted on American instructions and arrested all people in Guatemala of German descent.[99] He also permitted the US to establish an air base in Guatemala, with the stated aim of protecting the Panama Canal.[100] However, Ubico was an admirer of European fascists, such as Francisco Franco and Benito Mussolini,[101] and considered himself to be "another Napoleon".[102] He occasionally compared himself to Adolf Hitler.[103] He dressed ostentatiously and surrounded himself with statues and paintings of Napoleon, regularly commenting on the similarities between their appearances. He militarized numerous political and social institutions—including the post office, schools, and symphony orchestras—and placed military officers in charge of many government posts.[104][105][106][107][108]

Guatemalan Revolution (1944–1954)

On 1 July 1944 Ubico was forced to resign from the presidency in response to a wave of protests and a general strike inspired by brutal labor conditions among plantation workers.[109] His chosen replacement, General Juan Federico Ponce Vaides, was forced out of office on 20 October 1944 by a coup d'état led by Major Francisco Javier Arana and Captain Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán. About 100 people were killed in the coup. The country was then led by a military junta made up of Arana, Árbenz, and Jorge Toriello Garrido.[110]

 
Guatemala's democratically elected president Jacobo Árbenz was overthrown in a coup planned by the CIA, The United Fruit Company had lobbied the U.S. to overthrow him.

The junta organized Guatemala's first free election, which the philosophically conservative writer and teacher Juan José Arévalo, who wanted to turn the country into a liberal capitalist society won with a majority of 86%.[111] His "Christian Socialist" policies were inspired to a large extent by the U.S. New Deal of President Franklin D. Roosevelt during the Great Depression.[112] Arévalo built new health centers, increased funding for education, and drafted a more liberal labor law,[113] while criminalizing unions in workplaces with less than 500 workers,[114] and cracking down on communists.[115] Although Arévalo was popular among nationalists, he had enemies in the church and the military, and faced at least 25 coup attempts during his presidency.[116]

Arévalo was constitutionally prohibited from contesting the 1950 elections. The largely free and fair elections were won by Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán, Arévalo's defense minister.[117] Árbenz continued the moderate capitalist approach of Arévalo.[118] His most important policy was Decree 900, a sweeping agrarian reform bill passed in 1952.[119][120] Decree 900 transferred uncultivated land to landless peasants.[119] Only 1,710 of the nearly 350,000 private land-holdings were affected by the law,[121] which benefited approximately 500,000 individuals, or one-sixth of the population.[121]

Coup and civil war (1954–1996)

Despite their popularity within the country, the reforms of the Guatemalan Revolution were disliked by the United States government, which was predisposed by the Cold War to see it as communist, and the United Fruit Company (UFCO), whose hugely profitable business had been affected by the end to brutal labor practices.[115][122] The attitude of the U.S. government was also influenced by a propaganda campaign carried out by the UFCO.[123]

U.S. President Harry Truman authorized Operation PBFortune to topple Árbenz in 1952, with the support of Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza García,[124] but the operation was aborted when too many details became public.[124][125] Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected U.S. president in 1952, promising to take a harder line against communism; the close links that his staff members John Foster Dulles and Allen Dulles had to the UFCO also predisposed him to act against Árbenz.[126] Eisenhower authorized the CIA to carry out Operation PBSuccess in August 1953. The CIA armed, funded, and trained a force of 480 men led by Carlos Castillo Armas.[127][128] The force invaded Guatemala on 18 June 1954, backed by a heavy campaign of psychological warfare, including bombings of Guatemala City and an anti-Árbenz radio station claiming to be genuine news.[127] The invasion force fared poorly militarily, but the psychological warfare and the possibility of a U.S. invasion intimidated the Guatemalan army, which refused to fight. Árbenz resigned on 27 June.[129][130]

Following negotiations in San Salvador, Carlos Castillo Armas became president on 7 July 1954.[129] Elections were held in early October, from which all political parties were barred from participating. Castillo Armas was the only candidate and won the election with 99% of the vote.[129] Castillo Armas reversed Decree 900 and ruled until 26 July 1957, when he was assassinated by Romeo Vásquez, a member of his personal guard. After the rigged[112] election that followed, General Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes assumed power. He is celebrated for challenging the Mexican president to a gentleman's duel on the bridge on the south border to end a feud on the subject of illegal fishing by Mexican boats on Guatemala's Pacific coast, two of which were sunk by the Guatemalan Air Force. Ydigoras authorized the training of 5,000 anti-Castro Cubans in Guatemala. He also provided airstrips in the region of Petén for what later became the US-sponsored, failed Bay of Pigs Invasion in 1961.

On 13 November 1960, a group of left-wing junior military officers of the Escuela Politécnica national military academy led a failed revolt against Ydigoras' government. The rebels fled to the mountains of eastern Guatemala and neighboring Honduras and formed MR-13 (Movimiento Revolucionario 13 Noviembre). On 6 February 1962, in Bananera, they attacked the offices of the United Fruit Company. The attack sparked sympathetic strikes and university student walkouts throughout the country, to which the government responded with a violent crackdown.[131]

In 1963, Ydígoras, despite the firm opposition of the Kennedy administration, had pledged to allow Arévalo return from exile and run in a free and open election. Arevalo returned on 27 March 1963 to announce his candidacy for the scheduled November presidential elections, however Ydigoras' government was ousted on March 31, 1963, when the Guatemalan Air Force attacked several military bases; the coup was led by his Defense Minister, Colonel Enrique Peralta Azurdia.[132] The new régime intensified its counterinsurgency campaign against the guerrillas that had begun under Ydígoras-Fuentes.[133]

In 1966, Julio César Méndez Montenegro was elected president of Guatemala under the banner "Democratic Opening". Mendez Montenegro was the candidate of the Revolutionary Party, a center-left party that had its origins in the post-Ubico era. During this time, rightist paramilitary organizations, such as the "White Hand" (Mano Blanca), and the Anticommunist Secret Army (Ejército Secreto Anticomunista) were formed. Those groups were the forerunners of the infamous "Death Squads". Military advisers from the United States Army Special Forces (Green Berets) were sent to Guatemala to train Guatemala's armed forces and help transform it into a modern counter-insurgency force, which eventually made it the most sophisticated in Central America.[134]

In 1970, Colonel Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio was elected president. By 1972, members of the guerrilla movement entered the country from Mexico and settled in the Western Highlands. In the disputed election of 1974, General Kjell Laugerud García defeated General Efraín Ríos Montt, a candidate of the Christian Democratic Party, who claimed that he had been cheated out of a victory through fraud.

On 4 February 1976, a major earthquake destroyed several cities and caused more than 25,000 deaths, especially among the poor, whose housing was substandard. The government's failure to respond rapidly to the aftermath of the earthquake and to relieve homelessness gave rise to widespread discontent, which contributed to growing popular unrest. General Romeo Lucas García assumed power in 1978 in a fraudulent election.

The 1970s saw the rise of two new guerrilla organizations, the Guerrilla Army of the Poor (EGP) and the Organization of the People in Arms (ORPA). They began guerrilla attacks that included urban and rural warfare, mainly against the military and some civilian supporters of the army. The army and the paramilitary forces responded with a brutal counter-insurgency campaign that resulted in tens of thousands of civilian deaths.[135] In 1979, the U.S. president, Jimmy Carter, who had until then been providing public support for the government forces, ordered a ban on all military aid to the Guatemalan Army because of its widespread and systematic abuse of human rights.[112] However, documents have since come to light that suggest that American aid continued throughout the Carter years, through clandestine channels.[136]

 
Memorial to the victims of the Río Negro massacres

On 31 January 1980, a group of indigenous K'iche' took over the Spanish Embassy to protest army massacres in the countryside. The Guatemalan government armed forces launched an assault that killed almost everyone inside in a fire that consumed the building. The Guatemalan government claimed that the activists set the fire, thus immolating themselves.[137] However the Spanish ambassador survived the fire and disputed this claim, saying that the Guatemalan police intentionally killed almost everyone inside and set the fire to erase traces of their acts. As a result, the government of Spain broke off diplomatic relations with Guatemala.

This government was overthrown in 1982 and General Efraín Ríos Montt was named president of the military junta. He continued the bloody campaign of torture, forced disappearances, and "scorched earth" warfare. The country became a pariah state internationally, although the regime received considerable support from the Reagan Administration,[138] and Reagan himself described Ríos Montt as "a man of great personal integrity."[139] Ríos Montt was overthrown by General Óscar Humberto Mejía Victores, who called for an election of a national constituent assembly to write a new constitution, leading to a free election in 1986, won by Vinicio Cerezo Arévalo, the candidate of the Christian Democracy Party.

In 1982, the four guerrilla groups, EGP, ORPA, FAR and PGT, merged and formed the URNG, influenced by the Salvadoran guerrilla FMLN, the Nicaraguan FSLN and Cuba's government, in order to become stronger. As a result of the Army's "scorched earth" tactics in the countryside, more than 45,000 Guatemalans fled across the border to Mexico. The Mexican government placed the refugees in camps in Chiapas and Tabasco.

In 1992, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Rigoberta Menchú for her efforts to bring international attention to the government-sponsored genocide against the indigenous population.[140]

1996–2000

 
An outdoor market in Chichicastenango, 2009

The Guatemalan Civil War ended in 1996 with a peace accord between the guerrillas and the government, negotiated by the United Nations through intense brokerage by nations such as Norway and Spain. Both sides made major concessions. The guerrilla fighters disarmed and received land to work. According to the U.N.-sponsored truth commission (the Commission for Historical Clarification), government forces and state-sponsored, CIA-trained paramilitaries were responsible for over 93% of the human rights violations during the war.[141]

In the last few years, millions of documents related to crimes committed during the civil war have been found abandoned by the former Guatemalan police. The families of over 45,000 Guatemalan activists who disappeared during the civil war are now reviewing the documents, which have been digitized. This could lead to further legal actions.[142]

During the first ten years of the civil war, the victims of the state-sponsored terror were primarily students, workers, professionals, and opposition figures, but in the last years they were thousands of mostly rural Maya farmers and non-combatants. More than 450 Maya villages were destroyed and over 1 million people became refugees or displaced within Guatemala.

In 1995, the Catholic Archdiocese of Guatemala began the Recovery of Historical Memory (REMHI) project,[143] known in Spanish as "El Proyecto de la Recuperación de la Memoria Histórica", to collect the facts and history of Guatemala's long civil war and confront the truth of those years. On 24 April 1998, REMHI presented the results of its work in the report "Guatemala: Nunca Más!". This report summarized testimony and statements of thousands of witnesses and victims of repression during the Civil War. "The report laid the blame for 80 per cent of the atrocities at the door of the Guatemalan Army and its collaborators within the social and political elite."[144]

Catholic Bishop Juan José Gerardi Conedera worked on the Recovery of Historical Memory Project and two days after he announced the release of its report on victims of the Guatemalan Civil War, "Guatemala: Nunca Más!", in April 1998, Bishop Gerardi was attacked in his garage and beaten to death.[144] In 2001, in the first trial in a civilian court of members of the military in Guatemalan history, three Army officers were convicted of his death and sentenced to 30 years in prison. A priest was convicted as an accomplice and was sentenced to 20 years in prison.[145]

According to the report, Recuperación de la Memoria Histórica (REMHI), some 200,000 people died. More than one million people were forced to flee their homes and hundreds of villages were destroyed. The Historical Clarification Commission attributed more than 93% of all documented violations of human rights to Guatemala's military government, and estimated that Maya Indians accounted for 83% of the victims. It concluded in 1999 that state actions constituted genocide.[146][147]

In some areas such as Baja Verapaz, the Truth Commission found that the Guatemalan state engaged in an intentional policy of genocide against particular ethnic groups in the Civil War.[141] In 1999, U.S. president Bill Clinton said that the United States had been wrong to have provided support to the Guatemalan military forces that took part in these brutal civilian killings.[148]

Since 2000

Since the peace accords Guatemala has had both economic growth and successive democratic elections, most recently in 2019. In the 2019 elections, Alejandro Giammattei won the presidency. He assumed office in January 2020.

In January 2012 Efrain Rios Montt, the former dictator of Guatemala, appeared in a Guatemalan court on genocide charges. During the hearing, the government presented evidence of over 100 incidents involving at least 1,771 deaths, 1,445 rapes, and the displacement of nearly 30,000 Guatemalans during his 17-month rule from 1982 to 1983. The prosecution wanted him incarcerated because he was viewed as a flight risk but he remained free on bail, under house arrest and guarded by the Guatemalan National Civil Police (PNC). On 10 May 2013, Rios Montt was found guilty and sentenced to 80 years in prison. It marked the first time that a national court had found a former head of state guilty of genocide.[149] The conviction was later overturned, and Montt's trial resumed in January 2015.[150] In August 2015, a Guatemalan court ruled that Rios Montt could stand trial for genocide and crimes against humanity, but that he could not be sentenced due to his age and deteriorating health.[151]

Ex-President Alfonso Portillo was arrested in January 2010 while trying to flee Guatemala. He was acquitted in May 2010, by a panel of judges that threw out some of the evidence and discounted certain witnesses as unreliable.[152] The Guatemalan Attorney-General, Claudia Paz y Paz, called the verdict "a terrible message of injustice," and "a wake up call about the power structures." In its appeal, the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG), a UN judicial group assisting the Guatemalan government, called the decision's assessment of the meticulously-documented evidence against Portillo Cabrera "whimsical" and said the decision's assertion that the president of Guatemala and his ministers had no responsibility for handling public funds ran counter to the constitution and laws of Guatemala.[153] A New York grand jury had indicted Portillo Cabrera in 2009 for embezzlement; following his acquittal on those charges in Guatemala that country's Supreme Court authorized his extradition to the US.[154][155] The Guatemalan judiciary is deeply corrupt and the selection committee for new nominations has been captured by criminal elements.[152]

At the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, Guatemala received its first-ever Olympic medal when Erick Barrondo won the men's 20 kilometre walk.[156]

 
Guatemala City is the capital and largest city of Guatemala and the most populous urban area in Central America.

Pérez Molina government and "La Línea"

Retired general Otto Pérez Molina was elected president in 2011 along with Roxana Baldetti, the first woman ever elected vice-president in Guatemala; they began their term in office on 14 January 2012.[157] But on 16 April 2015, a United Nations (UN) anti-corruption agency report implicated several high-profile politicians including Baldetti's private secretary, Juan Carlos Monzón, and the director of the Guatemalan Internal Revenue Service (SAT).[who?][158] The revelations provoked more public outrage than had been seen since the presidency of General Kjell Eugenio Laugerud García. The International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) worked with the Guatemalan attorney-general to reveal the scam known as "La Línea", following a year-long investigation that included wire taps.

Officials received bribes from importers in exchange for discounted import tariffs,[158] a practice rooted in a long tradition of customs corruption in the country, as a fund-raising tactic of successive military governments for counterinsurgency operations during Guatemala's 36-year-long civil war.[159][160]

A Facebook event using the hashtag #RenunciaYa (Resign Now) invited citizens to go downtown in Guatemala City to ask for Baldetti's resignation. Within days, over 10,000 people RSVPed that they would attend. Organizers made clear that no political party or group was behind the event, and instructed protesters at the event to follow the law. They also urged people to bring water, food and sunblock, but not to cover their faces or wear political party colors.[161] Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Guatemala City. They protested in front of the presidential palace. Baldetti resigned a few days later. She was forced to remain in Guatemala when the United States revoked her visa. The Guatemalan government arraigned her, since it had enough evidence to suspect her involvement in the "La Linea" scandal. The prominence of US Ambassador Todd Robinson in the Guatemalan political scene once the scandal broke led to the suspicion that the US government was behind the investigation, perhaps because it needed an honest government in Guatemala to counter the presence of China and Russia in the region.[162]

The UN anti-corruption committee has reported on other cases since then, and more than 20 government officials have stepped down. Some were arrested. Two of those cases involved two former presidential private secretaries: Juan de Dios Rodríguez in the Guatemalan Social Service and Gustave Martínez, who was involved in a bribery scandal at the coal power plant company. Jaguar Energy [es] Martínez was also Perez Molina's son-in-law.[163]

Leaders of the political opposition have also been implicated in CICIG investigations: several legislators and members of Libertad Democrática Renovada party (LIDER) were formally accused of bribery-related issues, prompting a large decline in the electoral prospects of its presidential candidate, Manuel Baldizón, who until April had been almost certain to become the next Guatemalan president in the 6 September 2015 presidential elections. Baldizón's popularity steeply declined and he filed accusations with the Organization of American States against CICIG leader Iván Velásquez of international obstruction in Guatemalan internal affairs.[164]

CICIG reported its cases so often on Thursdays that Guatemalans coined the term "CICIG Thursdays". But a Friday press conference brought the crisis to its peak: on Friday 21 August 2015, the CICIG and Attorney General Thelma Aldana presented enough evidence to convince the public that both President Pérez Molina and former vice President Baldetti were the actual leaders of "La Línea". Baldetti was arrested the same day and an impeachment was requested for the president. Several cabinet members resigned and the clamor for the president's resignation grew after Perez Molina defiantly assured the nation in a televised message broadcast on 23 August 2015 that he was not going to resign.[165][166]

Thousands of protesters took to the streets again, this time to demand the increasingly isolated president's resignation. Guatemala's Congress named a commission of five legislators to consider whether to remove the president's immunity from prosecution. The Supreme Court approved. A major day of action kicked off early on 27 August, with marches and roadblocks across the country. Urban groups who had spearheaded regular protests since the scandal broke in April, on the 27th sought to unite with the rural and indigenous organizations who orchestrated the road blocks.

