Guatemala's
new president takes office with 'Mayan face'
GUATEMALA
CITY
Petroleumworld.com, Jan 15, 2008
Alvaro Colom will take the oath of office
as Guatemala's new president Monday, promising to crack down on crime and alleviate
poverty in one of the poorest and most violent countries in the Americas.
Colom, an engineer-cum-politician who won Guatemala's presidency in November,
has also vowed to help empower the country's ethnic Mayan Indians, telling reporters
that he plans "to convert Guatemala into a social-democratic country with
a Mayan face."
A good 43 percent of Guatemala's 13 million residents are indigenous Mayas, and
they voted overwhelmingly for Colom -- who is one of just three non-Mayas to
be a Maya priest and is known as "Sparrow Hawk."
"My government will push equality, cultural diversity and tolerance," Colom,
56, said in an interview Sunday.
"In my cabinet there will be no racists or male chauvinists. It matters
not who governs, but for whom they govern and how this is done."
Colom has already been criticized for naming just one woman and one indigenous
person to his 13-member cabinet, although the key ministries of Interior and
Defense remain open.
The new president's center-left proposals have rattled Guatemala's conservative
business community. Colom has vowed to end tax breaks for the wealthy, increase
the minimum wage, crack down on tax evasion and help strengthen unions.
Colom has also promised to slash poverty levels by 20 percent over his four-year-term
by creating 700,000 new jobs, building 200,000 houses and achieving economic
growth of at least six percent.
Gross domestic product growth is currently at five percent. Official figures
indicate half the country's 13 million population lives in poverty, though non
governmental organizations put the figure at 80 percent.
Violence had been a key issue in a country where, according to government figures,
there are 16 murders a day and five kidnappings a month.
While outgoing President Oscar Berger had a strong pro-US tilt, Colom has said
he will strengthen his ties with leftist Latin American governments while maintaining
friendly ties with the United States.
He cannot turn his back on Washington, as the country's most important source
of hard currency are the remittances from the 1.3 million Guatemalans living
abroad -- 97 percent of which live in the United States, and 60 percent of whom
are undocumented migrants.
Collectively, Guatemalans living abroad sent more than four billion dollars to
their homeland in 2007, according to Central Bank figures.
An industrial engineer by training who has managed dozens of textile companies,
Colom served as deputy economy minister in 1991 and later headed an agency that
helped people who fought or were displaced in the 1960-1996 civil war. He had
made two previous bids for the presidency.
His vice-president is Rafael Espada, a prestigious cardiologist who said he will
focus on improving the country's ramshackle public health system.
Colom won the presidency in a November 4 runoff vote over retired general Otto
Perez Molina. He is the first social democratic president elected since Jacobo
Arbenz, toppled in a CIA-organized coup in 1954.
Guatemala is still recovering from a bloody 35-year war with leftist insurgents
that ended in a 1996 peace accord.
Guests at Monday's the inauguration event include Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian;
the heir to the Spanish throne, Felipe de Borbon; and the presidents of Brazil,
Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Panama -- in all 1,500 personalities from
70 countries.
Story
by
Edgar Calderon from
AFP
AFP
140829 GMT 01 08
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