Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Guatemala Sends Police And Troops After Armed Groups Hit Highland Towns


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Guatemala imposed a 15-day“state of prevention” in Nahualá and Santa Catarina Ixtahuacán after sustained armed attacks.
  • Officials confirmed at least five deaths; local leaders reported missing people and dozens injured, with other counts higher.
  • The violence reflects a century-old boundary feud now being leveraged by armed groups seeking space to extort and operate.

    Guatemala's government moved Sunday to activate emergency powers in two municipalities in the western department of Sololá.

    The step follows a day of gunfire and disruption that authorities describe as an effort to intimidate residents and weaken state presence.

    President Bernardo Arévalo said“illegal armed groups” exploited a territorial conflict between neighboring communities that has simmered for more than a century.

    The government says the objective goes beyond local rivalry. It is to create room for extortion and other illicit business by pushing back police and military patrols.



    Officials said a military detachment in the area came under attack from around 8:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. on Saturday, leaving several soldiers wounded. The Interior Ministry confirmed at least five people were killed.

    It said specialized National Civil Police units were deployed to reinforce security and protect civilians. Reporting from the area also described roadblocks, bus hijackings, and an attack on a police station.

    Local accounts suggest the toll may be higher. Nahualá's mayor, Manuel Guarchaj Tzep, condemned the attack and said it occurred inside his municipality, about two kilometers from the boundary zone.

    He initially cited four dead, six missing, and around 50 injured. Other local reporting later circulated higher fatality figures. The“state of prevention” expands enforcement powers.

    It can restrict some gatherings, tighten rules on carrying weapons, and accelerate searches and checkpoints. Why does this matter beyond Guatemala? Sololá sits near the Lake Atitlán corridor, known internationally for tourism and Indigenous culture.

    When armed groups can sustain hours-long attacks and choke transport links, it signals a governance test with spillovers for travel confidence, commerce, and security.

    All figures above come from official statements and published local reporting, and casualty counts may change as cases are verified.

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  • The Rio Times

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