Guatemala’s Congress lifted Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina’s immunity of office on Tuesday, opening him up to possible prosecution in a widening customs corruption scandal that has rocked his administration and the nation’s political system.
With all 132 lawmakers present in the 158-seat assembly voting to approve the historic measure, prosecutors are now free to file criminal charges against Perez Molina just like any other citizen, and a judge would be able to order his detention.
The congressional vote does not remove the president from office, but a judge later granted an order barring him from traveling outside the nation.
Photo: AFP
“Guatemala is showing that nobody is above the law, and as a result this is a message for all current and future public servants that our behavior must be subject to the constitution,” prosecutor Thelma Aldana said at a news conference.
About 200 people outside the capitol hugged each other, cheered, waved Guatemalan flags and set off firecrackers as news of the congressional vote reached them, an echo of earlier massive street protests calling for his removal from office. Drivers honked horns and people recorded the moment with selfies.
“Excellent! It is a step forward for Guatemala,” Gerardo Corzo, 71, said.
Perez Molina, 64, has said he is innocent of corruption and has vowed to face the legal process against him.
“The president is aware of the new scenario, which was not the most desirable, but was very probable,” his spokesman, Jorge Ortega, told reporters. “He has said he will be very respectful and submit himself to the rule of law.”
Those voting against Perez Molina included members of his own ruling party.
“The party gave us permission to vote and withdraw the president’s immunity,” lawmaker Luis Fernandez Chenal said. “He who owes nothing, fears nothing.”
There was no immediate word on when any charges might be filed against the president, but prosecutors said they have reason to believe he was involved in the customs scheme. Aldana said he is being investigated for possible illicit association, bribery and customs fraud.
Uncovered by prosecutors and a UN commission probing criminal networks in Guatemala, it involved a ring known as La Linea, (The Line) in which businesspeople paid bribes to avoid import duties through the customs agency. The ring is believed to have defrauded the state of millions of dollars.
The scandal has already claimed the job of former Guatemalan vice president Roxana Baldetti, whose ex-personal secretary was named as the alleged ringleader. Baldetti resigned on May 8 and is currently in jail awaiting trial on accusations she took millions of dollars in bribes. A number of Cabinet officials have also left office.
Protesters have demanded not only that Perez Molina step down, but that Sunday’s presidential elections be postponed. Perez said delaying the vote would be against the law. Perez cannot run for re-election and is set to remain in office until a handover in January.
Under Guatemala’s constitution, the president is immune from prosecution and it requires a two-thirds majority from Congress to strip it.
Earlier on Tuesday, civilians formed a wall of bodies to let lawmakers into Congress, protecting them from dozens of presidential loyalists who had blocked access to the building since the morning in a bid to delay the proceedings.
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