Guerrilla Army of the Poor
The Guerrilla Army Of The Poor was a Guatemalan leftist guerrilla movement, which commanded significant support among indigenous Maya people during the Guatemalan Civil War.
Formation
In the aftermath of the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état a series of leftist insurgencies began in the Guatemalan countryside, against the United States-supported military governments of the country. A prominent guerrilla group among these insurgents was the Rebel Armed Forces. The FAR was largely crushed by a counter-insurgency campaign carried out by the Guatemalan government with the help of the U.S. in the late 1960s. Between 2,800 and 8,000 FAR supporters were killed, and hundreds of leftists in urban areas were kidnapped, assassinated, or disappeared. Those of the FAR's leadership that had survived this campaign came together to form the EGP in Mexico City in the 1970s. These leaders included Ricardo Ramírez, Julio César Macías, both Ladinos, Luis Augusto Turcios Lima, a former military officer trained in the School of the Americas, and a number of Indigenous Mayan leaders. The EGP primarily worked out of the Ixcan region and received wide spread support from the indigenous populace there.Ideology
The new group had several ideological differences from the prior FAR. The FAR had based its ideology on the foco theory of Che Guevara. Che Guevara believed that people living in countries still ruled by colonial powers, or living in countries subject to newer forms of economic exploitation, could best defeat colonial powers by taking up arms. Several of the new EGP felt that it had not sufficiently taken into account the racial discrimination experienced by the Indigenous Maya people in Guatemala, and that this had limited their support. The EGP drew inspiration from the success of the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese army in resisting U.S. forces in the Vietnam War. They saw parallels between Guatemala and Vietnam, in that both countries were largely agrarian, and they both saw a struggle between capitalism and communism, and both saw heavy intervention from the U.S. to protect its economic interests. As a result, the EGP decided to include civilians more actively in their projects and made non-combatants a part of the revolutionary movement. The EGP saw their role as not only incorporating the issues that the civilians were concerned about but also "instructing" them in their political beliefs.The EGP also followed liberation theology, and utilized its Catholic supporters and networks to build a coalition of revolutionary campesinos, Catholics, and indigenous Maya people. The organization was described as overwhelmingly composed of the indigenous and radicalized Catholics. The organization considered indigenous militants to be important revolutionary allies, and was influenced by the Maoist concept of the protracted people's war, aspiring to launch its own version. The organization dedicated itself to building popular support among poor peasants, Catholics and Maya people for years before committing its first action. The EGP stressed the importance of the "Indian question" and wanted to create a multiethnic socialist Guatemala, wishing to integrate the concerns regarding ethnic oppression of the indigenous population with class struggle. At its height, the EGP was estimated to have the support of 250,000-500,000 indigenous people and the EGP itself around 360,000 in its ranks. Many indigenous villagers joined the ranks of the EGP because of their ideological support and even participated in the EGP without pay.
Activities
The EGP made its existence public in 1975, by playing a role in the execution of two Ladinos seen as the "region's most notorious oppressors."Assassination of Guillermo Monzón
On May 28, 1975, the EGP committed its first public action - the execution of Guillermo Monzón. Monzón was a military commissioner in the Xalbal cooperative of Ixcán, Quiché. Known as a Ladino landowner and army informant, Monzón reportedly had strong differences with other Indigenous landowners from the same cooperative. He was also believed to have created a list of people he believed to be guerrilla supporters, which made him a target for the EGP.On the day of the assassination, he was ambushed, executed, and buried on the spot by EGP members. His body was discovered by locals four days later, leading his family to permanently leave the area. This incident marked the EGP's first action in the Guatemalan Civil War and brought them into the public eye.
Following Monzón's assassination, the Guatemalan army launched a crackdown on the Xalbal cooperative. On June 10, 1975, army paratroopers and ground forces entered the area, arresting numerous individuals and establishing a military presence at a nearby agrarian transformation facility. According to reports, some detainees were tortured and subsequently disappeared.
Assassination of José Luis Arenas
On June 7, 1975, the EGP carried out the assassination of José Luis Arenas, a wealthy Ladino finca owner in the Ixcán area. He was connected at high levels of the Guatemalan government, and had been accused of mistreating workers and engaging in land conflicts with neighboring communities. As a result, he was targeted by the EGP as part of their strategy to gain support among indigenous and peasant populations. The EGP deemed him to be a symbol of oppression, and acting on complaints received from locals, carried out their offensive.The attack took place at Arenas' La Perla estate, where Arenas had gathered to pay his workers. Disguised among the crowd of around 200-300 laborers, four EGP members approached the office where José Luis Arenas was located and opened fire. Arenas soon lay dead as a result of six bullet wounds, with two farmers injured as a result of the gunfire, one becoming paralyzed from a bullet wound.
After the execution, the guerrilla members addressed the public in the Ixil language. They proclaimed themselves members of the EGP, and stated that they had assassinated the "Tiger of Ixcán". The incident reportedly amassed local support for the guerrilla movement, with some residents viewing the act as a form of social justice given the reported abuses committed by Arenas.
Growing influence and response from the government
The Guatemalan army started to indiscriminately target indigenous civilians as early as early as 1972, believing a new insurgency group had formed, that being the EGP. The combatants of the EGP returned to Guatemala on 19 January 1972, and had added a number of recruits by 1975. According to EGP founder Mario Payeras, these included a number of Mayans from several different tribes. At its height, the EGP had the support of 250,000-500,000, while the army estimated the number at 360,000 across the regions of Quiché, Chimaltenango, Huehuetenango, and Verapaces, in the Guatemalan highlands. These supporters included students, poor Ladinos, and a large number of Indigenous people.In early 1980, a strike led by the CUC forced the Guatemalan government to raise minimum wages by 200 percent. In response, the government intensified its persecution of its critics, culminating in the Burning of the Spanish Embassy by police forces. A number of countries, including Spain, broke diplomatic relations with Guatemala following this incident, damaging the legitimacy of the government, and giving the EGP a chance to intensify its military activities. The EGP released a document proclaiming that the burning was an example of the racial persecution of the Indigenous People and that the EGP's struggle was related to this. This intensification of the EGP's activities led to the Guatemalan army establishing a presence in the area, and using kidnappings and torture to intimidate the population. A declassified CIA document from late February 1982 states that in mid-February 1982 the Guatemalan army had reinforced its existing forces and launched a "sweep operation in the Ixil Triangle. The commanding officers of the units involved have been instructed to destroy all towns and villages which are cooperating with the EGP and eliminate all sources of resistance" These style of attacks mirrored US style counter insurgency tactics used in the Vietnam War; additionally, many Guatemalan army officers were trained by the US in the School for the Americas for such a reason.
Civilian patrols formed by the army perpetrated further human rights abuses, such that when Guerrillas were offered an amnesty by the government in 1983, the EGP asked its local supporters to accept it. The ability of the army to suppress the local support of the EGP has been attributed to military aid given to it by Israel and Argentina, as well as by the U.S. government after Ronald Reagan became president in 1981.