Walter Manfredo Méndez Barrios

للمزيد من المعلومات يُرجى الاتصال بـ

المنطقة:الأمريكتان

البلد:غواتيمالا

المقاطعة/المحافظة/الولاية:إلبيتان

الجنس1:ذكر

تأريخ القتل:16/03/2016

نوع القتل:إطلاق نار

تهديدات سابقة:لا توجد معلومات

حالة التحقيق:تحقيق بلا نتيجة

نوع العمل:عضو منظمة غير حكومية

منظمة:Asociación de Comunidades Forestales de Petén

قطاع او نوع العمل الحقوقي الذي كان فيه المدافع (المدافعة) عن حقوق الإنسان:حقوق اقتصادية واجتماعية وثقافية

تفاصيل القطاع:حقوق الأرض, حقوق تنموية

معلومات اكثر:UDEFEGUA

1قاعدة البيانات هذه تسجل الهوية الجنسانية التي يختارها الأفراد لأنفسهم. فإذا لم يقوموا بتحديد جنسهم كذكر أو أنثى يمكنهم تسجيل أنفسهم باستخدام خيار آخر / لا ذكر ولا أنثى أو مصطلح الهويات بين الجنسين غير الثنائية..

Walter Manfredo Méndez Barrios was shot on the morning of March 16 while on his way to his plot of land inside Sierra del Lacandón National Park, one of the core zone areas of the Maya Biosphere Reserve. He died as a result of his gunshot wounds while being transported to a hospital in San Benito, the central town in the northern area of the Peten department.

The violent death of this well-known environmental activist and community leader in northern Guatemala sparked consternation and concern among communities and organizations working in the Maya Biosphere Reserve.

Méndez Barrios was the president of the La Lucha Cooperative, one of a cluster of farming cooperatives in the southeastern part of Sierra del Lacandón National Park. Established in the late 1970s, La Lucha later also became involved in the sustainable harvest of timber and non-timber forest products. The cooperative works closely with the governmental National Council for Protected Areas (CONAP) and non-governmental organizations, including park co-administrator Defensores de la Naturaleza.

“We energetically condemn the coward murder of Walter Manfredo Méndez Barrios, a well-known community leader who distinguished himself as a defender of nature and a visionary of sustainable development in the Peten region, notably in the communities of the Sierra del Lacandón National Park in the Maya Biosphere Reserve,” Defensores de la Naturaleza wrote in a March 16 statement condemning the killing.

Méndez Barrios was a member of the board of directors of the Association of Forest Communities of Peten (ACOFOP), a community-based organization comprised of 24 local groups and co-operatives, including La Lucha. The 36-year-old father of six was also an active member of the Peten Front against Dams. He had been receiving threats since last year, according to media reports.

“He was shot three times,” said Salvador López, CONAP regional director for the Peten. López spoke with Mongabay in the institution’s regional office in San Benito hours after Méndez Barrios’s death on March 16. He and other officials were getting ready to go offer their condolences to Méndez Barrios’s family. Between its release from the morgue and its return to La Lucha, Méndez Barrios’s body was taken briefly to the ACOFOP office so people could pay their respects.

“He was a leader who was totally convinced that human beings can only get ahead if we protect natural resources,” said López. Reports filed by Méndez Barrios contributed to the arrest of wildlife poachers and land usurpers, according to a note published March 17 by CONAP’s executive secretariat in Guatemala City.

Police have opened an investigation into the shooting of Méndez Barrios, but López and many others believe he was killed because of his community leadership and environmental activism. The identity of his attacker or attackers — and of any powerful groups suspected to be behind the crime — remains unknown.
“He was killed by the murderers who don’t want natural resources to be protected — people who are trafficking timber in the area, people who are trafficking wildlife in the area, people who are causing deforestation,” said López.

The Maya Biosphere Reserve covers the northern fifth of Guatemala. At 2.4 million hectares — nearly 1,000 square miles — it is larger than the U.S.’s Yellowstone National Park and Death Valley National Park combined. CONAP has broad management responsibilities in all zones of the reserve, from national parks to communities’ sustainable forestry plans. The Maya Biosphere Reserve encompasses areas bordering Mexico and Belize, and is affected by complex pressures and threats, including heavily armed actors in remote areas. CONAP and non-governmental environmental organizations in the Peten agree: the institution’s budget is woefully inadequate.

“It’s necessary to understand that 30 percent of Guatemala’s territory is protected areas,” said López. Two-thirds of that is the Maya Biosphere Reserve.

The lack of political will to provide adequate funding and personnel for monitoring and enforcement sends a message, he said. “The message for these organized crime people is, ‘okay, go for it.’”


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