The strike in Guatemala City was full of a diverse and peaceful crowd ranging from the indigenous poor to the well-heeled, and it included many students from public and private universities. Hundreds of schools and businesses closed in support of the protests. The Comité Coordinador de Asociaciones Agrícolas, Comerciales, Industriales y Financieras (CACIF) Guatemala's most powerful business leaders, issued a statement demanding that Pérez Molina step down, and urged Congress to withdraw his immunity from prosecution.[167]

The attorney general's office released its own statement, calling for the president's resignation "to prevent ungovernability that could destabilize the nation." As pressure mounted, the president's former ministers of defense and of the interior, who had been named in the corruption investigation and resigned, abruptly left the country.[168] Pérez Molina meanwhile had been losing support by the day. The private sector called for his resignation; however, he also managed to get support from entrepreneurs that were not affiliated with the private sector chambers: Mario López Estrada – grandchild of former dictator Manuel Estrada Cabrera and the billionaire owner of cellular phone companies – had some of his executives assume the vacated cabinet positions.[169]

The Guatemalan radio station Emisoras Unidas reported exchanging text messages with Perez Molina. Asked whether he planned to resign, he wrote: "I will face whatever is necessary to face, and what the law requires." Some protesters demanded the general election be postponed, both because of the crisis and because it was plagued with accusations of irregularities. Others warned that suspending the vote could lead to an institutional vacuum.[170] However, on 2 September 2015 Pérez Molina resigned, a day after Congress impeached him.[171][172] On 3 September 2015 he was summoned to the Justice Department for his first legal audience for the La Linea corruption case.[173][174]

In June 2016 a United Nations-backed prosecutor described the administration of Pérez Molina as a crime syndicate and outlined another corruption case, this one dubbed Cooperacha (Kick-in). The head of the Social Security Institute and at least five other ministers pooled funds to buy Molina luxurious gifts such as motorboats, spending over $4.7 million in three years.[175]

Jimmy Morales and Alejandro Giammattei in power (2015-present)

In the October 2015 presidential election, former TV comedian Jimmy Morales was elected as the new president of Guatemala after huge anti-corruption demonstrations. He took office in January 2016.[176]

In January 2017, President Morales announced that Guatemala will move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, becoming the first nation to follow the United States.[177]

In January 2020, Alejandro Giammattei replaced Jimmy Morales as the president of Guatemala. Giammattei had won the presidential election in August 2019 with his "tough-on-crime" agenda.[178]

Geography

 
A map of Guatemala.
 
Köppen climate types of Guatemala
 
The highlands of Quetzaltenango.

Guatemala is mountainous with small patches of desert and sand dunes, all hilly valleys, except for the south coast and the vast northern lowlands of Petén department. Two mountain chains enter Guatemala from west to east, dividing Guatemala into three major regions: the highlands, where the mountains are located; the Pacific coast, south of the mountains and the Petén region, north of the mountains.

All major cities are located in the highlands and Pacific coast regions; by comparison, Petén is sparsely populated. These three regions vary in climate, elevation, and landscape, providing dramatic contrasts between hot, humid tropical lowlands and colder, drier highland peaks. Volcán Tajumulco, at 4,220 metres (13,850 feet), is the highest point in the Central American countries.

The rivers are short and shallow in the Pacific drainage basin, larger and deeper in the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico drainage basins. These rivers include the Polochic and Dulce Rivers, which drain into Lake Izabal, the Motagua River, the Sarstún, which forms the boundary with Belize, and the Usumacinta River, which forms the boundary between Petén and Chiapas, Mexico.

Natural disasters

 
A town along the Pan-American Highway within a volcanic crater.

Guatemala's location between the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean makes it a target for hurricanes such as Hurricane Mitch in 1998 and Hurricane Stan in October 2005, which killed more than 1,500 people. The damage was not wind-related, but rather due to significant flooding and resulting mudslides. The most recent was Hurricane Eta in November 2020, which was responsible for more than 100 missing or killed with the final tally still uncertain.[179]

Guatemala's highlands lie along the Motagua Fault, part of the boundary between the Caribbean and North American tectonic plates. This fault has been responsible for several major earthquakes in historic times, including a 7.5 magnitude tremor on 4 February 1976 which killed more than 25,000 people. In addition, the Middle America Trench, a major subduction zone lies off the Pacific coast. Here, the Cocos Plate is sinking beneath the Caribbean Plate, producing volcanic activity inland of the coast. Guatemala has 37 volcanoes, four of them active: Pacaya, Santiaguito, Fuego, and Tacaná.

Natural disasters have a long history in this geologically active part of the world. For example, two of the three moves of the capital of Guatemala have been due to volcanic mudflows in 1541 and earthquakes in 1773.

Biodiversity

Guatemala has 14 ecoregions ranging from mangrove forests to both ocean littorals with 5 different ecosystems. Guatemala has 252 listed wetlands, including five lakes, 61 lagoons, 100 rivers, and four swamps.[180] Tikal National Park was the first mixed UNESCO World Heritage Site. Guatemala is a country of distinct fauna. It has some 1246 known species. Of these, 6.7% are endemic and 8.1% are threatened. Guatemala is home to at least 8,682 species of vascular plants, of which 13.5% are endemic. 5.4% of Guatemala is protected under IUCN categories I-V.[citation needed]

The Maya Biosphere Reserve in the department of Petén has 2,112,940 ha,[181] making it the second-largest forest in Central America after Bosawas. It had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 3.85/10, ranking it 138th globally out of 172 countries.[182]

Government and politics

Political system

Guatemala is a constitutional democratic republic whereby the President of Guatemala is both head of state and head of government, and of a multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Congress of the Republic. The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature.

On 2 September 2015, Otto Pérez Molina resigned as President of Guatemala due to a corruption scandal and was replaced by Alejandro Maldonado until January 2016.[183] Congress appointed former Universidad de San Carlos President Alfonso Fuentes Soria as the new vice president to replace Maldonado.[184]

Jimmy Morales assumed office on 14 January 2016.[176] In January 2020, he was succeeded by Alejandro Giammattei.[178]

Foreign relations

Guatemala has long claimed all or part of the territory of neighboring Belize. Owing to this territorial dispute, Guatemala did not recognize Belize's independence until 6 September 1991,[185] but the dispute is not resolved. Negotiations are currently under way under the auspices of the Organization of American States to conclude it.[186][187]

Military

Guatemala has a modest military, with between 15,000 and 20,000 personnel.[188]

In 2017, Guatemala signed the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.[189]

Administrative divisions

Guatemala is divided into 22 departments (Spanish: departamentos) and sub-divided into about 335 municipalities (Spanish: municipios).[190]

Human rights

Killings and death squads have been common in Guatemala since the end of the civil war in 1996. They often had ties to Clandestine Security Apparatuses (Cuerpos Ilegales y Aparatos Clandestinos de Seguridad – CIACS), organizations of current and former members of the military involved in organized crime. They had significant influence, now somewhat lessened,[191] but extrajudicial killings continue.[192] In July 2004, the Inter-American Court condemned the 18 July 1982 massacre of 188 Achi-Maya in Plan de Sanchez, and for the first time in its history, ruled the Guatemalan Army had committed genocide. It was the first ruling by the court against the Guatemalan state for any of the 626 massacres reported in its 1980s scorched-earth campaign.[192] In those massacres, 83 percent of the victims were Maya and 17 percent Ladino.[192]

Extra-Judicial Killings in Guatemala
2010 5,072
2011 279
2012 439
source: Center for Legal Action in Human Rights (CALDH)[191]

In 2008, Guatemala became the first country to officially recognize femicide, the murder of a female because of her gender, as a crime.[193] Guatemala has the third-highest femicide rate in the world, after El Salvador and Jamaica, with around 9.1 murders for every 100,000 women from 2007 to 2012.[193]

Economy

 
Historical GDP per capita development of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras
 
A proportional representation of Guatemala exports, 2019
 
Fields in Quetzaltenango.

Guatemala is the largest economy in Central America, with a GDP (PPP) per capita of US$5,200. However, Guatemala faces many social problems and is one of the poorest countries in Latin America. The income distribution is highly unequal with more than half of the population below the national poverty line and just over 400,000 (3.2%) unemployed. The CIA World Fact Book considers 54.0% of the population of Guatemala to be living in poverty in 2009.[194][195]

In 2010, the Guatemalan economy grew by 3%, recovering gradually from the 2009 crisis, as a result of the falling demands from the United States and other Central American markets and the slowdown in foreign investment in the middle of the global recession.[196]

Remittances from Guatemalans living in United States now constitute the largest single source of foreign income (two-thirds of exports and one tenth of GDP).[194]

Some of Guatemala's main exports are fruits, vegetables, flowers, handicrafts, cloths and others. It is a leading exporter of cardamom[197] and coffee.[198]

In the face of a rising demand for biofuels, the country is growing and exporting an increasing amount of raw materials for biofuel production, especially sugar cane and palm oil. Critics say that this development leads to higher prices for staple foods like corn, a major ingredient in the Guatemalan diet. As a consequence of the subsidization of US American corn, Guatemala imports nearly half of its corn from the United States that is using 40 percent of its crop harvest for biofuel production.[199] In 2014, the government was considering ways to legalize poppy and marijuana production, hoping to tax production and use tax revenues to fund drug prevention programs and other social projects.[200]

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in purchasing power parity (PPP) in 2010 was estimated at US$70.15 billion. The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 63%, followed by the industry sector at 23.8% and the agriculture sector at 13.2% (2010 est.). Mines produce gold, silver, zinc, cobalt and nickel.[201] The agricultural sector accounts for about two-fifths of exports, and half of the labor force. Organic coffee, sugar, textiles, fresh vegetables, and bananas are the country's main exports. Inflation was 3.9% in 2010.

The 1996 peace accords that ended the decades-long civil war removed a major obstacle to foreign investment. Tourism has become an increasing source of revenue for Guatemala thanks to the new foreign investment.

In March 2006, Guatemala's congress ratified the Dominican Republic – Central American Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) between several Central American nations and the United States.[202] Guatemala also has free trade agreements with Taiwan and Colombia.

Tourism

Tourism has become one of the main drivers of the economy, with tourism estimated at $1.8 billion to the economy in 2008. Guatemala receives around two million tourists annually. In recent years, there has been an increase in the number of cruise ships visiting Guatemalan seaports, leading to higher tourist numbers. Tourist destinations include Mayan archaeological sites (e.g. Tikal in the Peten, Quiriguá in Izabal, Iximche in Tecpan Chimaltenango and Guatemala City), natural attractions (e.g. Lake Atitlán and Semuc Champey) and historical sites such as the colonial city of Antigua Guatemala, which is recognized as a UNESCO Cultural Heritage site.

Demographics

 
Guatemala's population (1950–2010).[203]
 
Population pyramid in 2020

Guatemala has a population of 17,608,483 (2021 est).[8][9] With only 885,000 in 1900, this constitutes the fastest population growth in the Western Hemisphere during the 20th century.[204] The Republic of Guatemala's first census was taken in 1778.[205] The census records for 1778, 1880, 1893 and 1921 were used as scrap paper and no longer exist, although their statistical information was preserved.[206] Censuses have not been taken at regular intervals. Note that the 1837 census was discredited at the time; statistician Don Jose de la Valle made a calculation that in 1837 the population of Guatemala was 600,000.[205] The 1940 census was burned.[207][206] Data from the remaining censuses is in the Historical Population table below.

Historical Population
Census Population
1778 430,859[205]
1825 507,126[205]
1837 490,787[205]
1852 787,000[205]
1880 1,224,602[208]
1893 1,364,678[209]
1914 2,183,166[207]
1921 2,004,900[207]
1950 2,870,272[207]
1964 4,287,997[210]
1973 5,160,221[210]
1981 6,054,227[210]
1994 8,321,067[210]
2002 11,183,388[211]
2018 14,901,286[2]

Guatemala is heavily centralized: transportation, communications, business, politics, and the most relevant urban activity takes place in the capital of Guatemala City,[citation needed] whose urban area has a population of almost 3 million.[194]

The estimated median age in Guatemala is 20 years old, 19.4 for males and 20.7 years for females.[194] Guatemala is demographically one of the youngest countries in the Western Hemisphere, comparable to most of central Africa and Iraq. The proportion of the population below the age of 15 in 2010 was 41.5%, 54.1% were aged between 15 and 65 years of age, and 4.4% were aged 65 years or older.[203]

 
Indigenous Guatemalan women in Antigua Guatemala.

Diaspora

A significant number of Guatemalans live outside of their country. The majority of the Guatemalan diaspora is located in the United States of America, with estimates ranging from 480,665[212] to 1,489,426.[213] Emigration to the United States has led to the growth of Guatemalan communities in California, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, New York, New Jersey, Texas, Rhode Island and elsewhere since the 1970s.[214] However, as of July 2019, the United States and Guatemala signed a deal to restrict migration and asylum seekers from Guatemala.[215]

Below are estimates of the number of Guatemalans living abroad for certain countries:

Country 2019
  United States 1,070,743
  Mexico 44,178
  Belize 25,086
  Canada 18,398
  El Salvador 9,005
  Spain 7,678
  Honduras 4,681
  France 3,296
  Costa Rica 2,699
  Italy 2,299
Total 1,205,644
Source:DatosMacro.[216]

Ethnic groups

Ethnic groups in Guatemala (2018 Census)[2]
Ethnic groups percent
Ladino
56.01%
Mayan
41.66%
Xinca
1.77%
Afro-Guatemalan
0.19%
Garífuna
0.13%
Foreign
0.24%

Guatemala is populated by a variety of ethnic, cultural, racial, and linguistic groups. According to the 2018 Census conducted by the National Institute of Statistics (INE), 56% of the population is Ladino reflecting mixed indigenous and European heritage.[217] Indigenous Guatemalans are 43.6% of the national population, which is one of the largest percentages in Latin America, behind only Peru and Bolivia. Most indigenous Guatemalans (41.7% of the national population) are of the Maya people, namely K'iche' (11.0% of the total population), Q'eqchi (8.3%), Kaqchikel (7.8%), Mam (5.2%), and "other Maya" (7.6%). 2% of the national population is indigenous non-Maya. 1.8% of the population is Xinca (mesoamerican), and 0.1% of the population is Garifuna (African/Carib mix).[217] "However, indigenous rights activists put the indigenous figure closer to 61 per cent." [218]

White Guatemalans of European descent, also called Criollo, are not differentiated from Ladinos (mixed-race) individuals in the Guatemalan census.[217] Most are descendants of German and Spanish settlers, and others derive from Italians, British, French, Swiss, Belgians, Dutch, Russians and Danes. German settlers are credited with bringing the tradition of Christmas trees to Guatemala.[219]

The population includes about 110,000 Salvadorans. The Garífuna, descended primarily from Black Africans who lived and intermarried with indigenous peoples from St. Vincent, live mainly in Livingston and Puerto Barrios. Afro-Guatemalans and mulattos are descended primarily from banana plantation workers. There are also Asians, mostly of Chinese descent but also Arabs of Lebanese and Syrian descent.[220]

Languages

Languages in Guatemala
Languages percent
Spanish
69.9%
Mayan languages
29.6%
English
0.1%
Other
0.2%
None
0.1%
 
Language map of Guatemala. The "Castilian" areas represent Spanish.

Guatemala's sole official language is Spanish, spoken by 93 percent of the population as either the first or second language.

Twenty-one Mayan languages are spoken, especially in rural areas, as well as two non-Mayan Indigenous languages: Xinca, which is indigenous to the country, and Garifuna, an Arawakan language spoken on the Caribbean coast. According to the Language Law of 2003, these languages are recognized as national languages.[221]

Indigenous integration and bilingual education

Throughout the 20th century there have been many developments in the integration of Mayan languages into the Guatemalan society and educational system. Originating from political reasons, these processes have aided the revival of some Mayan languages and advanced bilingual education in the country.

