Google – AFP, 9 May 2013
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Jose Efrain
Rios Montt is seen during his trial in Guatemala City on May 9,
2013 (AFP,
Johan Ordonez)
|
GUATEMALA
CITY — Former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt testified for the first
time at his genocide trial Thursday, denying charges he ordered the massacre of
indigenous people during his 1982-1983 regime.
"I
declare myself innocent," the 86-year-old told the court after asking to
take the stand in the final arguments of his landmark trial.
"I
never had the intention, the aim to destroy any national ethnic group," he
said. "I am not genocidal."
Rio Montt
denied the prosecution's charge that he authorized military plans to
exterminate the Ixil Maya population.
"I
never authorized, I never signed, I never ordered attacks against a race, an
ethnic group or a religion. I never did!" the retired general thundered.
The former
dictator, taking sips of water during his 50-minute testimony, accused
left-wing rebels of committing human rights violations against civilians.
Prosecutors
have requested a 75-year prison term against Rios Montt and his former military
intelligence chief, Jose Rodriguez, over the massacre if 1,771 Ixil Mayas
during the country's civil war.
The
massacre was one of the darkest chapters in the 36-year conflict, which pitted
leftist guerrillas against government forces until 1996, leaving some 200,000
dead or "disappeared," according to the United Nations.
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