Email from Central America
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Date: 15 July, 2005

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'When you see the shattered shell of that double-decker bus the sense
of familiar is still there, but it is now perverted, twisted and
foreign.'
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Its a strange feeling being some 5,000 miles from home when
a sequence of events changes history.
On September 11th 2001 I woke up in a mountainous
village in the Andes, and spent the next week trying to catch odd
snippets of CNN on a small television set above the counter of a
local café.
In the final week of December 2004, I was on
an island in Nicaragua oblivious to the Tsunami horror on which
the rest of the world focussed.
On Wednesday 7th May 2005, I was in a southern
state of Mexico occupied with eating tacos and Guatemalan visa renewal
when I heard the news. My thoughts had been a million miles from
home.
After nine months of travelling solely on the
back of trucks or squeezed into chicken buses, to see a picture
of a red double-decker bus brings back a flood of comforting familiarity.
When you see the shattered shell of that double-decker bus the sense
of familiar is still there, but it is now perverted, twisted and
foreign.
To the average Guatemalan, England and Blair
are familiar words, confused with the blurred boundaries of America
and Bush. I have been asked on more than one occasion if England
is a country inside of the United States. But despite this, there
has been impressive media coverage here in Guatemala: special reports,
updated facts and extensive photos. It has been recognised that
these terrorist bombs
. affect, and will continue to
affect, the lifestyle of all those who inhabit the planet.
(La Prensa. 12.07.05) Exactly
the kind of reporting I would expect.
What I did not expect was to come across other
opinions in response to the horror that occurred, opinions that
did not immediately, if at all, criticize and condemn the attacks.
Luis Morales Chúa in the Sunday edition
of Guatemalas national paper La Prensa, although recognising
and sympathising with the victims asks directly in his column But
what of us the Guatemalans? When world feeling is with the
British on 7th July 2005, with the Spanish on 11th March 2004 and
with the Americans on 11th September 2001, he asks the reader to
recognise the terrorism Guatemala has suffered, and continues to
suffer, at an international, national and personal level.
Chúa illustrates this through the conquest
and destruction of the indigenous and their cities, through the
State executions during the years of repression, and through the
attacks committed by private armed groups in their efforts to overthrow,
or sustain, governments in power. He claims that the order of silence
in Guatemala is as homicidal as the bombs that destroy trains,
planes or the highest buildings in the world. (La
Prensa. 10.07.05)
The day after the worst terrorism assault in
British history, the editorial of Mexicos leftwing newspaper
La Jornada, without any condemnation of the bombings, launched into
a hard-line attack on the arrogance of Imperialism that has
allowed various Western Governments to believe it possible to harass
other nations, to undertake remote wars and to maintain destruction
and blood far from its own cities. (La
Jornada. 08.07.05)
In the aftermath of the terror these words are
severe, and my natural liberalism is surprisingly hostile to opinion
that does not immediately condemn the atrocity. But is this indignation
not remarkably similar to how Iraqi civilians must feel daily as
yet another fatal explosion is reported as routine news without
demanding the international condemnation it deserves? Or is it not
how a Guatemalan journalist might feel when comparing last weeks
events, and the subsequent international attention, to his own nations
past?
Perhaps this moment in history will initiate
a deeper understanding amongst the British public of the importance
of condemning every atrocity that occurs across the globe, be it
on home or foreign soil.
Prayers
and reflections
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