Guatemalan ex-dictator to face genocide retrial

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A Guatemalan court ruled Tuesday that ex-dictator Efrain Rios Montt must face retrial for genocide during the country's civil war, but ordered it take place behind closed doors because he has dementia.

The 89-year-old former general, who ruled the Central American country from 1982 to 1983, is accused of ordering the army to massacre more than 1,700 Ixil Maya indigenous people.

He was sentenced to 80 years in prison at an initial trial in 2013, but the Constitutional Court threw out his conviction on procedural grounds and ordered a retrial.

After defense lawyers argued Rios Montt was no longer mentally fit to stand trial, the court sent him to a psychiatric facility for testing.

"The psychiatric experts all agreed the accused suffers mental illness," said Judge Jaime Gonzalez.

He concluded that "the incapacity of the accused to appear in public court has been demonstrated," and ordered Rios Montt to face trial behind closed doors, with no journalists present.

Doctors told the court last week that Rios Montt alternates between moments of lucidity and dementia.

Rios Montt and his ex-military intelligence chief, Jose Rodriguez, are charged with orchestrating a scorched-earth campaign in Ixil Maya areas as the government sought to stamp out rural support for leftist guerrilla groups at the height of Guatemala's 1960 to 1996 civil war.

Rodriguez will now be tried separately in open court, the judge ruled.