In the first week of June 1994, "20/20" reported on charges of baby-selling in Guatemala. The charges - which had gained wide-spread acceptance among the peasants in that impoverished land - were that "middle men" were buying (and in some instances, stealing) babies for sale to rich, yuppie-class North Americans. The "20/20" report centered on two cases involving North American women who, while visiting Guatemala, almost lost their lives to infuriated mobs who believed the women had come to that unsettled and poverty-stricken land to receive stolen babies to take home. The program tended to treat the charges as myths generated out of superstition and ignorance; as a result, "20/20" was disposed to ignore the veracity of the charges by the peasants, and instead centered its report largely on the tragic plight of the two women - both of whom were well-educated, middle-aged, yuppies - exactly the type of women Guatemalan peasants had come to believe were at the center of the growing baby-trade.[1]
But reliable news reports from Guatemala City painted a very different story from that which had been painted by "20/20." For example, F. Colindres and C. Morales, reporting in Cronica, a centrist newsmagazine in Guatemala City, said that - in fact - foreign adoptions of Guatemalan children had mushroomed in recent years - and that behind this phenomenon was a network of baby brokers, lawyers, politicians, police officers, and even officials in the Ministry of Public Health and Social Welfare who offered Guatemalan children to North Americans for prices ranging up to $15,000 per child. In addition, there was evidence that many of the same people who for years had been involved in right-wing Death Squad activity provided the "muscle" sometimes necessary to obtain the children.
Childrens advocate Guillermo Carranza explained that baby brokers go to clinics, hospitals, and poor villages where they look for women willing to give up or sell one or more of their children. But, as in any business, things do not always work out. Some women immediately regret having sold their babies. If they try to renege on the agreement, they may have to go into hiding to avoid reprisals. Child-buyers also approach prostitutes and young women who, out of ignorance or need, rent out their wombs as surrogate mothers.
Because of the poverty of so many young women and the large sums of money that prospective North American parents are willing to pay, the selling of children has, according to Colindres and Morales - and contrary to "20/20s" report - become a thriving business in Guatemala. One investigator, Claudio Porres, chief of criminal investigations for the public-health ministry, says that at least twenty gangs - all of them in one way or another linked to the same people who are involved in Death Squad activity - profit from the trade. Porres, noted as an exceptionally honest official in a world otherwise characterized by corruption and blood-shed, reports that in the first two months of this year alone, police (under his orders) recovered fifty-four newborns (with a "street value" of almost one million dollars) in ten houses and arrested thirteen people, including two lawyers. But such "recoveries" are few and far between, and represent less than 10 percent of the real volume, which - if true - would be an annual trade in babies approaching $60,000,000.
Given the demand for babies, officials suspect that many of the children who disappear may in fact be illicitly adopted with help from unscrupulous professionals who exploit weaknesses in the legal adoption process. Former Congressional Deputy Mario Taracena, who has tried to get a new adoption law passed, makes more specific charges. He says that "in Guatemala it is easy to find a doctor who will sign a birth certificate without seeing the baby, a social worker who will certify the childs socioeconomic status without even knowing where the babys parents live, and a notary public who will attest to documents he has not seen."
Taracena notes that the baby trade involves both civil servants and politicians. In one case, Taracena accused Justice Juan Jose Rodil, president of the Supreme Court, of being the owner of a "birthing house" from which infants were allegedly sold.[2]
Since these initial reports, a growing body of what now appears to be irrefutable evidence has surfaced to corroborate Carranza, Taracena, Porres and the others. For example, on Friday, June 5th, 1996, ABCs Nightline aired an account by Emily Buchanan of the BBC of widespread baby stealing in Paraguay. The account reported on a massive flow of hundreds and hundreds of North Americans who were streaming into Paraguay to obtain babies - at a cost of upwards of $44,000 per child.[3] Again - as in Guatemala - the muscle behind the baby trade are the Death Squads.[4]
Christians should ask themselves, are these the kind of people they want to get mixed up with? Yet this is precisely what is happening when they allow their names to be tied - if only indirectly - to people who are involved in Death Squad activity - people like Calero, DAubuisson[5], etc. - people who, if not themselves directly involved, are tied to those who are.
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