In 1945, in order to overcome "the Indian problem", the Guatemalan government founded The Institute Indigents ta National (NH), the purpose of which was to teach literacy to Mayan children in their mother tongue instead of Spanish, to prepare the ground for later assimilation of the latter. The teaching of literacy in the first language, which received support from the UN, significantly advanced in 1952, when the SIL (Summer Institute of Linguistics), located in Dallas, Texas, partnered with the Guatemalan Ministry of Education; within 2 years, numerous written works in Mayan languages had been printed and published, and vast advancement was done in the translation of the New Testament. Further efforts to integrate the indigenous into the Ladino[222] society were made in the following years, including the invention of a special alphabet to assist Mayan students transition to Spanish, and bilingual education in the Q'eqchi' area. When Spanish became the official language of Guatemala in 1965, the government started several programs, such as the Bilingual Castellanizacion Program and the Radiophonic Schools, to accelerate the move of Mayan students to Spanish. Unintentionally, the efforts to integrate the indigenous using language, especially the new alphabet, gave institutions tools to use Mayan tongues in schools, and while improving Mayan children's learning, they left them unequipped to learn in a solely Spanish environment. So, an additional expansion of bilingual education took place in 1980, when an experimental program in which children were to be instructed in their mother tongue until they are fluent enough in Spanish was created. The program proved successful when the students of the pilot showed higher academic achievements than the ones in the Spanish-only control schools. In 1987, when the pilot was to finish, bilingual education was made official in Guatemala.

Religion

 
The Catedral Metropolitana, Guatemala City.

Christianity is very influential in nearly all of Guatemalan society, both in cosmology and social-politic composition. The country, once dominated by Roman Catholicism (introduced by the Spanish during the colonial era), is now influenced by a diversity of Christian denominations. The Roman Catholic Church remains the largest Church denomination, passing from 57.7% in 2001 to 47.9% as of 2012 (SEPAL 2001, CID Gallup 2012). During 2001-2012, the already numerous Protestant population, grew from little more than a quarter of the population to 38.2%. Those claiming no religious affiliation were down from 13.9% to 11.6%. The remainder, including Mormons and adherents of Judaism, Islam, and Buddhism, continued to register at more than 2 percent of the population.

Since the 1960s, and particularly during the 1980s, Guatemala has experienced the rapid growth of Protestantism, especially evangelical varieties. Guatemala has been described as the most heavily evangelical nation in Latin America,[223] with multitudes of unregistered churches,[224] although Brazil[225] or Honduras may be.

Over the past two decades, particularly since the end of the civil war, Guatemala has seen heightened missionary activity. Protestant denominations have grown markedly in recent decades, chiefly Evangelical and Pentecostal varieties; growth is particularly strong among the ethnic Maya population, with the National Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Guatemala maintaining 11 indigenous-language presbyteries. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has grown from 40,000 members in 1984 to 164,000 in 1998, and continues to expand.[226][227]

The growth of Eastern Orthodox Church in Guatemala has been especially strong, with hundreds of thousands of converts in the last five years,[228][229][230][better source needed] giving the country the highest proportion of Orthodox adherents in the Western Hemisphere.

Traditional Maya religion persists through the process of inculturation, in which certain practices are incorporated into Catholic ceremonies and worship when they are sympathetic to the meaning of Catholic belief.[231][232] Indigenous religious practices are increasing as a result of the cultural protections established under the peace accords. The government has instituted a policy of providing altars at every Maya ruin to facilitate traditional ceremonies.

 
A church in San Andrés Xecul.

Immigration

During the colonial era Guatemala received immigrants (settlers) only from Spain. Subsequently, Guatemala received waves of immigration from Europe in the mid 19th century and early 20th century.[clarification needed] Primarily from Germany, these immigrants installed coffee and cardamom fincas in Alta Verapaz, Zacapa, Quetzaltenango, Baja Verapaz and Izabal. To a lesser extent people also arrived from Spain, France, Belgium, England, Italy, Sweden, etc.

Many European immigrants to Guatemala were politicians, refugees, and entrepreneurs as well as families looking to settle. Up to 1950 Guatemala was the Central American country that received the most immigrants, behind Costa Rica, and large numbers of immigrants are still received today.[clarification needed] Since the 1890s, there has been immigration from East Asia.[citation needed] Also, beginning with the First World War, the immigrant population is being strengthened by Jewish immigration.[citation needed]

During the second half of the twentieth century, Latin American immigration increased in Guatemala, particularly from other Central American countries, Mexico, Cuba, and Argentina, although most of these immigrants stayed only temporarily before going to their final destinations in the United States.[citation needed]

Country 2019
  El Salvador 19,704
  Mexico 18,003
  United States 8,871
  Nicaragua 8,787
  Honduras 8,608
  South Korea 1,833
  Spain 1,354
  Costa Rica 1,192
  Colombia 1,186
  Belize 904
Total 80,421
Source:DatosMacro.[233]

Health

Guatemala has among the worst health outcomes in Latin America with some of the highest infant mortality rates, and one of the lowest life expectancies at birth in the region.[234] With about 16,000 doctors for its 16 million people, Guatemala has about half the doctor-citizen ratio recommended by the WHO.[235] Since the end of the Guatemalan Civil War in 1997, the Ministry of Health has extended healthcare access to 54% of the rural population.[236]

Healthcare has received different levels of support from different political administrations who disagree on how best to manage distribution of services – via a private or a public entity – and the scale of financing that should be made available.[236] As of 2013, the Ministry of Health lacked the financial means to monitor or evaluate its programs.[236]

Total healthcare spending, both public and private, has remained constant at between 6.4 and 7.3% of the GDP.[237][238] Per-capita average annual healthcare spending was only $368 in 2012.[238] Guatemalan patients choose between indigenous treatments or Western medicine when they engage with the health system.[239]

Education

74.5% of the population aged 15 and over is literate, the lowest literacy rate in Central America. Guatemala has a plan to increase literacy over the next 20 years.[240]

The government runs a number of public elementary and secondary-level schools, as youth in Guatemala do not fully participate in education. These schools are free, though the cost of uniforms, books, supplies, and transportation makes them less accessible to the poorer segments of society and significant numbers of poor children do not attend school.[241] Many middle and upper-class children go to private schools. Guatemala has one public university (USAC or Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala), and fourteen private ones (see List of universities in Guatemala). USAC was the first university in Guatemala and one of the first Universities of America.

Organizations such as Child Aid, Pueblo a Pueblo, and Common Hope, which train teachers in villages throughout the Central Highlands region, are working to improve educational outcomes for children. Lack of training for rural teachers is one of the key contributors to Guatemala's low literacy rates.

Culture

 
A Guatemalan woman selling souvenirs.

Guatemala City is home to many of the nation's libraries and museums, including the National Archives, the National Library, and the Museum of Archeology and Ethnology, which has an extensive collection of Maya artifacts. It also boasts private museums such as the Ixchel Museum of Indigenous Textiles and Clothing and the Museo Popol Vuh, which focuses on Maya archaeology. Both these museums are housed on the Universidad Francisco Marroquín campus. Most of the 329 municipalities in the country have at least a small museum.

Art

Guatemala has produced many indigenous artists who follow centuries-old Pre-Columbian traditions. Reflecting Guatemala's colonial and post-colonial history, encounters with multiple global art movements also have produced a wealth of artists who have combined the traditional primitivist or naive aesthetic with European, North American, and other traditions.

The Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas "Rafael Rodríguez Padilla" is Guatemala's leading art school, and several leading indigenous artists, also graduates of that school, have work in the permanent collection of the Museo Nacional de Arte Moderno in the capital city. Contemporary Guatemalan artists who have gained reputations outside of Guatemala include Dagoberto Vásquez, Luis Rolando Ixquiac Xicara, Carlos Mérida,[242] Aníbal López, Roberto González Goyri, and Elmar René Rojas.[243]

Literature

Cinema

The Guatemalan director Jayro Bustamante has gained an international audience with his films focused on Guatemalan contemporary society and politics : Ixcanul in 2015, and Temblores and La Llorona (The Weeping Woman) in 2019.

Media and news

Major national newspapers in Guatemala include Prensa Libre, El Periodico and Siglo21.[246][247] Guatemala also has a few major local channels and radio stations, such as one of Guatemala's major radio stations, Emisoras Unidas.

Music

 

Guatemalan music comprises a number of styles and expressions. Guatemalan social change has been empowered by music such as nueva cancion, which blends together histories, present-day issues, and the political values and struggles of common people. The Maya had an intense musical practice, as documented by their iconography.[248][249] Guatemala was also one of the first regions in the New World to be introduced to European music, from 1524 on. Many composers from the Renaissance, baroque, classical, romantic, and contemporary music styles have contributed works of all genres. The marimba, which is like a wooden xylophone,[250] is the national instrument and its music is widely found in Guatemala.[251] It has developed a large repertoire of very attractive pieces that have been popular for more than a century.

The Historia General de Guatemala has published a series of CDs compiling the historical music of Guatemala, in which every style is represented, from the Maya, colonial, independent and republican eras to the present. Many contemporary music groups in Guatemala play Caribbean music, salsa, Garifuna-influenced punta, Latin pop, Mexican regional, and mariachi.

Cuisine

 
Black and red tamales in Guatemala

Many traditional foods in Guatemalan cuisine are based on Mayan cuisine and prominently feature maize, chilies and black beans as key ingredients. Traditional dishes also include a variety of stews including Kak'ik (Kak-ik), which is a tomato-based stew with turkey, pepian, and cocido. Guatemala is also known for its antojitos, which include small tamales called chuchitos, fried plantains, and tostadas with tomato sauce, guacamole or black beans. Certain foods are also commonly eaten on certain days of the week; for example, a popular custom is to eat paches (a kind of tamale made from potatoes) on Thursday. Certain dishes are also associated with special occasions, such as fiambre for All Saints' Day on 1 November, or tamales and ponche (fruit punch), which are both very common around Christmas.

Sports

Football

Football is the most popular sport in Guatemala and its national team has appeared in 18 editions of the CONCACAF Championship, winning it once, in 1967. However, the team has failed to qualify to a FIFA World Cup so far. Established in 1919, the National Football Federation of Guatemala organizes the country's national league and its lower-level competitions.

Futsal

Futsal is probably the most successful team sport in Guatemala. Its national team won the 2008 CONCACAF Futsal Championship as hosts. It was also the runner-up in 2012 as hosts and won the bronze medal in 2016.

Guatemala participated for the first time in the FIFA Futsal World Cup in 2000, as hosts, and has played in every competition from 2008 onwards. It has never passed the first round. It has also participated in every Grand Prix de Futsal since 2009, reaching the semifinals in 2014.

Olympics

The Guatemalan Olympic Committee was founded in 1947 and recognized by the International Olympic Committee that same year. Guatemala participated in the 1952 Summer Olympics, and in every edition since the 1968 Summer Olympics. It has also appeared in a single Winter Olympics edition, in 1988.

Erick Barrondo won the only Olympic medal for Guatemala so far, silver in race walking at the 2012 Summer Olympics.

Other sports

Guatemala also keeps national sports teams in several disciplines such as basketball or beach volleyball.[252]

