The Americas | Guatemala

Not enough police; but who wants the army back in charge again?

How violent crime threatens to blow away a struggling new democracy

|guatemala city

FEW countries can ever have been in such urgent need of a halfway decent government as Guatemala was when Óscar Berger won last year's presidential election. Boasting Central America's largest economy, Guatemala lags its smaller neighbours in most other respects. Its civil war between military dictators and left-wing guerrillas was the longest and bloodiest in the isthmus, ending only in 1996. Peace brought little progress, especially for the six out of ten Guatemalans who are poor, most of them Mayan Indians.

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Not enough police; but who wants the army back in charge again?”

Sudan can't wait

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