A Guatemalan court has sentenced two former soldiers to 120 and 240 years of prison for subjecting at least 15 indigenous women to sexual slavery and other crimes during the country's civil war. The accused are guilty of "crimes against humanity, murder and forced disappearance," Judge Yassmin Barrios ruled at a hearing at a Guatemala City court on Friday.
Following a trial which lasted nearly a month, the judge handed a 120-year sentence to retired colonel Esteelmer Reyes, 59, for crimes against humanity in relation to enslavement between 1982 and 1983 and the murder of a woman and her two daughters. He was handed 30 years for the slavery charge and 90 years for the murder. At the time, Reyes headed a military outpost at Sepur Zarco in the northeastern Guatemala.
During the trial, prosecutors accused Reyes of "authorizing and consenting to soldiers under his command exercising sexual violence and inhuman, cruel and degrading treatment against Maya-Q'eqchi' women." Co-accused Heriberto Valdez, 74, was handed 30 years of prison on slavery charges and another 210 years for the forced disappearance of seven people.
During the trial, which has been described by activists as "historic", indigenous women with their faces covered told the court of what they had suffered as sexual slaves. "It is very important to highlight the role of the victims because not only do they have to go before a court, but must confront stigma, ridicule and abuse," 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winner and indigenous leader Rigoberta Menchu told AFP.