See also

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Further reading

  • Gómez Carrillo, Enrique (1898). "Interview from Enrique Gómez Carrillo with His Excellency, President Manuel Estrada Cabrera". Diario de Centro América (in Spanish). Guatemala.
  • Garcia Ferreira, Roberto (2008). "The CIA and Jacobo Arbenz: The story of a disinformation campaign". Journal of Third World Studies. United States. XXV (2): 59.
  • Koeppel, Dan (2008). Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World. New York: Hudson Street Press. p. 153. ISBN 9781101213919.
  • Krehm, William (1999). Democracies and Tyrannies of the Caribbean in the 1940s. COMER Publications. ISBN 978-1-896266-81-7.
  • Marroquín Rojas, Clemente (1971). Francisco Morazán y Rafael Carrera (in Spanish). Guatemala: Piedrasanta.
  • Martínez Peláez, Severo (1988). "Racismo y Análisis Histórico de la Definición del Indio Guatemalteco" (in Spanish). Guatemala: Universitaria. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Martínez Peláez, Severo (1990). La patria del criollo; ensayo de interpretación de la realidad colonial guatemalteca (in Spanish). México: Ediciones en Marcha.
  • McCreery, David (1994). Rural Guatemala, 1760–1940. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-2318-3.
  • Medina, José Toribio. La imprenta en Guatemala (1660-1821) por José Toribio Medina. Chile: Impreso en casa del autor, 1910, 1910.
  • Mendoza, Juan Manuel (1946). Biografía de Enrique Gómez Carrillo: su vida, su obra y su época (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). Guatemala: Tipografía Nacional.
  • Montenegro, Gustavo Adolfo (2005). . Revista Domigo de Prensa Libre (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
  • Montúfar, Lorenzo; Salazar, Ramón A. (1892). El centenario del general Francisco Morazán (in Spanish). Guatemala: Tipografía Nacional.
  • Rabe, Stephen G. (1988). Eisenhower and Latin America: The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4204-1.
  • Rosa, Ramón (1974). Historia del Benemérito Gral. Don Francisco Morazán, ex Presidente de la República de Centroamérica (in Spanish). Tegucigalpa: Ministerio de Educación Pública, Ediciones Técnicas Centroamericana.
  • Rugeley, Terry (1996). Yucatan's Maya Peasantry and the Origins of the Caste War. San Antonio, TX: University of Texas. ISBN 978-0-292-77078-2.
  • Rugeley, Terry (2001). Maya Wars: Ethnographic Accounts from Nineteenth Century Yucatan. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3355-3.
  • Sabino, Carlos (2007). Guatemala, la historia silenciada (1944–1989) (in Spanish). Vol. Tomo 1: Revolución y Liberación. Guatemala: Fondo Nacional para la Cultura Económica.
  • Stephens, John Lloyd; Catherwood, Frederick (1854). Incidents of travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan. London, England: Arthur Hall, Virtue and Co.
  • Striffler, Steve; Moberg, Mark (2003). Banana wars: power, production, and history in the Americas. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-3196-4.
  • Taracena, Arturo (2011). (in Spanish) (3rd ed.). Guatemala: Biblioteca básica de historia de Guatemala. ISBN 978-9929-587-42-7. Archived from the original on 9 January 2016. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  • Vanden, Harry E.; Prevost, Gary, eds. (2002). "Chapter Ten: Guatemala". Politics of Latin America: The Power Game. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512317-4.
guatemala, this, article, about, country, central, america, other, uses, disambiguation, coordinates, ɑː, ɑː, listen, gwah, spanish, ɡwateˈmala, listen, officially, republic, spanish, república, country, central, america, bordered, north, west, mexico, northea. This article is about the country in Central America For other uses see Guatemala disambiguation Coordinates 15 30 N 90 15 W 15 500 N 90 250 W 15 500 90 250 Guatemala ˌ ɡ w ɑː t e ˈ m ɑː l e listen GWAH te MAH le Spanish ɡwateˈmala listen officially the Republic of Guatemala Spanish Republica de Guatemala is a country in Central America It is bordered to the north and west by Mexico to the northeast by Belize and the Caribbean to the east by Honduras to the southeast by El Salvador and to the south by the Pacific Ocean With an estimated population of around 17 6 million 8 9 Guatemala is the most populous country in Central America and the 11th most populous country in the Americas It is a representative democracy with its capital and largest city being Nueva Guatemala de la Asuncion also known as Guatemala City the most populous city in Central America Republic of GuatemalaRepublica de Guatemala Spanish Flag Coat of armsMotto Libre Crezca Fecundo 1 Spanish English Grow Free and Fertile Anthem Himno Nacional de Guatemala English National Anthem of Guatemala March La Granadera English The Song of the Grenadier source source Location of Guatemala dark green in the Western Hemisphere grey Capitaland largest cityGuatemala City14 38 N 90 30 W 14 633 N 90 500 W 14 633 90 500Official languagesSpanishEthnic groups 2018 2 56 01 Ladino Mestizo41 66 Maya1 77 Xinca0 19 Afro Guatemalan0 13 Garifuna0 24 ForeignReligion 2017 3 88 Christianity 45 Roman Catholic 42 Protestant 1 Other Christian11 No religion1 OtherDemonym s GuatemalanChapinGovernmentUnitary presidential republic PresidentAlejandro Giammattei Vice PresidentGuillermo Castillo President of the CongressShirley RiveraLegislatureCongress of the RepublicIndependence Declared from the Spanish Empire15 September 1821 Declared from theFirst Mexican Empire1 July 1823 Declared from the Federal Republic of Central America17 April 1839 Current constitution31 May 1985Area Total108 889 km2 42 042 sq mi 105th Water 0 4Population 2022 estimate17 703 190 4 69th Density129 km2 334 1 sq mi 85th GDP PPP 2022 estimate Total 185 8 billion 5 77th Per capita 9 931 5 121nd GDP nominal 2022 estimate Total 91 3 billion 5 70th Per capita 4 880 5 108th Gini 2014 48 3 6 highHDI 2021 0 627 7 medium 135thCurrencyQuetzal GTQ Time zoneUTC 6 CST Date formatdd mm yyyyDriving siderightCalling code 502ISO 3166 codeGTInternet TLD gtThe territory of modern Guatemala hosted the core of the Maya civilization which extended across Mesoamerica In the 16th century most of this area was conquered by the Spanish and claimed as part of the viceroyalty of New Spain Guatemala attained independence in 1821 from Spain and Mexico In 1823 it became part of the Federal Republic of Central America which dissolved by 1841 From the mid to late 19th century Guatemala suffered chronic instability and civil strife Beginning in the early 20th century it was ruled by a series of dictators backed by the United Fruit Company and the United States government In 1944 authoritarian leader Jorge Ubico was overthrown by a pro democratic military coup initiating a decade long revolution that led to sweeping social and economic reforms A U S backed military coup in 1954 ended the revolution and installed a dictatorship 10 From 1960 to 1996 Guatemala endured a bloody civil war fought between the U S backed government and leftist rebels including genocidal massacres of the Maya population perpetrated by the military 11 12 13 A peace accord negotiated by the United Nations has resulted in continued economic growth and successful democratic elections although poverty crime drug trafficking and civil instability remain major issues As of 2021 update Guatemala ranks 31st of 33 Latin American and Caribbean countries in the Human Development Index 14 Although rich in export goods around a quarter of the population 4 6 million face food insecurity which has been worsened by the ongoing food crisis resulting from the Russian invasion of Ukraine 15 Guatemala s abundance of biologically significant and unique ecosystems includes many endemic species and contributes to Mesoamerica s designation as a biodiversity hotspot 16 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre Columbian 2 1 1 Archaeological investigation 2 2 Spanish era 1519 1821 2 3 Independence and the 19th century 1821 1847 2 4 Republic 1847 1851 2 5 Second Carrera government 1851 1865 2 6 Vicente Cerna y Cerna regime 1865 1871 2 7 Liberal governments 1871 1898 2 8 Manuel Estrada Cabrera regime 1898 1920 2 9 Jorge Ubico regime 1931 1944 2 10 Guatemalan Revolution 1944 1954 2 11 Coup and civil war 1954 1996 2 12 1996 2000 2 13 Since 2000 2 14 Perez Molina government and La Linea 2 15 Jimmy Morales and Alejandro Giammattei in power 2015 present 3 Geography 3 1 Natural disasters 3 2 Biodiversity 4 Government and politics 4 1 Political system 4 2 Foreign relations 4 3 Military 4 4 Administrative divisions 4 5 Human rights 5 Economy 5 1 Tourism 6 Demographics 6 1 Diaspora 6 2 Ethnic groups 6 3 Languages 6 4 Indigenous integration and bilingual education 6 5 Religion 6 6 Immigration 6 7 Health 6 8 Education 7 Culture 7 1 Art 7 2 Literature 7 3 Cinema 7 4 Media and news 7 5 Music 7 6 Cuisine 7 7 Sports 7 7 1 Football 7 7 2 Futsal 7 7 3 Olympics 7 7 4 Other sports 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology EditThe name Guatemala comes from the Nahuatl word Cuauhtemallan or place of many trees a derivative of the K iche Mayan word for many trees 17 18 or perhaps more specifically for the Cuate Cuatli tree Eysenhardtia This was the name that the Tlaxcaltecan warriors who accompanied Pedro de Alvarado during the Spanish Conquest gave to this territory 19 History EditMain article History of Guatemala Pre Columbian Edit The first evidence of human habitation in Guatemala dates to 12 000 BC Archaeological evidence such as obsidian arrowheads found in various parts of the country suggests a human presence as early as 18 000 BC 20 There is archaeological proof that early Guatemalan settlers were hunter gatherers Pollen samples from Peten and the Pacific coast indicate that maize cultivation had been developed by the people by 3500 BC 21 Sites dating to 6500 BC have been found in the Quiche region in the Highlands and Sipacate and Escuintla on the central Pacific coast Archaeologists divide the pre Columbian history of Mesoamerica into the Preclassic period 3000 BC to 250 AD the Classic period 250 to 900 AD and the Postclassic period 900 to 1500 AD 22 Until recently the Preclassic was regarded by researchers as a formative period in which the peoples typically lived in huts in small villages of farmers with few permanent buildings This notion has been challenged since the late 20th century by discoveries of monumental architecture from that period such as an altar in La Blanca San Marcos from 1000 BC ceremonial sites at Miraflores and Naranjo from 801 BC the earliest monumental masks and the Mirador Basin cities of Nakbe Xulnal El Tintal Wakna and El Mirador On 3 June 2020 researchers published an article in Nature describing their discovery of the oldest and largest Maya site known as Aguada Fenix in Mexico It features monumental architecture an elevated rectangular plateau measuring about 1 400 meters long and nearly 400 meters wide constructed of a mixture of earth and clay To the west is a 10 meter tall earthen mound Remains of other structures and reservoirs were also detected through the Lidar technology It is estimated to have been built from 1000 to 800 BC demonstrating that the Maya built large monumental complexes from their early period 23 Maya city of Tikal The Classic period of Mesoamerican civilization corresponds to the height of the Maya civilization It is represented by countless sites throughout Guatemala although the largest concentration is in Peten This period is characterized by urbanisation the emergence of independent city states and contact with other Mesoamerican cultures 24 This lasted until approximately 900 AD when the Classic Maya civilization collapsed 25 The Maya abandoned many of the cities of the central lowlands or were killed by a drought induced famine 25 The cause of the collapse is debated but the drought theory is gaining currency supported by evidence such as lakebeds ancient pollen and others 25 A series of prolonged droughts in what is otherwise a seasonal desert is thought to have decimated the Maya who relied on regular rainfall to support their dense population 26 The Post Classic period is represented by regional kingdoms such as the Itza Kowoj Yalain and Kejache in Peten and the Mam Ki che Kackchiquel Chajoma Tz utujil Poqomchi Q eqchi and Ch orti peoples in the highlands Their cities preserved many aspects of Maya culture The Maya civilization shares many features with other Mesoamerican civilizations due to the high degree of interaction and cultural diffusion that characterized the region Advances such as writing epigraphy and the calendar did not originate with the Maya however their civilization fully developed them Maya influence can be detected from Honduras Belize Guatemala and Northern El Salvador to as far north as central Mexico more than 1 000 km 620 mi from the Maya area Many outside influences are found in Maya art and architecture which are thought to have resulted from trade and cultural exchange rather than direct external conquest Archaeological investigation Edit In 2018 60 000 uncharted structures were revealed in northern Guatemala by archaeologists with the help of Lidar technology lasers The project applied Lidar technology on an area of 2 100 square kilometers in the Maya Biosphere Reserve in the Peten region of Guatemala Thanks to the new findings archaeologists believe that 7 11 million Maya people inhabited northern Guatemala during the late classical period from 650 to 800 A D twice the estimated population of medieval England 27 Lidar technology digitally removed the tree canopy to reveal ancient remains and showed that Maya cities such as Tikal were larger than previously assumed The use of Lidar revealed numerous houses palaces elevated highways and defensive fortifications According to archaeologist Stephen Houston it is one of the most overwhelming findings in over 150 years of Maya archaeology 28 27 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Spanish era 1519 1821 Edit See also Spanish conquest of Guatemala and Spanish conquest of Peten The Conquistador Pedro de Alvarado led the initial Spanish efforts to conquer Guatemala 38 After they arrived in the New World the Spanish started several expeditions to Guatemala beginning in 1519 Before long Spanish contact resulted in an epidemic that devastated native populations Hernan Cortes who had led the Spanish conquest of Mexico granted a permit to Captains Gonzalo de Alvarado and his brother Pedro de Alvarado to conquer this land Alvarado at first allied himself with the Kaqchikel nation to fight against their traditional rivals the K iche Quiche nation Alvarado later turned against the Kaqchikel and eventually brought the entire region under Spanish domination 39 During the colonial period Guatemala was an audiencia a captaincy general Capitania General de Guatemala of Spain and a part of New Spain Mexico 40 The first capital Villa de Santiago de Guatemala now known as Tecpan Guatemala was founded on 25 July 1524 near Iximche the Kaqchikel capital city The capital was moved to Ciudad Vieja on 22 November 1527 as a result of a Kaqchikel attack on Villa de Santiago de Guatemala Owing to its strategic location on the American Pacific Coast Guatemala became a supplementary node to the Transpacific Manila Galleon trade connecting Latin America to Asia via the Spanish owned Philippines 41 On 11 September 1541 the new capital was flooded when the lagoon in the crater of the Agua Volcano collapsed due to heavy rains and earthquakes the capital was then moved 6 km 4 mi to Antigua in the Panchoy Valley now a UNESCO World Heritage Site This city was destroyed by several earthquakes in 1773 1774 The King of Spain authorized moving the capital to its current location in the Ermita Valley which is named after a Catholic church dedicated to the Virgen del Carmen This new capital was founded on 2 January 1776 Independence and the 19th century 1821 1847 Edit Criollos rejoice upon learning about the declaration of independence from Spain on 15 September 1821 On 15 September 1821 the Captaincy General of Guatemala an administrative region of the Spanish Empire consisting of Chiapas Guatemala El Salvador Nicaragua Costa Rica and Honduras officially proclaimed its independence from Spain at a public meeting in Guatemala City Independence from Spain was gained and the Captaincy General of Guatemala joined the First Mexican Empire under Agustin de Iturbide Under the First Empire Mexico reached its greatest territorial extent stretching from northern California to the provinces of Central America excluding Panama which was then part of Colombia which had not initially approved becoming part of the Mexican Empire but joined the Empire shortly after their independence This region was formally a part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain throughout the colonial period but as a practical matter had been administered separately It was not until 1825 that Guatemala created its own flag 42 In 1838 the liberal forces of Honduran leader Francisco Morazan and Guatemalan Jose Francisco Barrundia invaded Guatemala and reached San Sur where they executed Chua Alvarez father in law of Rafael Carrera then a military commander and later the first president of Guatemala The liberal forces impaled Alvarez s head on a pike as a warning to followers of the Guatemalan caudillo 43 Carrera and his wife Petrona who had come to confront Morazan as soon as they learned of the invasion and were in Mataquescuintla swore they would never forgive Morazan even in his grave they felt it impossible to respect anyone who would not avenge family members 44 After sending several envoys whom Carrera would not receive and especially not Barrundia whom Carrera did not want to murder in cold blood Morazan began a scorched earth offensive destroying villages in his path and stripping them of assets The Carrera forces had to hide in the mountains 45 Believing Carrera totally defeated Morazan and Barrundia marched to Guatemala City and were welcomed as saviors by state governor Pedro Valenzuela and members of the conservative Aycinena clan es who proposed to sponsor one of the liberal battalions while Valenzuela and Barrundia gave Morazan all the Guatemalan resources needed to solve any financial problem he had 46 The criollos of both parties celebrated until dawn that they finally had a criollo caudillo like Morazan who was able to crush the peasant rebellion 47 The Federal Republic of Central America 1823 1838 with its capital in Guatemala City Morazan used the proceeds to support Los Altos and then replaced Valenzuela with Mariano Rivera Paz a member of the Aycinena clan although he did not return to that clan any property confiscated in 1829 In revenge Juan Jose de Aycinena y Pinol voted to dissolve the Central American Federation in San Salvador a little later forcing Morazan to return to El Salvador to fight for his federal mandate Along the way Morazan increased repression in eastern Guatemala as punishment for helping Carrera 48 Knowing that Morazan had gone to El Salvador Carrera tried to take Salama with the small force that remained but was defeated and lost his brother Laureano in combat With just a few men left he managed to escape badly wounded to Sanarate 49 After recovering somewhat he attacked a detachment in Jutiapa and got a small amount of booty which he gave to the volunteers who accompanied him He then prepared to attack Petapa near Guatemala City where he was victorious although with heavy casualties 50 In September of that year Carrera attempted an assault on the capital of Guatemala but the liberal general Carlos Salazar Castro defeated him in the fields of Villa Nueva and Carrera had to retreat 51 After unsuccessfully trying to take Quetzaltenango Carrera found himself both surrounded and wounded He had to capitulate to Mexican General Agustin Guzman who had been in Quetzaltenango since Vicente Filisola s arrival in 1823 Morazan had the opportunity to shoot Carrera but did not because he needed the support of the Guatemalan peasants to counter the attacks of Francisco Ferrera in El Salvador Instead Morazan left Carrera in charge of a small fort in Mita without any weapons Knowing that Morazan was going to attack El Salvador Francisco Ferrera gave arms and ammunition to Carrera and convinced him to attack Guatemala City 52 Meanwhile despite insistent advice to definitively crush Carrera and his forces Salazar tried to negotiate with him diplomatically he even went as far as to show that he neither feared nor distrusted Carrera by removing the fortifications of the Guatemalan capital in place since the battle of Villa Nueva 51 Taking advantage of Salazar s good faith and Ferrera s weapons Carrera took Guatemala City by surprise on 13 April 1839 Salazar Mariano Galvez and Barrundia fled before the arrival of Carrera s militiamen Salazar in his nightshirt vaulted roofs of neighboring houses and sought refuge 53 54 reaching the border disguised as a peasant 53 54 With Salazar gone Carrera reinstated Rivera Paz as head of state Between 1838 and 1840 a secessionist movement in the city of Quetzaltenango founded the breakaway state of Los Altos and sought independence from Guatemala The most important members of the Liberal Party of Guatemala and liberal enemies of the conservative regime moved to Los Altos leaving their exile in El Salvador 55 The liberals