[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 204 (Thursday, December 14, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8043-S8044]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE EL MOZOTE MASSACRE
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, those of us who remember the massacre at El
Mozote, El Salvador, are reminded that last week was the 36th
anniversary of that horrific tragedy.
For those who are not aware, on December 11, 1981, Salvadoran
soldiers, including an elite battalion trained and equipped by the
United States, systematically murdered more than 900 innocent men,
women, and children. The Salvadoran military high command falsely
denied the crimes had occurred, and their denials were echoed by the
U.S. Embassy and the State Department. For more than 35 years, the
perpetrators of the massacre avoided justice, due to the cover-up and
an amnesty law passed in 1993, but in 2016, the Salvadoran Supreme
Court overturned that law and the case was reopened. Let us hope that
those who ordered, participated in, and covered up those crimes against
humanity will finally receive the punishment they deserve.
On December 2, good friend Congressman Jim McGovern traveled to El
Salvador. More than any other Member of Congress, Jim has been a
tireless advocate for human rights and justice in that country. After
returning to Washington, on December 11, Jim spoke about the El Mozote
massacre in the House of Represenatives. I ask unanimous consent that
his remarks be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[Five-Minute Special Order, Monday, December 11, 2017]
36th Anniversary of the El Mozote Massacre
(By James P. McGovern (MA))
Mr. Speaker, thirty-six years ago, nearly one thousand men,
women and children were murdered by Salvadoran soldiers in El
Mozote, El Salvador. It's considered one of the worst
massacres in modern Latin American history.
On December 2nd, I traveled to El Mozote with a delegation
led by the Washington Office on Latin America. Four hours
after leaving San Salvador, we arrived at El Mozote in the
northern region of Morazan, near the border of Honduras.
Three decades ago, El Mozote included about 20 houses on
open ground around a square. Facing the square was a church
and, behind it, a small building known as ``the convent,''
used by the priest to change into his vestments when
celebrating Mass. Nearby was a small school house.
Our delegation sat in the town square with survivors and
victims of the massacre. We listened to their stories, shared
prayers for their loss and suffering, toured the grounds
where this atrocity took place, and visited memorials the
community built to commemorate and preserve this tragic
history. We also heard from lawyers with Cristosal, a U.S.-
based NGO providing legal aid to the association of victims
and survivors.
On December 10, 1981, the Salvadoran army brigade based in
San Miguel and the Atlacatl Battalion, an elite infantry unit
based in San Salvador, arrived in El Mozote. Over the next
two days, these troops methodically and viciously murdered
the town's residents and those of nearby villages.
On the morning of December 11th, troops assembled the
people in the town square. They separated the men from the
women and children and locked them in separate groups in the
church, the convent, and various houses. According to eye-
witness accounts, they then interrogated, tortured, and
executed the men at several different sites.
Around noon, they began taking the women and girls in
groups, separating them from their children and machine-
gunning them after raping them. Many families were ordered to
remain in their homes while soldiers set fire to the houses.
Over 140 of the children, some mere infants, were jammed
into ``the convent'' next to the church. There, soldiers
blocked the doors, aimed guns through the windows, and fired
into the mass of children, murdering them all in cold blood.
They then threw an incendiary bomb into the building,
collapsing the roof and adobe walls.
I walked with members of the community to the site where
the children were murdered. A garden cultivated in their
memory blooms on the site where they perished. A mural on the
side of the church facing the garden depicts tiny angels
ascending to heaven.
Beneath the mural are plaques with the names and ages of
the children killed so brutally. They range from zero to
sixteen years. Walking on such hallowed ground, I was deeply
moved and outraged by the atrocity that took place there.
In October 1990, the Salvadoran courts opened an
investigation into the El Mozote
[[Page S8044]]
case, and in January 1992, the civil war ended with peace
accords signed between the Salvadoran government and FMLN
guerrillas. In November 1992, the U.N. Truth Commission on El
Salvador supervised exhumations of El Mozote remains by
Argentine forensics experts, confirming that the stories told
by survivors were indeed true. Then, everything was cut short
when the Salvadoran congress passed a sweeping amnesty law in
1993.
However, last year, in July 2016, the Salvadoran Supreme
Court overturned the amnesty law as unconstitutional. And in
October 2016, a judge reopened the El Mozote case and began
taking testimony, which continues today.
There are many reasons why we in Congress should be engaged
in the search for justice in the El Mozote case.
First, in the post-war period, the U.S. has supported a
strong and independent judiciary in El Salvador, capable of
prosecuting corruption and human rights abuses. El Mozote is
viewed as an exemplar case on whether this is possible to
achieve.
Second, in the 1980s, the United States armed, trained and
equipped the Salvadoran armed forces, in particular, the
Army. At El Mozote, U.S. guns and bullets were used to
massacre infants, children, women and men.
Third, the U.S. established and trained the Atlacatl
Battalion. Ostensibly an elite rapid reaction counter-
insurgency force, it was a major actor in the mass murder at
El Mozote; nine years later, the unit also murdered six
Jesuit priests and two women at the University of Central
America in San Salvador.
Finally, at the time of the massacre, the Salvadoran High
Command denied that it had happened. The U.S. embassy and
State Department echoed those denials and denigrated the
Washington Post and New York Times reporters who traveled to
El Mozote and published detailed stories about the massacre.
Mr. Speaker, the U.S. should support the Salvadoran judge
presiding over the El Mozote case and the Attorney General's
Office, including releasing all information in our military
and intelligence files relevant to that period of the civil
war. It would be a significant contribution to ending the
culture of impunity in El Salvador.
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