A murdered lawyer's videotaped and posthumously broadcast accusation that President Alvaro Colom ordered his murder has prompted the Guatemalan government to call for a UN agency and the FBI to investigate the killing.
President Colom has vehemently denied the allegations made in a videotape left by lawyer Rodrigo Rosenberg, who was shot to death by unidentified assailants while riding his bicycle Sunday. But opposition lawmakers called for the president to step aside while the killing is investigated.
"If you are watching this message, it is because I was assassinated by President Alvaro Colom with help from Gustavo Alejos," the president's secretary, Rosenberg said in the video distributed at his funeral Monday.
The Guatemala City newspaper Prensa Libresaid the recording "has created the greatest political crisis for this democracy, because never before has a democratically elected president been accused of murder."
Television stations repeatedly aired the video and so many people watched it on Guatemalan Internet sites that some temporarily collapsed. More than 5,300 people joined a Facebook group called "Guatemalans for the dismissal of Alvaro Colom."
On the video, Rosenberg says officials might want to kill him because he represented businessman Khalil Musa, who was slain in March along with his daughter. The lawyer says Musa, who had been named to the board of the Guatemala's Rural Development Bank, was killed for refusing to get involved in purported illicit transactions at the bank.
The Guatemalan government is the majority shareholder in the bank.
Rosenberg said the alleged illicit transactions "range from money laundering to the embezzlement of public funds and nonexistent programs operated by first lady Sandra de Colom, as well as the financing of front companies used by drug traffickers."
The video was shot in the office of journalist Mario David Garcia, who told The Associated Press that Rosenberg approached him to ask his help in making the video and broadcasting it on his program "Hablando Claro" or "Straight Talk" in case something happened to him.
"I tried to persuade him to first denounce what he knew, rather than thinking about being killed. We left it at that we would interview him on my program on Monday and he was going to bring me the evidence," said Garcia, adding that Rosenberg also said he would go this week to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
President Colom, a center-left politician who took office in January, went on national television to dismiss the accusations and demand an outside investigation.
"First of all, I am not a murderer. Second, I am not a drug trafficker, and everything he says there is totally senseless," President Colom said of Rosenberg's video.
He said his government asked the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala to investigate "to clear up this matter." The UN panel was created in 2007 to clean up corruption in Guatemala.
Colom said he also talked to US Ambassador Stephen McFarland to ask the FBI to probe Rosenberg's slaying.
In a statement released by the embassy, Ambassador McFarland said the "the embassy is trying to work with the FBI to see what they can do."
Otto Perez, secretary-general of the leading opposition faction, the Patriot Party, called on President Colom to step aside during the investigation.
Outside the presidential palace, family and friends of Rosenberg protested his killing. The well-dressed crowd exchanged insults with a group of slum dwellers who showed up to back Colom.
Governors, all of whom appointed by the president, voiced their support for Colom, as did about 250 of the country's 333 mayors.
Helen Mack, a human rights activist and director of the Myrna Mack Foundation, said the accusation moved the country toward an institutional crisis.
"Congress, the supreme court, the constitutional court and all the other institutions are being questioned, and now there emerges this serious allegation against the executive in chief," she said.
Colom's 2007 election victory gave Guatemala its first leftist leader since Jacobo Arbenz was thrown out of office in 1954 by a CIA-orchestrated coup.
Colom, who led Guatemala's efforts to coax thousands of refugees back home after its civil war ended, campaigned promising to fight poverty, help indigenous communities and bring security to a country where gangs behead victims and drug traffickers control much of the police forces.
AP