in Los Altos began severely criticizing the Conservative government of Rivera Paz 55 Los Altos was the region with the main production and economic activity of the former state of Guatemala Without Los Altos conservatives lost many of the resources that had given Guatemala hegemony in Central America 55 The government of Guatemala tried to reach a peaceful solution but two years of bloody conflict followed On 17 April 1839 Guatemala declared itself independent from the United Provinces of Central America In 1840 Belgium began to act as an external source of support for Carrera s independence movement in an effort to exert influence in Central America The Compagnie belge de colonisation Belgian Colonization Company commissioned by Belgian King Leopold I became the administrator of Santo Tomas de Castilla 56 replacing the failed British Eastern Coast of Central America Commercial and Agricultural Company 56 Even though the colony eventually crumbled Belgium continued to support Carrera in the mid 19th century although Britain continued to be the main business and political partner to Carrera 57 Rafael Carrera was elected Guatemalan Governor in 1844 Settlers from Germany arrived in the mid 19th century German settlers acquired land and grew coffee plantations in Alta Verapaz and Quetzaltenango citation needed Republic 1847 1851 Edit On 21 March 1847 Guatemala declared itself an independent republic and Carrera became its first president Proclamation Coin 1847 of the independent Republic of Guatemala During the first term as president Carrera brought the country back from extreme conservatism to a traditional moderation in 1848 the liberals were able to drive him from office after the country had been in turmoil for several months 58 59 Carrera resigned of his own free will and left for Mexico The new liberal regime allied itself with the Aycinena family and swiftly passed a law ordering Carrera s execution if he returned to Guatemalan soil 58 The liberal criollos from Quetzaltenango were led by general Agustin Guzman who occupied the city after Corregidor general Mariano Paredes was called to Guatemala City to take over the presidential office 60 They declared on 26 August 1848 that Los Altos was an independent state once again The new state had the support of Doroteo Vasconcelos regime in El Salvador and the rebel guerrilla army of Vicente and Serapio Cruz who were sworn enemies of Carrera 61 The interim government was led by Guzman himself and had Florencio Molina and the priest Fernando Davila as his Cabinet members 62 On 5 September 1848 the criollos altenses chose a formal government led by Fernando Antonio Martinez In the meantime Carrera decided to return to Guatemala and did so entering at Huehuetenango where he met with native leaders and told them that they must remain united to prevail the leaders agreed and slowly the segregated native communities started developing a new Indian identity under Carrera s leadership 63 In the meantime in the eastern part of Guatemala the Jalapa region became increasingly dangerous former president Mariano Rivera Paz and rebel leader Vicente Cruz were both murdered there after trying to take over the Corregidor office in 1849 63 When Carrera arrived to Chiantla in Huehuetenango he received two altenses emissaries who told him that their soldiers were not going to fight his forces because that would lead to a native revolt much like that of 1840 their only request from Carrera was to keep the natives under control 63 The altenses did not comply and led by Guzman and his forces they started chasing Carrera the caudillo hid helped by his native allies and remained under their protection when the forces of Miguel Garcia Granados arrived from Guatemala City looking for him 63 On learning that officer Jose Victor Zavala had been appointed as Corregidor in Suchitepequez Carrera and his hundred jacalteco bodyguards crossed a dangerous jungle infested with jaguars to meet his former friend Zavala not only did not capture him he agreed to serve under his orders thus sending a strong message to both liberal and conservatives in Guatemala City that they would have to negotiate with Carrera or battle on two fronts Quetzaltenango and Jalapa 64 Carrera went back to the Quetzaltenango area while Zavala remained in Suchitepequez as a tactical maneuver 65 Carrera received a visit from a cabinet member of Paredes and told him that he had control of the native population and that he assured Paredes that he would keep them appeased 64 When the emissary returned to Guatemala City he told the president everything Carrera said and added that the native forces were formidable 66 Guzman went to Antigua to meet with another group of Paredes emissaries they agreed that Los Altos would rejoin Guatemala and that the latter would help Guzman defeat his enemy and also build a port on the Pacific Ocean 66 Guzman was sure of victory this time but his plan evaporated when in his absence Carrera and his native allies occupied Quetzaltenango Carrera appointed Ignacio Yrigoyen as Corregidor and convinced him that he should work with the K iche Q anjobal and Mam leaders to keep the region under control 67 On his way out Yrigoyen murmured to a friend Now he is the king of the Indians indeed 67 Guzman then left for Jalapa where he struck a deal with the rebels while Luis Batres Juarros convinced President Paredes to deal with Carrera Back in Guatemala City within a few months Carrera was commander in chief backed by military and political support of the Indian communities from the densely populated western highlands 68 During the first presidency from 1844 to 1848 he brought the country back from excessive conservatism to a moderate regime and with the advice of Juan Jose de Aycinena y Pinol and Pedro de Aycinena restored relations with the Church in Rome with a Concordat ratified in 1854 69 Second Carrera government 1851 1865 Edit Captain General Rafael Carrera after being appointed president for Life in 1854 After Carrera returned from exile in 1849 the president of El Salvador Doroteo Vasconcelos granted asylum to the Guatemalan liberals who harassed the Guatemalan government in several different ways Jose Francisco Barrundia established a liberal newspaper for that specific purpose Vasconcelos supported a rebel faction named La Montana in eastern Guatemala providing and distributing money and weapons By late 1850 Vasconcelos was getting impatient at the slow progress of the war with Guatemala and decided to plan an open attack Under that circumstance the Salvadorean head of state started a campaign against the conservative Guatemalan regime inviting Honduras and Nicaragua to participate in the alliance only the Honduran government led by Juan Lindo accepted 58 In 1851 Guatemala defeated an Allied army from Honduras and El Salvador at the Battle of La Arada In 1854 Carrera was declared supreme and perpetual leader of the nation for life with the power to choose his successor He held that position until he died on 14 April 1865 While he pursued some measures to set up a foundation for economic prosperity to please the conservative landowners military challenges at home and a three year war with Honduras El Salvador and Nicaragua dominated his presidency His rivalry with Gerardo Barrios President of El Salvador resulted in open war in 1863 At Coatepeque the Guatemalans suffered a severe defeat which was followed by a truce Honduras joined with El Salvador and Nicaragua and Costa Rica with Guatemala The contest was finally settled in favor of Carrera who besieged and occupied San Salvador and dominated Honduras and Nicaragua He continued to act in concert with the Clerical Party and tried to maintain friendly relations with European governments Before he died Carrera nominated his friend and loyal soldier Army Marshall Vicente Cerna y Cerna as his successor Vicente Cerna y Cerna regime 1865 1871 Edit Vicente Cerna y Cerna was the president of Guatemala from 1865 to 1871 Further information Vicente Cerna y Cerna Vicente Cerna y Cerna was president of Guatemala from 24 May 1865 to 29 June 1871 70 Liberal author Alfonso Enrique Barrientos es 71 full citation needed described Marshall Cerna s government in the following manner 72 full citation needed A conservative and archaic government badly organized and with worse intentions was in charge of the country centralizing all powers in Vicente Cerna ambitious military man who not happy with the general rank had promoted himself to the Army Marshall rank even though that rank did not exist and it does not exist in the Guatemalan military The Marshall called himself President of the Republic but in reality he was the foreman of oppressed and savaged people cowardly enough that they had not dared to tell the dictator to leave threatening him with a revolution The State and Church were a single unit and the conservative regime was strongly allied to the power of regular clergy of the Catholic Church who were then among the largest landowners in Guatemala The tight relationship between church and state had been ratified by the Concordat of 1852 which was the law until Cerna was deposed in 1871 73 Even liberal generals like Serapio Cruz es realized that Rafael Carrera s political and military presence made him practically invincible Thus the generals fought under his command 58 and waited for a long time until Carrera s death before beginning their revolt against the tamer Cerna 74 During Cerna s presidency liberal party members were prosecuted and sent into exile among them those who started the Liberal Revolution of 1871 58 In 1871 the merchants guild Consulado de Comercio lost their exclusive court privilege They had major effects on the economics of the time and therefore land management From 1839 to 1871 the Consulado held a consistent monopolistic position in the regime 75 Liberal governments 1871 1898 Edit Further information Justo Rufino Barrios Guatemala s Liberal Revolution came in 1871 under the leadership of Justo Rufino Barrios who worked to modernize the country improve trade and introduce new crops and manufacturing During this era coffee became an important crop for Guatemala 76 Barrios had ambitions of reuniting Central America and took the country to war in an unsuccessful attempt to attain it losing his life on the battlefield in 1885 against forces in El Salvador Manuel Barillas was president from 16 March 1886 to 15 March 1892 Manuel Barillas was unique among liberal presidents of Guatemala between 1871 and 1944 he handed over power to his successor peacefully When election time approached he sent for the three Liberal candidates to ask them what their government plan would be 77 Happy with what he heard from general Reyna Barrios 77 Barillas made sure that a huge column of Quetzaltenango and Totonicapan indigenous people came down from the mountains to vote for him Reyna was elected president 78 Jose Maria Reina Barrios was president between 1892 and 1898 During Barrios s first term in office the power of the landowners over the rural peasantry increased He oversaw the rebuilding of parts of Guatemala City on a grander scale with wide Parisian style avenues He oversaw Guatemala hosting the first Exposicion Centroamericana Central American Fair in 1897 During his second term Barrios printed bonds to fund his ambitious plans fueling monetary inflation and the rise of popular opposition to his regime His administration also worked on improving the roads installing national and international telegraphs and introducing electricity to Guatemala City Completing a transoceanic railway was a main objective of his government with a goal to attract international investors at a time when the Panama Canal was not yet built Manuel Estrada Cabrera regime 1898 1920 Edit Main article Manuel Estrada Cabrera Manuel Estrada Cabrera ruled Guatemala between 1898 and 1920 After the assassination of general Jose Maria Reina Barrios on 8 February 1898 the Guatemalan cabinet called an emergency meeting to appoint a new successor but declined to invite Estrada Cabrera to the meeting even though he was the designated successor to the presidency There are two different descriptions of how Cabrera was able to become president The first states that Cabrera entered the cabinet meeting with pistol drawn to assert his entitlement to the presidency 79 while the second states that he showed up unarmed to the meeting and demanded the presidency by virtue of being the designated successor 80 The first civilian Guatemalan head of state in over 50 years Estrada Cabrera overcame resistance to his regime by August 1898 and called for elections in September which he won handily 81 In 1898 the legislature convened for the election of President Estrada Cabrera who triumphed thanks to the large number of soldiers and policemen who went to vote in civilian clothes and to the large number of illiterate family that they brought with them to the polls 82 One of Estrada Cabrera s most famous and most bitter legacies was allowing the entry of the United Fruit Company UFCO into the Guatemalan economic and political arena As a member of the Liberal Party he sought to encourage development of the nation s infrastructure of highways railroads and sea ports for the sake of expanding the export economy By the time Estrada Cabrera assumed the presidency there had been repeated efforts to construct a railroad from the major port of Puerto Barrios to the capital Guatemala City Owing to lack of funding exacerbated by the collapse of the internal coffee trade the railway fell 100 kilometres 60 mi short of its goal Estrada Cabrera decided without consulting the legislature or judiciary that striking a deal with the UFCO was the only way to finish the railway 83 Cabrera signed a contract with UFCO s Minor Cooper Keith in 1904 that gave the company tax exemptions land grants and control of all railroads on the Atlantic side 84 Estrada Cabrera often employed brutal methods to assert his authority Right at the beginning of his first presidential period he started prosecuting his political rivals and soon established a well organized web of spies One American ambassador returned to the United States after he learned the dictator had given orders to poison him Former president Manuel Barillas was stabbed to death in Mexico City Estrada Cabrera responded violently to workers strikes against UFCO In one incident when UFCO went directly to Estrada Cabrera to resolve a strike after the armed forces refused to respond the president ordered an armed unit to enter a workers compound The forces arrived in the night firing indiscriminately into the workers sleeping quarters wounding and killing an unspecified number 85 In 1906 Estrada faced serious revolts against his rule the rebels were supported by the governments of some of the other Central American nations but Estrada succeeded in putting them down Elections were held by the people against the will of Estrada Cabrera and thus he had the president elect murdered in retaliation In 1907 Estrada narrowly survived an assassination attempt when a bomb exploded near his carriage 86 It has been suggested that the extreme despotic characteristics of Estrada did not emerge until after an attempt on his life in 1907 87 Guatemala City was badly damaged in the 1917 Guatemala earthquake Estrada Cabrera continued in power until forced to resign after new revolts in 1920 By that time his power had declined drastically and he was reliant upon the loyalty of a few generals While the United States threatened intervention if he was removed through revolution a bipartisan coalition came together to remove him from the presidency He was removed from office after the national assembly charged that he was mentally incompetent and appointed Carlos Herrera in his place on 8 April 1920 88 Guatemala joined with El Salvador and Honduras in the Federation of Central America from 9 September 1921 until 14 January 1922 Carlos Herrera served as President of Guatemala from 1920 until 1921 He was succeeded by Jose Maria Orellana who served from 1921 until 1926 Lazaro Chacon Gonzalez then served until 1931 Jorge Ubico regime 1931 1944 Edit Main article Jorge Ubico The Great Depression began in 1929 and badly damaged the Guatemalan economy causing a rise in unemployment and leading to unrest among workers and laborers Afraid of a popular revolt the Guatemalan landed elite lent their support to Jorge Ubico who had become well known for efficiency and cruelty as a provincial governor Ubico won the election that followed in 1931 in which he was the only candidate 89 90 After his election his policies quickly became authoritarian He replaced the system of debt peonage with a brutally enforced vagrancy law requiring all men of working age who did not own land to work a minimum of 100 days of hard labor 91 His government used unpaid Indian labor to build roads and railways Ubico also froze wages at very low levels and passed a law allowing land owners complete immunity from prosecution for any action they took to defend their property 91 an action described by historians as legalizing murder 92 He greatly strengthened the police force turning it into one of the most efficient and ruthless in Latin America 93 He gave them greater authority to shoot and imprison people suspected of breaking the labor laws These laws created tremendous resentment against him among agricultural laborers 94 The government became highly militarized under his rule every provincial governor was a general in the army 95 Ubico continued his predecessor s policy of making massive concessions to the United Fruit Company often at a cost to Guatemala He granted the company 200 000 hectares 490 000 acres of public land in exchange for a promise to build a port a promise he later waived 96 Since its entry into Guatemala the United Fruit Company had expanded its land holdings by displacing farmers and converting their farmland to banana plantations This process accelerated under Ubico s presidency with the government doing nothing to stop it 97 The company received import duty and real estate tax exemptions from the government and controlled more land than any other individual or group It also controlled the sole railroad in the country the sole facilities capable of producing electricity and the port facilities at Puerto Barrios on the Atlantic coast 98 Ubico saw the United States as an ally against the supposed communist threat of Mexico and made efforts to gain its support When the US declared war against Germany in 1941 Ubico acted on American instructions and arrested all people in Guatemala of German descent 99 He also permitted the US to establish an air base in Guatemala with the stated aim of protecting the Panama Canal 100 However Ubico was an admirer of European fascists such as Francisco Franco and Benito Mussolini 101 and considered himself to be another Napoleon 102 He occasionally compared himself to Adolf Hitler 103 He dressed ostentatiously and surrounded himself with statues and paintings of Napoleon regularly commenting on the similarities between their appearances He militarized numerous political and social institutions including the post office schools and symphony orchestras and placed military officers in charge of many government posts 104 105 106 107 108 Guatemalan Revolution 1944 1954 Edit Main article Guatemalan Revolution On 1 July 1944 Ubico was forced to resign from the presidency in response to a wave of protests and a general strike inspired by brutal labor conditions among plantation workers 109 His chosen replacement General Juan Federico Ponce Vaides was forced out of office on 20 October 1944 by a coup d etat led by Major Francisco Javier Arana and Captain Jacobo Arbenz Guzman About 100 people were killed in the coup The country was then led by a military junta made up of Arana Arbenz and Jorge Toriello Garrido 110 Guatemala s democratically elected president Jacobo Arbenz was overthrown in a coup planned by the CIA The United Fruit Company had lobbied the U S to overthrow him The junta organized Guatemala s first free election which the philosophically conservative writer and teacher Juan Jose Arevalo who wanted to turn the country into a liberal capitalist society won with a majority of 86 111 His Christian Socialist policies were inspired to a large extent by the U S New Deal of President Franklin D Roosevelt during the Great Depression 112 Arevalo built new health centers increased funding for education and drafted a more liberal labor law 113 while criminalizing unions in workplaces with less than 500 workers 114 and cracking down on communists 115 Although Arevalo was popular among nationalists he had enemies in the church and the military and faced at least 25 coup attempts during his presidency 116 Arevalo was constitutionally prohibited from contesting the 1950 elections The largely free and fair elections were won by Jacobo Arbenz Guzman Arevalo s defense minister 117 Arbenz continued the moderate capitalist approach of Arevalo 118 His most important policy was Decree 900 a sweeping agrarian reform bill passed in 1952 119 120 Decree 900 transferred uncultivated land to landless peasants 119 Only 1 710 of the nearly 350 000 private land holdings were affected by the law 121 which benefited approximately 500 000 individuals or one sixth of the population 121 Coup and civil war 1954 1996 Edit Main articles 