The former chief of Guatemala’s police force has been sentenced to 70 years in prison, for orchestrating the kidnap of a university student, during the country’s civil war.
Pedro Garcia, who was chief from 1974 until 1982, is now the highest ranking police official to have been convicted for war crimes in the latest string of cases against former government officials (see here, here and here).
Garcia was found guilty of crimes against humanity and the “forced disappearance” of engineering student Edgar Saenz in 1981.
He faces further murder charges over the 1980 burning of the Spanish embassy in Guatemala, where 36 people were killed.
See report from the Guardian here.
Pedro Garcia, who was chief from 1974 until 1982, is now the highest ranking police official to have been convicted for war crimes in the latest string of cases against former government officials (see here, here and here).
Garcia was found guilty of crimes against humanity and the “forced disappearance” of engineering student Edgar Saenz in 1981.
He faces further murder charges over the 1980 burning of the Spanish embassy in Guatemala, where 36 people were killed.
See report from the Guardian here.