In
1982, an army colonel ordered the Guatemalan village of Chichicastenango
to form a Civil Defense Patrol to help put down an ongoing
insurrection. The colonel made it clear that those who refused to
sign a commitment to civil patrols would be seen as subversives
and killed. The villagers signed.
Hundreds of thousands of Guatemalan civilians had to serve in civil
patrols, essentially paramilitary
groups formed from the civilian population as a means to control
them and gain their assistance in the civil war. Already poor, patrollers
were forced to purchase weapons and uniform shirts from the army.
Members had to patrol continuously for up to twenty-four hours a
week, and sometimes went on army-accompanied sweeps that lasted
up to several weeks. Males of nearly all ageseven eight-year-oldswere
compelled into service. Besides their combat duties, patrollers
had to work as laborers for army soldiers. Those who refused to
participate had to pay a fine, find a replacement, or face beatings
and other severe punishments or even execution, all without trial.
Recalcitrant villagers in Chichicastenango were put into a specially
dug well fifteen meters deep.
Humanitarian law does not interfere with a governments right
to suppress insurrections and implicitly allows a military draft.
Human rights law takes a dim view of forcing people to serve in
civil patrols. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has
repeatedly declared that the institution of civil patrols in Guatemala
was a restriction of liberty and a form of involuntary servitude,
in violation of Articles 6, 7, and 22 of the American Convention
on Human Rights.
Yet civil patrollers are not only victims, they are also victimizers.
Patrollers in Guatemala beat, tortured, and even killed thousands
of suspected subversives, even those who merely refused to serve
in the patrols. Sometimes civil patrols were ordered to do these
things by army or government officials, sometimes the patrols acted
on their own initiative. In either case, patrollers violated not
only the human rights of the victims but also the rules of internal
armed conflict that call for humane treatment of noncombatants.
Governments are usually held responsible for violations of both
humanitarian and human rights law perpetrated by patrollers. This
is especially the case when the patrols are organized by government
or army officials. Also, governments are held responsible under
human rights law when they fail to suppress violations by privately
organized armed groups.
(See
compelling military service;
irregulars.)

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