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat and Guatemalan Civil War See also United States involvement in regime change Despite their popularity within the country the reforms of the Guatemalan Revolution were disliked by the United States government which was predisposed by the Cold War to see it as communist and the United Fruit Company UFCO whose hugely profitable business had been affected by the end to brutal labor practices 115 122 The attitude of the U S government was also influenced by a propaganda campaign carried out by the UFCO 123 U S President Harry Truman authorized Operation PBFortune to topple Arbenz in 1952 with the support of Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza Garcia 124 but the operation was aborted when too many details became public 124 125 Dwight D Eisenhower was elected U S president in 1952 promising to take a harder line against communism the close links that his staff members John Foster Dulles and Allen Dulles had to the UFCO also predisposed him to act against Arbenz 126 Eisenhower authorized the CIA to carry out Operation PBSuccess in August 1953 The CIA armed funded and trained a force of 480 men led by Carlos Castillo Armas 127 128 The force invaded Guatemala on 18 June 1954 backed by a heavy campaign of psychological warfare including bombings of Guatemala City and an anti Arbenz radio station claiming to be genuine news 127 The invasion force fared poorly militarily but the psychological warfare and the possibility of a U S invasion intimidated the Guatemalan army which refused to fight Arbenz resigned on 27 June 129 130 Following negotiations in San Salvador Carlos Castillo Armas became president on 7 July 1954 129 Elections were held in early October from which all political parties were barred from participating Castillo Armas was the only candidate and won the election with 99 of the vote 129 Castillo Armas reversed Decree 900 and ruled until 26 July 1957 when he was assassinated by Romeo Vasquez a member of his personal guard After the rigged 112 election that followed General Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes assumed power He is celebrated for challenging the Mexican president to a gentleman s duel on the bridge on the south border to end a feud on the subject of illegal fishing by Mexican boats on Guatemala s Pacific coast two of which were sunk by the Guatemalan Air Force Ydigoras authorized the training of 5 000 anti Castro Cubans in Guatemala He also provided airstrips in the region of Peten for what later became the US sponsored failed Bay of Pigs Invasion in 1961 On 13 November 1960 a group of left wing junior military officers of the Escuela Politecnica national military academy led a failed revolt against Ydigoras government The rebels fled to the mountains of eastern Guatemala and neighboring Honduras and formed MR 13 Movimiento Revolucionario 13 Noviembre On 6 February 1962 in Bananera they attacked the offices of the United Fruit Company The attack sparked sympathetic strikes and university student walkouts throughout the country to which the government responded with a violent crackdown 131 In 1963 Ydigoras despite the firm opposition of the Kennedy administration had pledged to allow Arevalo return from exile and run in a free and open election Arevalo returned on 27 March 1963 to announce his candidacy for the scheduled November presidential elections however Ydigoras government was ousted on March 31 1963 when the Guatemalan Air Force attacked several military bases the coup was led by his Defense Minister Colonel Enrique Peralta Azurdia 132 The new regime intensified its counterinsurgency campaign against the guerrillas that had begun under Ydigoras Fuentes 133 In 1966 Julio Cesar Mendez Montenegro was elected president of Guatemala under the banner Democratic Opening Mendez Montenegro was the candidate of the Revolutionary Party a center left party that had its origins in the post Ubico era During this time rightist paramilitary organizations such as the White Hand Mano Blanca and the Anticommunist Secret Army Ejercito Secreto Anticomunista were formed Those groups were the forerunners of the infamous Death Squads Military advisers from the United States Army Special Forces Green Berets were sent to Guatemala to train Guatemala s armed forces and help transform it into a modern counter insurgency force which eventually made it the most sophisticated in Central America 134 In 1970 Colonel Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio was elected president By 1972 members of the guerrilla movement entered the country from Mexico and settled in the Western Highlands In the disputed election of 1974 General Kjell Laugerud Garcia defeated General Efrain Rios Montt a candidate of the Christian Democratic Party who claimed that he had been cheated out of a victory through fraud On 4 February 1976 a major earthquake destroyed several cities and caused more than 25 000 deaths especially among the poor whose housing was substandard The government s failure to respond rapidly to the aftermath of the earthquake and to relieve homelessness gave rise to widespread discontent which contributed to growing popular unrest General Romeo Lucas Garcia assumed power in 1978 in a fraudulent election The 1970s saw the rise of two new guerrilla organizations the Guerrilla Army of the Poor EGP and the Organization of the People in Arms ORPA They began guerrilla attacks that included urban and rural warfare mainly against the military and some civilian supporters of the army The army and the paramilitary forces responded with a brutal counter insurgency campaign that resulted in tens of thousands of civilian deaths 135 In 1979 the U S president Jimmy Carter who had until then been providing public support for the government forces ordered a ban on all military aid to the Guatemalan Army because of its widespread and systematic abuse of human rights 112 However documents have since come to light that suggest that American aid continued throughout the Carter years through clandestine channels 136 Memorial to the victims of the Rio Negro massacres On 31 January 1980 a group of indigenous K iche took over the Spanish Embassy to protest army massacres in the countryside The Guatemalan government armed forces launched an assault that killed almost everyone inside in a fire that consumed the building The Guatemalan government claimed that the activists set the fire thus immolating themselves 137 However the Spanish ambassador survived the fire and disputed this claim saying that the Guatemalan police intentionally killed almost everyone inside and set the fire to erase traces of their acts As a result the government of Spain broke off diplomatic relations with Guatemala This government was overthrown in 1982 and General Efrain Rios Montt was named president of the military junta He continued the bloody campaign of torture forced disappearances and scorched earth warfare The country became a pariah state internationally although the regime received considerable support from the Reagan Administration 138 and Reagan himself described Rios Montt as a man of great personal integrity 139 Rios Montt was overthrown by General oscar Humberto Mejia Victores who called for an election of a national constituent assembly to write a new constitution leading to a free election in 1986 won by Vinicio Cerezo Arevalo the candidate of the Christian Democracy Party In 1982 the four guerrilla groups EGP ORPA FAR and PGT merged and formed the URNG influenced by the Salvadoran guerrilla FMLN the Nicaraguan FSLN and Cuba s government in order to become stronger As a result of the Army s scorched earth tactics in the countryside more than 45 000 Guatemalans fled across the border to Mexico The Mexican government placed the refugees in camps in Chiapas and Tabasco In 1992 the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Rigoberta Menchu for her efforts to bring international attention to the government sponsored genocide against the indigenous population 140 1996 2000 Edit An outdoor market in Chichicastenango 2009 The Guatemalan Civil War ended in 1996 with a peace accord between the guerrillas and the government negotiated by the United Nations through intense brokerage by nations such as Norway and Spain Both sides made major concessions The guerrilla fighters disarmed and received land to work According to the U N sponsored truth commission the Commission for Historical Clarification government forces and state sponsored CIA trained paramilitaries were responsible for over 93 of the human rights violations during the war 141 In the last few years millions of documents related to crimes committed during the civil war have been found abandoned by the former Guatemalan police The families of over 45 000 Guatemalan activists who disappeared during the civil war are now reviewing the documents which have been digitized This could lead to further legal actions 142 During the first ten years of the civil war the victims of the state sponsored terror were primarily students workers professionals and opposition figures but in the last years they were thousands of mostly rural Maya farmers and non combatants More than 450 Maya villages were destroyed and over 1 million people became refugees or displaced within Guatemala In 1995 the Catholic Archdiocese of Guatemala began the Recovery of Historical Memory REMHI project 143 known in Spanish as El Proyecto de la Recuperacion de la Memoria Historica to collect the facts and history of Guatemala s long civil war and confront the truth of those years On 24 April 1998 REMHI presented the results of its work in the report Guatemala Nunca Mas This report summarized testimony and statements of thousands of witnesses and victims of repression during the Civil War The report laid the blame for 80 per cent of the atrocities at the door of the Guatemalan Army and its collaborators within the social and political elite 144 Catholic Bishop Juan Jose Gerardi Conedera worked on the Recovery of Historical Memory Project and two days after he announced the release of its report on victims of the Guatemalan Civil War Guatemala Nunca Mas in April 1998 Bishop Gerardi was attacked in his garage and beaten to death 144 In 2001 in the first trial in a civilian court of members of the military in Guatemalan history three Army officers were convicted of his death and sentenced to 30 years in prison A priest was convicted as an accomplice and was sentenced to 20 years in prison 145 According to the report Recuperacion de la Memoria Historica REMHI some 200 000 people died More than one million people were forced to flee their homes and hundreds of villages were destroyed The Historical Clarification Commission attributed more than 93 of all documented violations of human rights to Guatemala s military government and estimated that Maya Indians accounted for 83 of the victims It concluded in 1999 that state actions constituted genocide 146 147 In some areas such as Baja Verapaz the Truth Commission found that the Guatemalan state engaged in an intentional policy of genocide against particular ethnic groups in the Civil War 141 In 1999 U S president Bill Clinton said that the United States had been wrong to have provided support to the Guatemalan military forces that took part in these brutal civilian killings 148 Since 2000 Edit Since the peace accords Guatemala has had both economic growth and successive democratic elections most recently in 2019 In the 2019 elections Alejandro Giammattei won the presidency He assumed office in January 2020 In January 2012 Efrain Rios Montt the former dictator of Guatemala appeared in a Guatemalan court on genocide charges During the hearing the government presented evidence of over 100 incidents involving at least 1 771 deaths 1 445 rapes and the displacement of nearly 30 000 Guatemalans during his 17 month rule from 1982 to 1983 The prosecution wanted him incarcerated because he was viewed as a flight risk but he remained free on bail under house arrest and guarded by the Guatemalan National Civil Police PNC On 10 May 2013 Rios Montt was found guilty and sentenced to 80 years in prison It marked the first time that a national court had found a former head of state guilty of genocide 149 The conviction was later overturned and Montt s trial resumed in January 2015 150 In August 2015 a Guatemalan court ruled that Rios Montt could stand trial for genocide and crimes against humanity but that he could not be sentenced due to his age and deteriorating health 151 Ex President Alfonso Portillo was arrested in January 2010 while trying to flee Guatemala He was acquitted in May 2010 by a panel of judges that threw out some of the evidence and discounted certain witnesses as unreliable 152 The Guatemalan Attorney General Claudia Paz y Paz called the verdict a terrible message of injustice and a wake up call about the power structures In its appeal the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala CICIG a UN judicial group assisting the Guatemalan government called the decision s assessment of the meticulously documented evidence against Portillo Cabrera whimsical and said the decision s assertion that the president of Guatemala and his ministers had no responsibility for handling public funds ran counter to the constitution and laws of Guatemala 153 A New York grand jury had indicted Portillo Cabrera in 2009 for embezzlement following his acquittal on those charges in Guatemala that country s Supreme Court authorized his extradition to the US 154 155 The Guatemalan judiciary is deeply corrupt and the selection committee for new nominations has been captured by criminal elements 152 At the 2012 Summer Olympics in London Guatemala received its first ever Olympic medal when Erick Barrondo won the men s 20 kilometre walk 156 Guatemala City is the capital and largest city of Guatemala and the most populous urban area in Central America Perez Molina government and La Linea Edit Main article Otto Perez Molina Retired general Otto Perez Molina was elected president in 2011 along with Roxana Baldetti the first woman ever elected vice president in Guatemala they began their term in office on 14 January 2012 157 But on 16 April 2015 a United Nations UN anti corruption agency report implicated several high profile politicians including Baldetti s private secretary Juan Carlos Monzon and the director of the Guatemalan Internal Revenue Service SAT who 158 The revelations provoked more public outrage than had been seen since the presidency of General Kjell Eugenio Laugerud Garcia The International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala CICIG worked with the Guatemalan attorney general to reveal the scam known as La Linea following a year long investigation that included wire taps Officials received bribes from importers in exchange for discounted import tariffs 158 a practice rooted in a long tradition of customs corruption in the country as a fund raising tactic of successive military governments for counterinsurgency operations during Guatemala s 36 year long civil war 159 160 A Facebook event using the hashtag RenunciaYa Resign Now invited citizens to go downtown in Guatemala City to ask for Baldetti s resignation Within days over 10 000 people RSVPed that they would attend Organizers made clear that no political party or group was behind the event and instructed protesters at the event to follow the law They also urged people to bring water food and sunblock but not to cover their faces or wear political party colors 161 Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Guatemala City They protested in front of the presidential palace Baldetti resigned a few days later She was forced to remain in Guatemala when the United States revoked her visa The Guatemalan government arraigned her since it had enough evidence to suspect her involvement in the La Linea scandal The prominence of US Ambassador Todd Robinson in the Guatemalan political scene once the scandal broke led to the suspicion that the US government was behind the investigation perhaps because it needed an honest government in Guatemala to counter the presence of China and Russia in the region 162 The UN anti corruption committee has reported on other cases since then and more than 20 government officials have stepped down Some were arrested Two of those cases involved two former presidential private secretaries Juan de Dios Rodriguez in the Guatemalan Social Service and Gustave Martinez who was involved in a bribery scandal at the coal power plant company Jaguar Energy es Martinez was also Perez Molina s son in law 163 Leaders of the political opposition have also been implicated in CICIG investigations several legislators and members of Libertad Democratica Renovada party LIDER were formally accused of bribery related issues prompting a large decline in the electoral prospects of its presidential candidate Manuel Baldizon who until April had been almost certain to become the next Guatemalan president in the 6 September 2015 presidential elections Baldizon s popularity steeply declined and he filed accusations with the Organization of American States against CICIG leader Ivan Velasquez of international obstruction in Guatemalan internal affairs 164 CICIG reported its cases so often on Thursdays that Guatemalans coined the term CICIG Thursdays But a Friday press conference brought the crisis to its peak on Friday 21 August 2015 the CICIG and Attorney General Thelma Aldana presented enough evidence to convince the public that both President Perez Molina and former vice President Baldetti were the actual leaders of La Linea Baldetti was arrested the same day and an impeachment was requested for the president Several cabinet members resigned and the clamor for the president s resignation grew after Perez Molina defiantly assured the nation in a televised message broadcast on 23 August 2015 that he was not going to resign 165 166 Thousands of protesters took to the streets again this time to demand the increasingly isolated president s resignation Guatemala s Congress named a commission of five legislators to consider whether to remove the president s immunity from prosecution The Supreme Court approved A major day of action kicked off early on 27 August with marches and roadblocks across the country Urban groups who had spearheaded regular protests since the scandal broke in April on the 27th sought to unite with the rural and indigenous organizations who orchestrated the road blocks The strike in Guatemala City was full of a diverse and peaceful crowd ranging from the indigenous poor to the well heeled and it included many students from public and private universities Hundreds of schools and businesses closed in support of the protests The Comite Coordinador de Asociaciones Agricolas Comerciales Industriales y Financieras CACIF Guatemala s most powerful business leaders issued a statement demanding that Perez Molina step down and urged Congress to withdraw his immunity from prosecution 167 The attorney general s office released its own statement calling for the president s resignation to prevent ungovernability that could destabilize the nation As pressure mounted the president s former ministers of defense and of the interior who had been named in the corruption investigation and resigned abruptly left the country 168 Perez Molina meanwhile had been losing support by the day The private sector called for his resignation however he also managed to get support from entrepreneurs that were not affiliated with the private sector chambers Mario Lopez Estrada grandchild of former dictator Manuel Estrada Cabrera and the billionaire owner of cellular phone companies had some of his executives assume the vacated cabinet positions 169 The Guatemalan radio station Emisoras Unidas reported exchanging text messages with Perez Molina Asked whether he planned to resign he wrote I will face whatever is necessary to face and what the law requires Some protesters demanded the general election be postponed both because of the crisis and because it was plagued with accusations of irregularities Others warned that suspending the vote could lead to an institutional vacuum 170 However on 2 September 2015 Perez Molina resigned a day after Congress impeached him 171 172 On 3 September 2015 he was summoned to the Justice Department for his first legal audience for the La Linea corruption case 173 174 In June 2016 a United Nations backed prosecutor described the administration of Perez Molina as a crime syndicate and outlined another corruption case this one dubbed Cooperacha Kick in The head of the Social Security Institute and at least five other ministers pooled funds to buy Molina luxurious gifts such as motorboats spending over 4 7 million in three years 175 Jimmy Morales and Alejandro Giammattei in power 2015 present Edit In the October 2015 presidential election former TV comedian Jimmy Morales was elected as the new president of Guatemala after huge anti corruption demonstrations He took office in January 2016 176 In January 2017 President Morales announced that Guatemala will move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem becoming the first nation to follow the United States 177 In January 2020 Alejandro Giammattei replaced Jimmy Morales as the president of Guatemala Giammattei had won the presidential election in August 2019 with his tough on crime agenda 178 