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Guatemala arrests former U.N. anticorruption commission representative

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Guatemalan prosecutors on Monday arrested the former representative of a United Nations-backed anticorruption commission that was expelled from the country several years ago.

The arrest of Claudia González is the latest chapter in the government’s systematic pursuit of those who worked with the U.N. anticorruption mission, best known by its Spanish initials CICIG.

Interviewed outside the courthouse after her arrest, González said the charges were strange. She said she was charged with abuse of authority by a public servant, when in fact she was not a government employee when she served as legal representative of the CICIG.

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González has most recently been acting as defense attorney for some of the dozens of former anticorruption prosecutors and officials facing legal action from the current administration.

President Alejandro Giammattei’s administration has been accused by civil society organizations and foreign governments of systemically pursuing those who worked with the U.N. mission.

The Guatemalan government said Monday that it is expelling a United Nations-backed anti-corruption commission that has investigated the president and other lawmakers — a decision that edges the Central American nation toward a constitutional crisis.

Some 30 judges, magistrates and prosecutors involved in the investigation or processing of those corruption cases have been forced to flee the country after facing legal action.

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Perhaps the CICIG’s greatest achievement was the investigation and prosecution of President Otto Pérez Molina, who was forced to resign along with his Cabinet in 2015.

Recent attacks on Judge Miguel Ángel Gálvez are part of a broader campaign on Guatemala’s courts that have forced nearly two dozen judges and prosecutors into exile.

Over 12 years, the CICIG supported Guatemala’s Special Prosecutors Office Against Impunity in dismantling dozens of criminal networks while at the same time building its capacity to handle complex corruption cases.

Then-President Jimmy Morales ended the CICIG mission in 2019 while he was under investigation.

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The U.S. government has sharply criticized the weakening of anticorruption efforts in Guatemala and last year canceled the U.S. visa of current Guatemalan Atty. Gen. Consuelo Porras, who had been pursuing former prosecutors who conducted corruption investigations.

Guatemalans overwhelmingly picked an anti-corruption progressive as the country’s next president, rejecting the country’s elite, but he could face challenges.

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