Guatemala: Film - Killer's Paradise
Another documentary I want to get my hands on soon, this one about the increasing number of "femicides" in Guatemala (nearly 600 women killed in 2006 alone, see this previous post). Snip:
Link (via Human Rights Watch, thanks Rudy Giron)Olenka Frenkiel and Giselle Portenier (Murder in Purdah, Israel’s Secret Weapon) document the story of the brutal killings of women in Guatemala. Since 1999, more than 2,000 women have been murdered there, with the numbers rising every year. In 2005 alone, 640 women, nearly two a day, were killed. That’s one woman in every twelve thousand murdered last year, almost ten times as many, per capita, as in Britain. And in Guatemala, the murders are rarely investigated. Few statistics are kept, details rarely are logged, potential forensic evidence is often ignored or contaminated, so the killers invariably go free and no one, not even the country’s president, has any idea who they are or why so many women are murdered. The answer, at least in part, is the failure of Guatemalan authorities to pursue justice for perpetrators of abuses during a civil war which killed 200,000 people. Three generations of killers have gone free; though the country is trying to show it has changed, old habits die hard. KILLER’S PARADISE documents the story of Claudina Isabel Velasquez, a 19 year old law student murdered in summer 2005, as her family urges the authorities to investigate who killed her.
Technorati Tags: film, guatemala, femicide
Labels: Guatemala

Olenka Frenkiel and Giselle Portenier (Murder in Purdah, Israel’s Secret Weapon) document the story of the brutal killings of women in Guatemala. Since 1999, more than 2,000 women have been murdered there, with the numbers rising every year. In 2005 alone, 640 women, nearly two a day, were killed. That’s one woman in every twelve thousand murdered last year, almost ten times as many, per capita, as in Britain. And in Guatemala, the murders are rarely investigated. Few statistics are kept, details rarely are logged, potential forensic evidence is often ignored or contaminated, so the killers invariably go free and no one, not even the country’s president, has any idea who they are or why so many women are murdered. The answer, at least in part, is the failure of Guatemalan authorities to pursue justice for perpetrators of abuses during a civil war which killed 200,000 people. Three generations of killers have gone free; though the country is trying to show it has changed, old habits die hard. KILLER’S PARADISE documents the story of Claudina Isabel Velasquez, a 19 year old law student murdered in summer 2005, as her family urges the authorities to investigate who killed her.
4 Comments:
I'm the production coordinator on this film and I can tell you that it should be coming out very soon. I encourage everyone to see this important and hauntingly beautiful film.
Hi, Sam, would you please email me offline (xeni at xeni dot net) with your contact info? - XJ
We've just posted four clips from this powerful film over at CITZENShift.
Scroll down a little:
http://citizen.nfb.ca/onf/info?aid=8442&atid=27
Matt
http://citizen.nfb.ca/
I'm going down to the nfb to watch it this afternoon. If you find yourself in Toronto anytime it's available at the personal viewing stations at the National Film Board @ John and Richmond streets.
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