Murder,
rape and mutilations are common crimes in Latin America, considered one of the
most violent areas in the world today. Is the violence a legacy of the region's
bloody past? A new study examines the phenomenon.
UN figures
show that in Mexico alone, more than 20,000 people were murdered in 2010. In
Guatemala, an average of 41 murders per 100,000 residents were committed, in El
Salvador, this figure was even 66. In comparison: in Germany, not even one
murder - 0.8 cases - per 100,000 people takes place.
The three
Latin American countries have all experienced political conflict in their
recent past: violent civil wars took place in El Salvador and Guatemala in the
1980s and 1990s. Mexico experienced in the early 1990s an armed uprising of the
Zapatistas against the government.
The
conflicts in these countries are all considered over for at least a decade now.
The violence which still prevails is primarily perceived as being not
politically motivated but rather criminal. This is a reason why the continent
has hardly played a role in discussions about post-war and post-conflict
societies, said Sabine Kurtenbach, author of the paper "The specific
features of Latin American post-conflict situations" for the Institute for
Development and Peace (INEF) at the University of Duisburg-Essen.
Kurtenbach,
an INEF associate fellow, said the experience of war or armed conflict was not
an adequate explanation for the high degree of violence in the region. If this
were the case, all post-war and post-conflict societies would have such
problems, she said.
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| Kurtenbach is also a senior research fellow at Hamburg's GIGA Institute of Latin American Studies |
The causes
of violence are complex, according to Kurtenbach's study. In countries such as
El Salvador and Guatemala, the experience of war and armed conflict represent a
significant factor. The oppressive policies of these governments are
accompanied by a lack of willingness to resolve the large gap between poor and
rich. Social inequality continued to be a significant factor for the high level
of violence in Latin America.
Growing
cities and a weak state
Other
factors are the speed of urban growth and the dissolution of traditional social
ties due to migration into the cities. Criminal youth gangs often take over a
substitute role for the family.
However,
compared to the usual flight from the countryside into the cities, migration
following armed conflicts is significantly more problematic, since a mainly
traumatized population in a region is affected.
"This
makes the urbanization even more complicated than the classic form due to
social change," Kurtenbach said. The risk of violence was increased, since
the state for the most part cannot provide the migrants with adequate
infrastructure. Organized crime, such as international drug trade, had also led
to an increase in violence.
"Transnational
networks do not simply spread into a vacuum, but rather go there where there
are favorable local factors," Kurtenbach said. A weak state made it possible,
especially when the legal system did not function adequately.
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| Members of the Mara-18 gang behind bars in El Salvador |
"Where
violence is hardly prosecuted and sanctioned or where state institutions
themselves consider violence a legitimate means, incentives are created to
employ violence," said Peter Imbusch, an expert for conflict and violence
research at the University of Wuppertal.
In post-war
societies or countries formerly ruled by military dictatorships, it was an
added predicament when the state security apparatus was part of conflicts,
Kurtenbach said. This particularly put into question the ability to reform the
security sector. This concretely concerned the downsizing of armed forces, the
demilitarization of the police, the subordination of the military under civil
institutions, as well as the strengthening of the justice system. Mexico,
Guatemala and El Salvador continue to struggle to implement planned reforms.
A culture
of violence
Just how
much a country deals with its past is a decisive point for its development
after a conflict has ended. This is the only way for a society to agree that
violence is no longer a legitimate means, Kurtenbach said. But it was not
necessarily the case that the inclination to use violence automatically ceased
when an armed conflict ended, Imbusch said.
"Violence
does not simply emerge in a society that is in a post-conflict situation, but
apparently violence is somehow virulent in some form there," he said.
However, there were also structures which generally favored violence, for
example the "machismo" culture where violence is considered a
legitimate means of defending oneself.
The battle
against violence in the region can only be won in the long term, Imbusch said.
It was important to ease tensions in troubled hotspots through new education
and leisure possibilities. This was a good opportunity for German development
cooperation.
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| Bogota is trying to clean up its streets |
In
addition, urban development measures could improve the situation, such as is
the case in Colombia's capital Bogota. The mayors there across the political
spectrum have spent years successfully winning back public space. Dark streets
and squares, for example, are better illuminated, so people dare to go back
onto the streets again.
Both
Kurtenbach and Imbusch agreed that state-imposed repressive measures only have
a limited effect, if at all. They often tend to lead to an escalation of the
conflicts instead. This was evident in the fight of the Mexican government
against drug cartels. Since 2006, at least 50,000 civilians have been killed in
the drug war between the military and rival drug cartels.
Author: Christina Ruta / sac
Editor: Michael Knigge




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