Geography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Guatemala news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Geography of Guatemala A map of Guatemala Koppen climate types of Guatemala The highlands of Quetzaltenango Guatemala is mountainous with small patches of desert and sand dunes all hilly valleys except for the south coast and the vast northern lowlands of Peten department Two mountain chains enter Guatemala from west to east dividing Guatemala into three major regions the highlands where the mountains are located the Pacific coast south of the mountains and the Peten region north of the mountains All major cities are located in the highlands and Pacific coast regions by comparison Peten is sparsely populated These three regions vary in climate elevation and landscape providing dramatic contrasts between hot humid tropical lowlands and colder drier highland peaks Volcan Tajumulco at 4 220 metres 13 850 feet is the highest point in the Central American countries The rivers are short and shallow in the Pacific drainage basin larger and deeper in the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico drainage basins These rivers include the Polochic and Dulce Rivers which drain into Lake Izabal the Motagua River the Sarstun which forms the boundary with Belize and the Usumacinta River which forms the boundary between Peten and Chiapas Mexico Natural disasters Edit For the 2018 volcanic eruption see 2018 Volcan de Fuego eruption A town along the Pan American Highway within a volcanic crater Guatemala s location between the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean makes it a target for hurricanes such as Hurricane Mitch in 1998 and Hurricane Stan in October 2005 which killed more than 1 500 people The damage was not wind related but rather due to significant flooding and resulting mudslides The most recent was Hurricane Eta in November 2020 which was responsible for more than 100 missing or killed with the final tally still uncertain 179 Guatemala s highlands lie along the Motagua Fault part of the boundary between the Caribbean and North American tectonic plates This fault has been responsible for several major earthquakes in historic times including a 7 5 magnitude tremor on 4 February 1976 which killed more than 25 000 people In addition the Middle America Trench a major subduction zone lies off the Pacific coast Here the Cocos Plate is sinking beneath the Caribbean Plate producing volcanic activity inland of the coast Guatemala has 37 volcanoes four of them active Pacaya Santiaguito Fuego and Tacana Natural disasters have a long history in this geologically active part of the world For example two of the three moves of the capital of Guatemala have been due to volcanic mudflows in 1541 and earthquakes in 1773 Biodiversity Edit Main article Biodiversity of Guatemala Guatemala has 14 ecoregions ranging from mangrove forests to both ocean littorals with 5 different ecosystems Guatemala has 252 listed wetlands including five lakes 61 lagoons 100 rivers and four swamps 180 Tikal National Park was the first mixed UNESCO World Heritage Site Guatemala is a country of distinct fauna It has some 1246 known species Of these 6 7 are endemic and 8 1 are threatened Guatemala is home to at least 8 682 species of vascular plants of which 13 5 are endemic 5 4 of Guatemala is protected under IUCN categories I V citation needed The Maya Biosphere Reserve in the department of Peten has 2 112 940 ha 181 making it the second largest forest in Central America after Bosawas It had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 3 85 10 ranking it 138th globally out of 172 countries 182 Government and politics EditPolitical system Edit Main article Politics of Guatemala The Congress of the Republic of Guatemala Guatemala is a constitutional democratic republic whereby the President of Guatemala is both head of state and head of government and of a multi party system Executive power is exercised by the government Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Congress of the Republic The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature On 2 September 2015 Otto Perez Molina resigned as President of Guatemala due to a corruption scandal and was replaced by Alejandro Maldonado until January 2016 183 Congress appointed former Universidad de San Carlos President Alfonso Fuentes Soria as the new vice president to replace Maldonado 184 Jimmy Morales assumed office on 14 January 2016 176 In January 2020 he was succeeded by Alejandro Giammattei 178 Foreign relations Edit Further information Foreign relations of Guatemala Guatemala has long claimed all or part of the territory of neighboring Belize Owing to this territorial dispute Guatemala did not recognize Belize s independence until 6 September 1991 185 but the dispute is not resolved Negotiations are currently under way under the auspices of the Organization of American States to conclude it 186 187 Military Edit Further information Military of Guatemala Guatemala has a modest military with between 15 000 and 20 000 personnel 188 In 2017 Guatemala signed the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons 189 Administrative divisions Edit Main articles Departments of Guatemala and Municipalities of Guatemala Guatemala is divided into 22 departments Spanish departamentos and sub divided into about 335 municipalities Spanish municipios 190 Human rights Edit See also Human rights in Guatemala Violence against women in Guatemala and Guatemalan Civil War Killings and death squads have been common in Guatemala since the end of the civil war in 1996 They often had ties to Clandestine Security Apparatuses Cuerpos Ilegales y Aparatos Clandestinos de Seguridad CIACS organizations of current and former members of the military involved in organized crime They had significant influence now somewhat lessened 191 but extrajudicial killings continue 192 In July 2004 the Inter American Court condemned the 18 July 1982 massacre of 188 Achi Maya in Plan de Sanchez and for the first time in its history ruled the Guatemalan Army had committed genocide It was the first ruling by the court against the Guatemalan state for any of the 626 massacres reported in its 1980s scorched earth campaign 192 In those massacres 83 percent of the victims were Maya and 17 percent Ladino 192 Extra Judicial Killings in Guatemala2010 5 0722011 2792012 439source Center for Legal Action in Human Rights CALDH 191 In 2008 Guatemala became the first country to officially recognize femicide the murder of a female because of her gender as a crime 193 Guatemala has the third highest femicide rate in the world after El Salvador and Jamaica with around 9 1 murders for every 100 000 women from 2007 to 2012 193 Economy EditMain article Economy of Guatemala Historical GDP per capita development of El Salvador Guatemala and Honduras A proportional representation of Guatemala exports 2019 Fields in Quetzaltenango Guatemala is the largest economy in Central America with a GDP PPP per capita of US 5 200 However Guatemala faces many social problems and is one of the poorest countries in Latin America The income distribution is highly unequal with more than half of the population below the national poverty line and just over 400 000 3 2 unemployed The CIA World Fact Book considers 54 0 of the population of Guatemala to be living in poverty in 2009 194 195 In 2010 the Guatemalan economy grew by 3 recovering gradually from the 2009 crisis as a result of the falling demands from the United States and other Central American markets and the slowdown in foreign investment in the middle of the global recession 196 Remittances from Guatemalans living in United States now constitute the largest single source of foreign income two thirds of exports and one tenth of GDP 194 Some of Guatemala s main exports are fruits vegetables flowers handicrafts cloths and others It is a leading exporter of cardamom 197 and coffee 198 In the face of a rising demand for biofuels the country is growing and exporting an increasing amount of raw materials for biofuel production especially sugar cane and palm oil Critics say that this development leads to higher prices for staple foods like corn a major ingredient in the Guatemalan diet As a consequence of the subsidization of US American corn Guatemala imports nearly half of its corn from the United States that is using 40 percent of its crop harvest for biofuel production 199 In 2014 the government was considering ways to legalize poppy and marijuana production hoping to tax production and use tax revenues to fund drug prevention programs and other social projects 200 Gross Domestic Product GDP in purchasing power parity PPP in 2010 was estimated at US 70 15 billion The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 63 followed by the industry sector at 23 8 and the agriculture sector at 13 2 2010 est Mines produce gold silver zinc cobalt and nickel 201 The agricultural sector accounts for about two fifths of exports and half of the labor force Organic coffee sugar textiles fresh vegetables and bananas are the country s main exports Inflation was 3 9 in 2010 The 1996 peace accords that ended the decades long civil war removed a major obstacle to foreign investment Tourism has become an increasing source of revenue for Guatemala thanks to the new foreign investment In March 2006 Guatemala s congress ratified the Dominican Republic Central American Free Trade Agreement DR CAFTA between several Central American nations and the United States 202 Guatemala also has free trade agreements with Taiwan and Colombia Tourism Edit Main article Tourism in Guatemala Tourism has become one of the main drivers of the economy with tourism estimated at 1 8 billion to the economy in 2008 Guatemala receives around two million tourists annually In recent years there has been an increase in the number of cruise ships visiting Guatemalan seaports leading to higher tourist numbers Tourist destinations include Mayan archaeological sites e g Tikal in the Peten Quirigua in Izabal Iximche in Tecpan Chimaltenango and Guatemala City natural attractions e g Lake Atitlan and Semuc Champey and historical sites such as the colonial city of Antigua Guatemala which is recognized as a UNESCO Cultural Heritage site Demographics EditMain articles Demographics of Guatemala and List of cities in Guatemala Guatemala s population 1950 2010 203 Population pyramid in 2020 Tz utujil men in Santiago Atitlan Guatemala has a population of 17 608 483 2021 est 8 9 With only 885 000 in 1900 this constitutes the fastest population growth in the Western Hemisphere during the 20th century 204 The Republic of Guatemala s first census was taken in 1778 205 The census records for 1778 1880 1893 and 1921 were used as scrap paper and no longer exist although their statistical information was preserved 206 Censuses have not been taken at regular intervals Note that the 1837 census was discredited at the time statistician Don Jose de la Valle made a calculation that in 1837 the population of Guatemala was 600 000 205 The 1940 census was burned 207 206 Data from the remaining censuses is in the Historical Population table below Historical Population Census Population1778 430 859 205 1825 507 126 205 1837 490 787 205 1852 787 000 205 1880 1 224 602 208 1893 1 364 678 209 1914 2 183 166 207 1921 2 004 900 207 1950 2 870 272 207 1964 4 287 997 210 1973 5 160 221 210 1981 6 054 227 210 1994 8 321 067 210 2002 11 183 388 211 2018 14 901 286 2 Guatemala is heavily centralized transportation communications business politics and the most relevant urban activity takes place in the capital of Guatemala City citation needed whose urban area has a population of almost 3 million 194 The estimated median age in Guatemala is 20 years old 19 4 for males and 20 7 years for females 194 Guatemala is demographically one of the youngest countries in the Western Hemisphere comparable to most of central Africa and Iraq The proportion of the population below the age of 15 in 2010 was 41 5 54 1 were aged between 15 and 65 years of age and 4 4 were aged 65 years or older 203 Indigenous Guatemalan women in Antigua Guatemala Diaspora Edit A significant number of Guatemalans live outside of their country The majority of the Guatemalan diaspora is located in the United States of America with estimates ranging from 480 665 212 to 1 489 426 213 Emigration to the United States has led to the growth of Guatemalan communities in California Delaware Florida Illinois New York New Jersey Texas Rhode Island and elsewhere since the 1970s 214 However as of July 2019 the United States and Guatemala signed a deal to restrict migration and asylum seekers from Guatemala 215 Below are estimates of the number of Guatemalans living abroad for certain countries Country 2019 United States 1 070 743 Mexico 44 178 Belize 25 086 Canada 18 398 El Salvador 9 005 Spain 7 678 Honduras 4 681 France 3 296 Costa Rica 2 699 Italy 2 299Total 1 205 644Source DatosMacro 216 Ethnic groups Edit Main article Demographics of Guatemala Ethnic groups Ethnic groups in Guatemala 2018 Census 2 Ethnic groups percentLadino 56 01 Mayan 41 66 Xinca 1 77 Afro Guatemalan 0 19 Garifuna 0 13 Foreign 0 24 Guatemala is populated by a variety of ethnic cultural racial and linguistic groups According to the 2018 Census conducted by the National Institute of Statistics INE 56 of the population is Ladino reflecting mixed indigenous and European heritage 217 Indigenous Guatemalans are 43 6 of the national population which is one of the largest percentages in Latin America behind only Peru and Bolivia Most indigenous Guatemalans 41 7 of the national population are of the Maya people namely K iche 11 0 of the total population Q eqchi 8 3 Kaqchikel 7 8 Mam 5 2 and other Maya 7 6 2 of the national population is indigenous non Maya 1 8 of the population is Xinca mesoamerican and 0 1 of the population is Garifuna African Carib mix 217 However indigenous rights activists put the indigenous figure closer to 61 per cent 218 White Guatemalans of European descent also called Criollo are not differentiated from Ladinos mixed race individuals in the Guatemalan census 217 Most are descendants of German and Spanish settlers and others derive from Italians British French Swiss Belgians Dutch Russians and Danes German settlers are credited with bringing the tradition of Christmas trees to Guatemala 219 The population includes about 110 000 Salvadorans The Garifuna descended primarily from Black Africans who lived and intermarried with indigenous peoples from St Vincent live mainly in Livingston and Puerto Barrios Afro Guatemalans and mulattos are descended primarily from banana plantation workers There are also Asians mostly of Chinese descent but also Arabs of Lebanese and Syrian descent 220 Languages Edit Main article Languages of Guatemala Languages in GuatemalaLanguages percentSpanish 69 9 Mayan languages 29 6 English 0 1 Other 0 2 None 0 1 Language map of Guatemala The Castilian areas represent Spanish Guatemala s sole official language is Spanish spoken by 93 percent of the population as either the first or second language Twenty one Mayan languages are spoken especially in rural areas as well as two non Mayan Indigenous languages Xinca which is indigenous to the country and Garifuna an Arawakan language spoken on the Caribbean coast According to the Language Law of 2003 these languages are recognized as national languages 221 Indigenous integration and bilingual education Edit Throughout the 20th century there have been many developments in the integration of Mayan languages into the Guatemalan society and educational system Originating from political reasons these processes have aided the revival of some Mayan languages and advanced bilingual education in the country In 1945 in order to overcome the Indian problem the Guatemalan government founded The Institute Indigents ta National NH the purpose of which was to teach literacy to Mayan children in their mother tongue instead of Spanish to prepare the ground for later assimilation of the latter The teaching of literacy in the first language which received support from the UN significantly advanced in 1952 when the SIL Summer Institute of Linguistics located in Dallas Texas partnered with the Guatemalan Ministry of Education within 2 years numerous written works in Mayan languages had been printed and published and vast advancement was done in the translation of the New Testament Further efforts to integrate the indigenous into the Ladino 222 society were made in the following years including the invention of a special alphabet to assist Mayan students transition to Spanish and bilingual education in the Q eqchi area When Spanish became the official language of Guatemala in 1965 the government started several programs such as the Bilingual Castellanizacion Program and the Radiophonic Schools to accelerate the move of Mayan students to Spanish Unintentionally the efforts to integrate the indigenous using language especially the new alphabet gave institutions tools to use Mayan tongues in schools and while improving Mayan children s learning they left them unequipped to learn in a solely Spanish environment So an additional expansion of bilingual education took place in 1980 when an experimental program in which children were to be instructed in their mother tongue until they are fluent enough in Spanish was created The program proved successful when the students of the pilot showed higher academic achievements than the ones in the Spanish only control schools In 1987 when the pilot was to finish bilingual education was made official in Guatemala Religion Edit Main article Religion in Guatemala The Catedral Metropolitana Guatemala City Christianity is very influential in nearly all of Guatemalan society both in cosmology and social politic composition The country once dominated by Roman Catholicism introduced by the Spanish during the colonial era is now influenced by a diversity of Christian denominations The Roman Catholic Church remains the largest Church denomination passing from 57 7 in 2001 to 47 9 as of 2012 update SEPAL 2001 CID Gallup 2012 During 2001 2012 the already numerous Protestant population grew from little more than a quarter of the population to 38 2 Those claiming no religious affiliation were down from 13 9 to 11 6 The remainder including Mormons and adherents of Judaism Islam and Buddhism continued to register at more than 2 percent of the population Since the 1960s and particularly during the 1980s Guatemala has experienced the rapid growth of Protestantism especially evangelical varieties Guatemala has been described as the most heavily evangelical nation in Latin America 223 with multitudes of unregistered churches 224 although Brazil 225 or Honduras may be Over the past two decades particularly since the end of the civil war Guatemala has seen heightened missionary activity Protestant denominations have grown markedly in recent decades chiefly Evangelical and Pentecostal varieties growth is particularly strong among the ethnic Maya population with the National Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Guatemala maintaining 11 indigenous language presbyteries The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints has grown from 40 000 members in 1984 to 164 000 in 1998 and continues to expand 226 227 The growth of Eastern Orthodox Church in Guatemala has been especially strong with hundreds of thousands of converts in the last five years 228 229 230 better source needed giving the country the highest proportion of Orthodox adherents in the Western Hemisphere Traditional Maya religion persists through the process of inculturation in which certain practices are incorporated into Catholic ceremonies and worship when they are sympathetic to the meaning of Catholic belief 231 232 Indigenous religious practices are increasing as a result of the cultural protections established under the peace accords The government has instituted a policy of providing altars at every Maya ruin to facilitate traditional ceremonies A church in San Andres Xecul Immigration Edit Main article Immigration to Guatemala This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message During the colonial era Guatemala received immigrants settlers only from Spain Subsequently Guatemala received waves of immigration from Europe in the mid 19th century and early 20th century clarification needed Primarily from Germany these immigrants installed coffee and cardamom fincas in Alta Verapaz Zacapa Quetzaltenango Baja Verapaz and Izabal To a lesser extent people also arrived from Spain France Belgium England Italy Sweden etc Many European immigrants to Guatemala were politicians refugees and entrepreneurs as well as families looking to settle Up to 1950 Guatemala was the Central American country that received the most immigrants behind Costa Rica and large numbers of immigrants are still received today clarification needed Since the 1890s there has been immigration from East Asia citation needed Also beginning with the First World War the immigrant population is being strengthened by Jewish immigration citation needed During the second half of the twentieth century Latin American immigration increased in Guatemala particularly from other Central American countries Mexico Cuba and Argentina although most of these immigrants stayed only temporarily before going to their final destinations