Guatemalan President Otto Pérez Molina has defiantly vowed to stay in office despite calls from around the Central American country for him to resign immediately.
The
President said Sunday that he will continue to govern the nation of 15
million and let the legal process take its course as a corruption
scandal rocks his administration.
Pérez Molina, 64, has been accused of leading a corruption scheme. A U.N. investigating commission known as CICIG for its Spanish acronym
and Guatemala's attorney general have said there's evidence the
President and close aides in his administration, including former Vice
President Roxana Baldetti, took bribes in exchange for reducing or
eliminating taxes to companies or individuals seeking to import products
into Guatemala.
"I
categorically deny and reject the accusation that I was involved (in a
corruption scheme) and having received any money from that customs fraud
scheme," the President said in a message broadcast late Sunday on
Guatemalan national TV and radio.
Baldetti,
53, was detained Friday and accused of being involved in the corruption
scheme. She has repeatedly denied involvement.
She resigned in May,
shortly after the scandal broke and the CICIG and attorney general's
office announced the first results of their investigations.
Several
ministers, vice ministers and commissioners, who have not been
implicated in the scandal, have resigned recently, saying they no longer
trust Pérez Molina and don't want to be part of an administration they
say is unfit to govern the country.
There
have been protests demanding the President's resignation since April,
mainly in the capital's Constitution Square, where the National Palace
is located.
Dozens of people
gathered Sunday evening outside the presidential residence, beating on
drums, shouting and holding flags. "Otto Pérez, get out," they chanted.
"Guatemala doesn't want you anymore."
Protester
Pamela Sarabia said she's convinced the President knowingly allowed his
associates in government to enrich themselves by receiving kickbacks
from importers.
"It's
impossible that he didn't know about all these corruption charges. It's
absolutely impossible that he didn't know about the things the vice
president was doing and all the people around him," Sarabia said.
Others
such as Óscar Adolfo Reyes, a member of Guatemala's radio announcers
association, said Pérez Molina and others allegedly involved in the
corruption scheme have breached their duties and forgotten the promises
of honesty and transparency made to the people upon taking office.
"They have been elected by the people with the sole goal of serving themselves instead of serving the people," Reyes said.
Phillip
Chicola, a Guatemalan political analyst, said the current political
crisis has created a situation in which the President is unable to
effectively govern and respond to the country's needs.
"Since
the scandal broke in April, the President has been more interested in
trying to survive the last months of his term than governing. The
government here in Guatemala is paralyzed because the President right
now is more worried about staying in power," Chicola said.
Guatemala is holding presidential elections September 6.
Pérez
Molina's term in office runs until January 14, but it remains to be
seen if his legal troubles or the Guatemalan people will allow him to
remain in power.
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