Guatemala prosecutors raid Save the Children over alleged abuse

1 week ago 24

GUATEMALA CITY: Guatemalan authorities on Thursday (Apr 25) raided the offices of the international organisation Save the Children in what the prosecutor's office said was part of an investigation into alleged abuses against minors.

The operation followed local media reports that prosecutors in the Central American country had asked the Texas attorney general's office for help investigating the alleged trafficking of Guatemalan children on the southern United States border.

The raid was part of a "transnational" probe of "actions that could be related to violations and abuses against Guatemalan children", state prosecutor Rafael Curruchiche said in a video published on social media.

Save the Children confirmed that officials had entered its offices in Guatemala City.

"We have been shocked and perplexed by the unprecedented search of our offices by the Guatemalan Public Ministry," it said in a statement on Thursday.

"No specific allegations were made known to us, and there is no evidence to support allegations of misconduct.

"We have protected children from any abuse of their rights. We do not – and we have never – facilitated the movement of children out of Guatemala," Save the Children added.

Public prosecutors enter the offices of Save the Children during a raid in Guatemala City on Apr 25, 2024. (Photo: AFP/Johan Ordonez)

Guatemalan authorities had sought assistance from prosecutors in Texas, Curruchiche confirmed, adding that the raid involved the "inspection, search and seizure of evidence".

Curruchiche heads the special prosecutor's office against impunity and is considered an ally of Guatemala's controversial attorney general, Consuelo Porras.

Porras is listed as corrupt and undemocratic by the US Justice Department and has been accused of plotting to oust President Bernardo Arevalo, who wants to fire him.

A public prosecutor loads a box with evidence after a raid in the offices of Save the Children during a raid in Guatemala City on Apr 25, 2024. (Photo: AFP/Johan Ordonez)

"NO EVIDENCE"

AFP reporters at the scene saw prosecutors entering the building of Save the Children, which has been working in Guatemala since a devastating earthquake in 1976 that left more than 25,000 people dead.

It opened a permanent office there in 1983 and says it provides education, health, child protection and humanitarian aid, including to migrant children and their families who cross Guatemala's southern border.

In a statement released last week, Save the Children denied facilitating "the movement of children" out of Guatemala.

"We take all child safeguarding and misconduct allegations extremely seriously and have independent investigative mechanisms in place to investigate them thoroughly," the statement said.

"We have no evidence to support these claims and remain dedicated to providing humanitarian aid to migrant children and their families under strict standards of protection and safeguarding," it added.

Guatemalan newspaper Prensa Libre had reported that the prosecutor's office sent a letter to the Texas attorney general on Apr 12 naming Save the Children and several other non-govermental organisations that were under suspicion.

It said the organisations were suspected of "participating in a child trafficking operation".

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