in the United States citation needed Country 2019 El Salvador 19 704 Mexico 18 003 United States 8 871 Nicaragua 8 787 Honduras 8 608 South Korea 1 833 Spain 1 354 Costa Rica 1 192 Colombia 1 186 Belize 904Total 80 421Source DatosMacro 233 Health Edit Main article Health in Guatemala Guatemala has among the worst health outcomes in Latin America with some of the highest infant mortality rates and one of the lowest life expectancies at birth in the region 234 With about 16 000 doctors for its 16 million people Guatemala has about half the doctor citizen ratio recommended by the WHO 235 Since the end of the Guatemalan Civil War in 1997 the Ministry of Health has extended healthcare access to 54 of the rural population 236 Healthcare has received different levels of support from different political administrations who disagree on how best to manage distribution of services via a private or a public entity and the scale of financing that should be made available 236 As of 2013 update the Ministry of Health lacked the financial means to monitor or evaluate its programs 236 Total healthcare spending both public and private has remained constant at between 6 4 and 7 3 of the GDP 237 238 Per capita average annual healthcare spending was only 368 in 2012 238 Guatemalan patients choose between indigenous treatments or Western medicine when they engage with the health system 239 Education Edit Main article Education in Guatemala 74 5 of the population aged 15 and over is literate the lowest literacy rate in Central America Guatemala has a plan to increase literacy over the next 20 years 240 The government runs a number of public elementary and secondary level schools as youth in Guatemala do not fully participate in education These schools are free though the cost of uniforms books supplies and transportation makes them less accessible to the poorer segments of society and significant numbers of poor children do not attend school 241 Many middle and upper class children go to private schools Guatemala has one public university USAC or Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala and fourteen private ones see List of universities in Guatemala USAC was the first university in Guatemala and one of the first Universities of America Organizations such as Child Aid Pueblo a Pueblo and Common Hope which train teachers in villages throughout the Central Highlands region are working to improve educational outcomes for children Lack of training for rural teachers is one of the key contributors to Guatemala s low literacy rates Culture EditMain article Culture of Guatemala This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Guatemalan woman selling souvenirs Guatemala City is home to many of the nation s libraries and museums including the National Archives the National Library and the Museum of Archeology and Ethnology which has an extensive collection of Maya artifacts It also boasts private museums such as the Ixchel Museum of Indigenous Textiles and Clothing and the Museo Popol Vuh which focuses on Maya archaeology Both these museums are housed on the Universidad Francisco Marroquin campus Most of the 329 municipalities in the country have at least a small museum Art Edit Guatemala has produced many indigenous artists who follow centuries old Pre Columbian traditions Reflecting Guatemala s colonial and post colonial history encounters with multiple global art movements also have produced a wealth of artists who have combined the traditional primitivist or naive aesthetic with European North American and other traditions The Escuela Nacional de Artes Plasticas Rafael Rodriguez Padilla is Guatemala s leading art school and several leading indigenous artists also graduates of that school have work in the permanent collection of the Museo Nacional de Arte Moderno in the capital city Contemporary Guatemalan artists who have gained reputations outside of Guatemala include Dagoberto Vasquez Luis Rolando Ixquiac Xicara Carlos Merida 242 Anibal Lopez Roberto Gonzalez Goyri and Elmar Rene Rojas 243 Literature Edit Further information Guatemalan literature Author Rigoberta Menchu The Guatemala National Prize in Literature is a one time only award that recognizes an individual writer s body of work It has been given annually since 1988 by the Ministry of Culture and Sports Miguel Angel Asturias won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1967 Among his famous books is El Senor Presidente a novel based on the government of Manuel Estrada Cabrera Rigoberta Menchu winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for fighting oppression of indigenous people in Guatemala is famous for her books I Rigoberta Menchu 244 and Crossing Borders 245 Cinema Edit The Guatemalan director Jayro Bustamante has gained an international audience with his films focused on Guatemalan contemporary society and politics Ixcanul in 2015 and Temblores and La Llorona The Weeping Woman in 2019 Media and news Edit Further information Media of Guatemala Major national newspapers in Guatemala include Prensa Libre El Periodico and Siglo21 246 247 Guatemala also has a few major local channels and radio stations such as one of Guatemala s major radio stations Emisoras Unidas Music Edit Further information Music of Guatemala Singer Ricardo Arjona Guatemalan music comprises a number of styles and expressions Guatemalan social change has been empowered by music such as nueva cancion which blends together histories present day issues and the political values and struggles of common people The Maya had an intense musical practice as documented by their iconography 248 249 Guatemala was also one of the first regions in the New World to be introduced to European music from 1524 on Many composers from the Renaissance baroque classical romantic and contemporary music styles have contributed works of all genres The marimba which is like a wooden xylophone 250 is the national instrument and its music is widely found in Guatemala 251 It has developed a large repertoire of very attractive pieces that have been popular for more than a century The Historia General de Guatemala has published a series of CDs compiling the historical music of Guatemala in which every style is represented from the Maya colonial independent and republican eras to the present Many contemporary music groups in Guatemala play Caribbean music salsa Garifuna influenced punta Latin pop Mexican regional and mariachi Cuisine Edit Main article Guatemalan cuisine Black and red tamales in Guatemala Many traditional foods in Guatemalan cuisine are based on Mayan cuisine and prominently feature maize chilies and black beans as key ingredients Traditional dishes also include a variety of stews including Kak ik Kak ik which is a tomato based stew with turkey pepian and cocido Guatemala is also known for its antojitos which include small tamales called chuchitos fried plantains and tostadas with tomato sauce guacamole or black beans Certain foods are also commonly eaten on certain days of the week for example a popular custom is to eat paches a kind of tamale made from potatoes on Thursday Certain dishes are also associated with special occasions such as fiambre for All Saints Day on 1 November or tamales and ponche fruit punch which are both very common around Christmas Sports Edit Main article Sport in Guatemala Estadio Doroteo Guamuch Flores in Guatemala City Football Edit Main article Football in Guatemala Football is the most popular sport in Guatemala and its national team has appeared in 18 editions of the CONCACAF Championship winning it once in 1967 However the team has failed to qualify to a FIFA World Cup so far Established in 1919 the National Football Federation of Guatemala organizes the country s national league and its lower level competitions Futsal Edit Futsal is probably the most successful team sport in Guatemala Its national team won the 2008 CONCACAF Futsal Championship as hosts It was also the runner up in 2012 as hosts and won the bronze medal in 2016 Guatemala participated for the first time in the FIFA Futsal World Cup in 2000 as hosts and has played in every competition from 2008 onwards It has never passed the first round It has also participated in every Grand Prix de Futsal since 2009 reaching the semifinals in 2014 Olympics Edit Further information Guatemala at the Olympics and Guatemala at the Paralympics The Guatemalan Olympic Committee was founded in 1947 and recognized by the International Olympic Committee that same year Guatemala participated in the 1952 Summer Olympics and in every edition since the 1968 Summer Olympics It has also appeared in a single Winter Olympics edition in 1988 Erick Barrondo won the only Olympic medal for Guatemala so far silver in race walking at the 2012 Summer Olympics Other sports Edit Guatemala also keeps national sports teams in several disciplines such as basketball or beach volleyball 252 See also Edit Guatemala portal Latin America portalIndex of Guatemala related articles Outline of GuatemalaReferences Edit Banco de Guatemala 1996 a b c Portal de Resultados del Censo 2018 Censopoblacion gt Retrieved 14 April 2022 International Religious Freedom Report for 2017 Guatemala www state gov Retrieved 27 July 2018 Guatemala The World Factbook 2022 ed Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 24 September 2022 a b c d World Economic Outlook Database October 2022 IMF org International Monetary Fund October 2022 Retrieved 26 December 2022 GINI index World Bank estimate data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 7 March 2019 Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF United Nations Development Programme 8 September 2022 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2022 a b World Population Prospects 2022 population un org United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 a b World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XSLX population un org Total Population as of 1 July thousands United Nations Department of 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October 2009 Archived from the original on 26 May 2010 Retrieved 1 June 2010 Elmar Rojas y la utopia pictorica latinoamercana Latinartmuseum com Archived from the original on 31 May 2010 Retrieved 1 June 2010 Menchu Rigoberta 2009 I Rigoberta Menchu An Indian Woman in Guatemala Paperback January 12 2010 ISBN 978 1844674183 Crossing Borders Hardcover August 17 1998 1998 ISBN 1859848931 Prensa Libre Periodico lider de Guatemala Archived from the original on 14 June 2008 Retrieved 14 June 2008 Siglo21 com gt Archived from the original on 3 March 2011 Retrieved 3 September 2015 Bethany Kay Duke May 2014 Palatial soundscapes music in Maya court societies Thesis University of Texas ScholarWorks Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Mayan instrument iconography bibliolore International Repertory of Music Literature 13 October 2014 Archived from the original on 7 August 2016 Retrieved 19 July 2016 SCHWEITZER VIVIEN 29 June 2008 The Marimba Rich and Warm Makes Itself Heard New York Times Archived from the original on 5 January 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Saeed Saeed 22 March 2018 Also performing at Festival in the Park The National Archived from the original on 4 June 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Continental Cup Finals start in Africa FIVB 22 June 2021 Retrieved 7 August 2021 Bibliography EditAguirre Lily 1949 The land of eternal spring Guatemala my beautiful country Patio Press p 253 Arevalo Martinez Rafael 1945 Ecce Pericles in Spanish Guatemala Tipografia Nacional Aycinena Pedro de 1854 Concordato entre la Santa Sede y el presidente de la Republica de Guatemala in Latin and Spanish Guatemala Imprenta La Paz Banco de Guatemala 29 December 1996 Ilustraciones de Cada una de las 11 Denominaciones Anverso y Reverso Banguat gob gt in Spanish Archived from the original on 7 June 2007 Retrieved 22 September 2013 Benz Stephen Connely 1996 Guatemalan Journey University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70840 2 Blakeley Ruth 2009 State Terrorism and Neoliberalism The North in the South Routledge ISBN 978 0415686174 Calvert Peter 1985 Guatemala A Nation in Turmoil Boulder CO Westview Press ISBN 978 0 86531 572 3 Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian languages The historical linguistics of Native America New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509427 1 Chapman Peter 2007 Bananas How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World NY Canongate Compagnie Belge de Colonisation 1844 Colonisation du district de Santo Thomas de Guatemala par la Communaute de l Union Collection de renseignements publies ou recueillis par la Compagnie in French Original held and digitised by the British Library Biodiversity Hotspots Mesoamerica Overview Conservation International 2007 Archived from the original on 4 July 2008 Retrieved 1 February 2007 Cooper Allan 2008 The Geography of Genocide University Press of America p 171 ISBN 978 0 7618 4097 8 Cullather Nicholas 2006 Secret History The CIA s Classified Account of its Operations in Guatemala 1952 54 2nd ed Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 5468 2 Cullather Nicholas 23 May 1997 CIA and Assassinations The Guatemala 1954 Documents National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No 4 National Security Archive a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help de Aerenlund C 2006 Voyage to an Unknown Land The saga of an Italian Family from Lombardy to Guatemala ISBN 1 4257 0187 6 De los Rios Efrain 1948 Ombres contra Hombres in Spanish Fondo para Cultura de la Universidad de Mexico Mexico Dosal Paul J 1993 Doing Business with the Dictators A Political History of United Fruit in Guatemala Wilmington Delaware Scholarly Resources Inc Forster Cindy 2001 The time of freedom campesino workers in Guatemala s October Revolution University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 4162 0 Foster Lynn V 2000 A Brief History of Central America New York NY Facts on File Inc ISBN 0 8160 3962 3 Gleijeses Piero 1991 Shattered hope the Guatemalan revolution and the United States 1944 1954 United States Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02556 8 Gonzalez Davison Fernando 2008 La montana infinita Carrera caudillo de Guatemala in Spanish Guatemala Artemis y Edinter ISBN 978 84 89452 81 7 Grandin Greg 2000 The blood of Guatemala a history of race and nation Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 2495 9 Hernandez de Leon Federico 1959 El capitulo de las efemerides Jose Milla y Rafael Carrera Diario La Hora in Spanish Guatemala Hernandez de Leon Federico 1930 El libro de las efemerides in Spanish Vol Tomo III Guatemala Tipografia Sanchez y de Guise Immerman Richard H 1982 The CIA in Guatemala The Foreign Policy of Intervention University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71083 2 Instituto Nacional de Estadistica 2014 Poblacion de Guatemala Demografia Instituto Nacional de Estadistica INE in Spanish Guatemala Archived from the original on 14 March 2014 LaFeber Walter 1993 Inevitable revolutions the United States in Central America W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 30964 5 Loveman Brian Davies Thomas M 1997 The Politics of antipolitics the military in Latin America 3rd revised ed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 2611 6 McCleary Rachel 1999 Dictating Democracy Guatemala and the End of Violent Revolution Illustrated ed University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0 8130 1726 6 Miceli Keith 1974 Rafael Carrera Defender and Promoter of Peasant Interests in Guatemala 1837 1848 The Americas Academy of American Franciscan History 31 1 72 95 doi 10 1017 S000316150008843X JSTOR 980382 S2CID 197669388 Navarro Mireya 26 February 1999 Guatemalan Army Waged Genocide New Report Finds The New York Times Retrieved 20 November 2016 Paterson Thomas G 2009 American Foreign Relations A History Volume 2 Since 1895 Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 547 22569 2 Rain Forest Wordpress 4 April 2013 Guatemala Rainforest Interesting fact rainforest facts Rainforestcentralamerica wordpress com Retrieved 22 September 2013 Schlesinger Stephen Kinzer Stephen 1999 Bitter Fruit The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala David Rockefeller Center series on Latin American studies Harvard University ISBN 978 0 674 01930 0 Shillington John 2002 Grappling with atrocity Guatemalan theater in the 1990s Fairleigh Dickinson University Press pp 38 39 ISBN 9780838639306 Solano Luis 2012 Contextualizacion historica de la Franja Transversal del Norte FTN PDF Centro de Estudios y Documentacion de la Frontera Occidental de Guatemala CEDFOG Archived from the original PDF on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Streeter Stephen M 2000 Managing the counterrevolution the United States and Guatemala 1954 1961 Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 89680 215 5 Torres Espinoza Enrique 2007 Enrique Gomez Carrillo el cronista errante in Spanish 2nd ed Guatemala Artemis Edinter Trigger Bruce G Washburn Wilcomb E Adams Richard E W 2000 The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas Troika study abroad programs 2006 Guatemala Community colleges for international development Archived from the original on 18 September 2010 Retrieved 12 June 2012 Human Development Report 2011 Statistical annex PDF United Nations 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 11 January 2012 Retrieved 22 December 2011 Weaver Frederic S March 1999 Reform and Counter Revolution in Post Independence Guatemala Liberalism Conservatism and Postmodern Controversies Latin American Perspectives 26 2 129 158 doi 10 1177 0094582x9902600207 JSTOR 2634298 S2CID 143757705 White Douglas R 2002 The Marriage Core of the Elite Network of Colonial Guatemala PDF Irvine CA University of California Irvine School of Social Sciences Archived PDF from the original on 10 December 2004 Woodward Ralph Lee 1993 Rafael Carrera and the Emergence of the Republic of Guatemala 1821 1871 Athens GA University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 1448 8 Further reading EditGomez Carrillo Enrique 1898 Interview from Enrique Gomez Carrillo with His Excellency President Manuel Estrada Cabrera Diario de Centro America in Spanish Guatemala Garcia Ferreira Roberto 2008 The CIA and Jacobo Arbenz The story of a disinformation campaign Journal of Third World Studies United States XXV 2 59 Koeppel Dan 2008 Banana The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World New York Hudson Street Press p 153 ISBN 9781101213919 Krehm William 1999 Democracies and Tyrannies of the Caribbean in the 1940s COMER Publications ISBN 978 1 896266 81 7 Marroquin Rojas Clemente 1971 Francisco Morazan y Rafael Carrera in Spanish Guatemala Piedrasanta Martinez Pelaez Severo 1988 Racismo y Analisis Historico de la Definicion del Indio Guatemalteco in Spanish Guatemala Universitaria a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Martinez Pelaez Severo 1990 La patria del criollo ensayo de interpretacion de la realidad colonial guatemalteca in Spanish Mexico Ediciones en Marcha McCreery David 1994 Rural Guatemala 1760 1940 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 2318 3 Medina Jose Toribio La imprenta en Guatemala 1660 1821 por Jose Toribio Medina Chile Impreso en casa del autor 1910 1910 Mendoza Juan Manuel 1946 Biografia de Enrique Gomez Carrillo su vida su obra y su epoca in Spanish 2nd ed Guatemala Tipografia Nacional Montenegro Gustavo Adolfo 2005 Yo el Supremo Revista Domigo de Prensa Libre in Spanish Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 20 July 2014 Montufar Lorenzo Salazar Ramon A 1892 El centenario del general Francisco Morazan in Spanish Guatemala Tipografia Nacional Rabe Stephen G 1988 Eisenhower and Latin America The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4204 1 Rosa Ramon 1974 Historia del Benemerito Gral Don Francisco Morazan ex Presidente de la Republica de Centroamerica in Spanish Tegucigalpa Ministerio de Educacion Publica Ediciones Tecnicas Centroamericana Rugeley Terry 1996 Yucatan s Maya Peasantry and the Origins of the Caste War San Antonio TX University of Texas ISBN 978 0 292 77078 2 Rugeley Terry 2001 Maya Wars Ethnographic Accounts from Nineteenth Century Yucatan Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3355 3 Sabino Carlos 2007 Guatemala la historia silenciada 1944 1989 in Spanish Vol Tomo 1 Revolucion y Liberacion Guatemala Fondo Nacional para la Cultura Economica Stephens John Lloyd Catherwood Frederick 1854 Incidents of travel in Central America Chiapas and Yucatan London England Arthur Hall Virtue and Co Striffler Steve Moberg Mark 2003 Banana wars power production and history in the Americas Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 3196 4 Taracena Arturo 2011 Invencion criolla sueno ladino pesadilla indigena Los Altos de Guatemala de region a Estado 1740 1871 in Spanish 3rd ed Guatemala Biblioteca basica de historia de Guatemala ISBN 978 9929 587 42 7 Archived from the original on 9 January 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2015 Vanden Harry E Prevost Gary eds 2002 Chapter Ten Guatemala Politics of Latin America The Power Game Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512317 4 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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