
FROM FREEDOM SOCIALIST PARTY
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished in Guatemala
 Tecpán, Guatemala, February 2013
 
By Alfredo Zarazúa, Guatemala City
 
Sandra Paredes Rojas, organizer of the Joranda Médica Internacional in Tecpán,
 
Guatemala, is a Guatemalan health care worker who brought a group of North American
doctors through Helps International to the Centro de Urgencias Médicas, the clinic where she has worked for many years. For her selfless labor, the newly appointed clinic director, Miguel Ángel Calel, banned her from working on the event she had spent a month and a half organizing through her international contacts and which she had
planned and executed in years past.
Director Calel had never met Ms. Paredes Rojas but that did not stop him from deciding that she was an abrasive woman because she tends to say things the way they are. He branded her a troublemaker--which is not surprising coming from one who was recently given his new job by the patriarchal and fascist-like Guatemalan government bureaucracy.
 Sr. Calel was appointed Director of the Centro de Urgencias Médicas one year ago
 by the rightwing, heavy-handed party in power in Guatemala. Apparently, being the
 organizer of an event for the poor and indigenous people of Tecpán and environs was
 reason enough for Ms. Paredes Rojas to be treated with vicious discrimination and
 machismo by Sr. Calel. It is further proof of the poor treatment that health workers,
 especially women, are subject to in Guatemala, where reprisals from official party
 bureaucrats is common.
 Guerry Hoddersen, speaking on behalf of the Freedom Socialist Party (FSP) in the US,
 called on Director Calel and the Guatemalan government to open the doors of the clinic
 to Ms. Paredes Rojas and held them responsible for threats of violence or intimidation
 against her. “No worker, whether he or she is a volunteer or not, should be mistreated
 for organizing an event to serve the local indigenous people,” she said, “especially an
 event that helps them to be healthy and able to live and work with dignity.”
_____________________________________________
From February 10-17, Ms. Paredes Rojas organized the International Medical Program
 2013, which served patients from Totonicapán, San Marcos, Chichicastenango, Sololá
 and Sacatepéquez.
 This is the second year that she has organized the International Medical Program for the
 Centro de Urgencias Médicas in Tecpán. In February 2012, Ms. Paredes Rojas put on a
 similar International Medical Program at the same clinic with the help of her international
 contacts.
 During the 2012 event, Ms. Paredes Rojas was responsible for doing laundry at the
 local Centro de Urgencia Médicas. Her work during the full duration of the International
 Medical Program was to wash hospital linens for patients that had surgery for hernias,
 gall bladders, breast cysts, harelips, split palates, clubfeet, bunions and hysterectomies,
 among others. Her shift started at 7:00am and did not end until midnight. She had to
 wash laundry by hand since the machines could not wash all the linens used for 60
 surgeries per day. (The doctors had thought to bring medical supplies and equipment
 but not washing machines for their visit!)
 This year medical services were offered in general medicine, pediatrics, gynecology
 and dental work. There were so many patients that it was impossible to accommodate
 everyone, so requests for hernia and gall bladder surgeries were denied and no help
 was available for the many people with strabismus (weakness in eye muscles or crossed
 eyes).
 When the Clinic Director denied Ms. Paredes Rojas access to the event she had
 organized, she set up an “office” outside the clinic where she saw patients, registered
 them, and gave them a number for a medical consultation with the international
 specialists.
 All of Ms. Paredes Rojas’ work is on a volunteer basis and fortunately, the international
 specialists supported her, even sharing their food with her. These North American
 workers acknowledge that she is the organizer for the Helps International event, whose
 purpose is to create an orderly program to assist the legions of people in desperate need
 of medical attention. She plays an important role by answering questions posed by the
 local people day and night. The doctors know that not just anyone can do that!
 Ms. Paredes Rojas’ efforts have borne fruit thanks to the support from the Casa de
 la Cultura in Chimaltenango and Tecpán whose members protect her 24 hours a day
 so she can remain safe. Otherwise, she could become one more victim of the police
 state regime. (If this were to happen, the FSP would mount a public campaign to alert
 the medical volunteers and the US government to this abuse of power by the Perez
 government.)
 Ms. Paredes Rojas was interviewed by a Mexican news outlet and asked how much
 she had spent on publicizing this event. She replied she did not spend one penny
 because she asked “chimalteco” journalists at the Casa de la Cultura in Chimaltenango
 for support. One day they all got together and she was interviewed, thus creating free
 publicity for the program. She also visited “chimalteco” radio stations and community
 radio in Tecpán to get the word out.
 In spite of adversity, Ms. Paredes Rojas is deeply thankful to the volunteer doctors for
 coming to this community on the Guatemalan high plateau and expressed her gratitude
 to the people that attended the event. She also thanked the Freedom Socialist Party for
 donating towels, sheets and pillow cases for hospital beds which the clinic desperately
 needed. In February, a member of the FSP visited Ms. Paredes Rojas to show solidarity
 with her work and gave her encouraging words to help her face the difficulties brought
 on by the rightwing, heartless, self-serving Guatemalan regime.
 As she pointed out, the only thing the current regime intends to do regarding health care
 is to provide its sympathizers with jobs, even though they do not have the necessary
 training to work at a medical facility. This can be seen at the Centro de Urgencias
 Médicas in Tecpán where the new director has fired 150 workers and put 100 new ones
 in their place. These new workers are not familiar with the correct medical practices
 necessary to provide quality care for patients at the Centro de Urgencias Médicas
 because they lack the necessary experience.