Everything about Zak Hern Ndez totally explained
Sgt.
Zak Hernández Laporte (b.
1970–
June 10,
1992), was a 22-year-old member of the
United States Army who was killed in
Panama City when the
Humvee in which he was riding was ambushed on the eve of President
George H. W. Bush's visit to
Panama. His accused murderer,
Pedro Miguel González Pinzón, was acquitted in 1997 in a trial mounted by Panama's judiciary. Two years later he was elected to Panama's
National Assembly and, in September 2007, was chosen by his peers as National Assembly President, an event which has generated protests from the governments of the United States and Puerto Rico. This event also jeopardized U.S. Congress' ratification of a Free Trade Agreement between the U.S. and Panama, a pact that was previously ratified by Panama and was, until Pedro Miguel Gonzalez's elevation, considered likely to receive bipartisan Congressional approval.
Incident
On
June 10,
1992, a group of
Panamanians were protesting the scheduled visit of United States President
George H. W. Bush to their country. One of the main reasons behind the demonstrations was the
invasion of Panama by the US for the arrest and conviction of Head of State
Manuel Noriega in 1989, during which anywhere between 200 and 4,000 Panamanian civilians were killed by US forces.
(External Link
) Among the protesters was
Pedro Miguel González Pinzón.
On that day Sgt. Hernández, a
Puerto Rican soldier stationed in the
Panama Canal Zone, and his comrade Sgt. Ronald Marshall, were in their Humvee on the outskirts of
Panama City, close to the area where the demonstrators were protesting, when suddenly they were ambushed. Hernández was killed and Marshall wounded.
Pedro Miguel González Pinzón was indicted in the
United States Federal Court of
Washington D.C., for Sgt. Hernández' murder and the attempted murder of Sgt. Marshall.
After disappearing to Cuba for several years, once
his party was returned to power, González Pinzón was brought by his late father, Gerardo Gonzalez (then President of the National Assembly and head of the PRD party) to "surrender himself" to Panamanian President Ernesto Perez Balladares. After two years of confinement, González Pinzón was acquitted in a 1997 trial marred by witness intimidation, harassment of the prosecutor, and ex parte communications by the judge with Gonzalez's father and others. All seven jurors were civil servants who owed their jobs to the PRD. The U.S. government and other outside observers maintain that the trial was a sham resulting from Panama's notoriously corrupt judiciary, where influence peddling remains common. Longtime Gonzalez friend and now current PRD leader and Panamanian President, Martin Torrijos, was Vice Minister of Government and Justice at the time of Gonzalez's trial. In September 2007, González Pinzón was elected President of the
National Assembly.
International protest
His election has been protested by the Government of the United States. Tom Casey, a spokesman for the
United States State Department, said that the United States government was
"deeply disappointed that the Panamian National Assembly elected Pedro Miguel González Pinzón from among its members" and that "The United States wants those responsible (for Zak Hernández' murder)...to face justice".
On
September 4,
2007, the
Senate of Puerto Rico approved a resolution expressing its "profound preoccupation" that a person indicted for Sgt. Zak Hernández' murder has been elected president of the Panamanian National Assembly. During a previously scheduled courtesy visit to his office, Senate President
Kenneth McClintock on
September 6 presented a copy of the resolution to
Panama Supreme Court Chief Magistrate
Graciela Dixon.
Key members of the U.S. Congress, such as Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) and the committee's ranking Republican member, Charles Grassley (R-IA) have signaled that Gonzalez's elevation to National Assembly President represents an obstacle to Congress' ratification of the U.S.-Panama Free Trade Agreement. (In assuming the presidency on September 1, 2007, Gonzalez said he'd step down should be become an obstacle to FTA ratification by the U.S. Despite clear signals from the U.S. Congress and Bush Administration officials that he indeed poses such an obstacle, Gonzalez has thus far refused to step down.)
Zak Hernández' name appears on "El Monumento de la Recordación" (The Wall of Remembrance} at the
Puerto Rico Capitol complex as the only Puerto Rican casualty in the 1992 United States military operation in Panama. The U.S. consulate in Panama also displays a plaque in memory of Zak Hernández.
Further Information
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