The United Nations Office for Human Rights in Guatemala expresses its  deep concern over the current debate in the Guatemalan Congress over  bills for security and justice, promoting measures that do not attack  the structural problems, delegitimize and undermine the rule of law.
It is misleading to think that actions based on repression and human  rights violations are the solution to insecurity, such as the  application of the death penalty today in Guatemala, to renounce  international human rights treaties, the creation of courts with  "faceless judges" and the so-called "anti-gang laws "
The latter, besides being ineffective have been strongly condemned by  the United Nations for being discriminatory and promote the persecution  of young people simply by their clothing or the use of tattoos, not  because they commit a crime. Furthermore, in a country that lacks  adequate meeting places and recreation, these laws criminalize youth and  restrict freedom of association, since any youth social would be  included in the definition of "mara"- gangs, being innocent.
To execute ten people on death row does not solve the problem of  insecurity. The death penalty has not proven to have a deterrent effect  on crime, it reproduces violence and neglects to address the structural  problems that originate the problem.
The waiver of international human rights treaties would be a serious  setback, which not only threatens the rights of Guatemalans, but that  marginalizes the country against the international community and  contradicts the commitments acquired by the State of Guatemala before  international human rights organizations.
Source 
Source: The United Nations Office for Human Rights in Guatemala, Press Release, September 29, 2010.
http://www.oacnudh.org.gt