Nineth Montenegro
Nineth Varenca Montenegro Cottom (born 1958 in San Marcos, Guatemala)[1] is a Guatemalan human rights activist and a victim of state terrorism. She was the first person to face civil resistance on a national level as a result of protesting in the streets about the whereabouts of her husband, Edgar Fernando García, who had been captured illegally by the government and has been a missing person since February 18, 1984. The disappearance of her husband still remains an unsolved case, as he is considered a desaprecido.
She is married to the current director of GAM, Mario Polanco.
Militancy
In September 1984, she joined with other family members of victims of state violence and founded GAM ("Mutual Support Group"; Spanish: Grupo de Apoyo Mutuo), one of Guatemala's oldest and best-known human rights organizations.
After receiving her teaching degree from Instituto Normal Central para Señoritas Belén, she worked as a professor in public schools for many years. She was considered a hero and a role model for women at one of the last schools she taught at, "No 151 en la zona 7".
Since 1979, she has dedicated herself to social struggles. As a consequence of her constant protesting, she has received thousands of death threats. She has also appeared in Amnesty International videos that portray social struggles in Guatemala.
Politics
Montenegro was elected to Congress in 1996 and since then, has dedicated herself to monitoring the functions of multiple public institutions, including the armed forces, where she managed to detect abnormal activity that caused the illicit enrichment of several army officials.
Since 2004, she has dedicated herself to building her own political party, Encuentro por Guatemala, in which she received public support. Today, her political party has united with Visión con Valores which obtained six seats in Congress, giving her another term of office for the 2008-12 legislative session, as second vice president.
Awards
She was named person of the year by various magazines and other media reports.
She has received international recognition in:
- The United States
- Spain
- Austria
- France
- Canada
- Argentina
See also
External links
- Interview and article in Prensa Libre naming her "person of the year" for 2004 (Spanish)
- Nineth Montenegro, Congress of the Republic