A Guatemalan court on Friday handed down a four-year jail term to a senior anti-corruption prosecutor in what critics assailed as a blatant effort to undermine a fight against corruption.
The sentence against Virginia Laparra, who has been imprisoned for 10 months already, was announced by Judge Oly Gonzalez after an unusually speedy 18-day trial that was largely confined to testimony from police, government functionaries and a judge once investigated for corruption.
Gonzalez said Laparra was convicted for "abuse of authority" and given a commutable term of four years, which, under Guatemalan law, means she could pay a fine and see her term reduced.
Laparra wept as she heard the sentence.
"This is a legal aberration and a terrible precedent," she said.
Amnesty International lambasted the conviction as a travesty.
"This conviction is yet another example of the criminalization of justice workers in Guatemala," said Erika Guevara Rosas, Americas director for Amnesty International. "Virginia Laparra is a prisoner of conscience who is paying a high price for conducting her work as an anti-corruption prosecutor.
- 'Vengeance' campaign -
In brief remarks to journalists, Laparra said "no prosecutor evermore will dare present a case."
US State Department assistant secretary for the western hemisphere Brian Nichols this week tweeted that the US government is "deeply concerned" about Laparra's prosecution. In a separate tweet, the department said Guatemala's campaign against Laparra "for doing her job undermines the fight against corruption and impunity."
A day earlier, Laparra asserted as the trial wrapped up that the charges against her were part of a "vengeance" campaign by right-wing forces intent on protecting corruption rackets and military officers blamed for crimes during the 1960-1996 civil war.
The only witnesses brought forth to testify in Laparra's trial were the two police officers who arrested her, a lawyer for the plaintiff, a handwriting expert and former judge Lesther Castellanos, who Laparra denounced on four occasions for leaking sensitive information.
As part of the backlash against United Nations-financed anti-corruption efforts, some 25 prosecutors, former prosecutors and judges are either in jail or have fled the country. Laparra is the first to be brought to trial and convicted.
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© Agence France-Presse
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