Guatemala Still Searches for Cristina as Femicide’s Silence Grows Louder
Fifteen years after Cristina Siekavizza vanished in Guatemala, her family’s plea for anonymous tips cuts through a region where femicide laws exist, bodies disappear, and justice too often arrives late, partial, or not at all for women.
A Family Asks for Courage
In Guatemala City, the photograph did what the courts could not. It held Cristina Siekavizza still.
Her children, Roberto José and María Mercedez Barreda Siekavizza, stood before the country Monday with her image in their hands, no longer the small children carried through one of Guatemala’s most emblematic suspected femicide cases, but adults formed by an absence. Their grandparents sat with them. Their demand was not revenge, at least not in the loud sense. It was more intimate, more devastating. Tell us where she is.
“After 15 years, our family asks for only one thing: that our beloved Cristina be searched for, to return her to us with dignity so we can give her a Christian burial,” her mother, Angelis de Siekavizza, said, according to EFE. The sentence had the weight of Catholic Guatemala in it, and also the hard edge of a country where the dead are often denied even the final mercy of being found.
Cristina was last seen at her family home on the night of July 6, 2011. The case was first investigated as a kidnapping. Later, prosecutors turned toward her husband, Roberto Barreda, who fled to Mexico with the couple’s two children and was arrested there in 2013. Prosecutors alleged he acted with the complicity of his mother, Beatriz Ofelia de León, a former Supreme Court magistrate accused in the case of cover-up and judicial influence.
That detail still stings. In a country where power has long known how to dress itself in legal robes, the suspected involvement of a former magistrate made the case feel larger than one household. It became a portrait of the machinery women face when violence moves from the bedroom to the courthouse, when private terror meets public influence.
Barreda went to trial in 2019 on charges of femicide and obstruction of justice. The process ended before judgment. He died in 2020 from complications of COVID-19, extinguishing the possibility of a conviction. What remained was a family without a body, a society without a sentence, and a question that keeps returning in Guatemala’s long argument with impunity: what does justice mean when the accused dies before the truth is fully spoken?

The Numbers Have Faces
The Siekavizza case endures because it is singular and painfully ordinary at once. It has the elements that seize national attention: a middle-class family, a fugitive husband, a powerful mother-in-law, children taken across borders, a legal process that collapsed into delay and death. Yet its deepest horror belongs to a much broader pattern in Latin America.
At least 3,828 women and girls were victims of femicide in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2024, according to figures attributed in the case notes to ECLAC and Statista, part of a five-year toll exceeding 19,200 gender-related killings. That means the region loses a woman or girl to gender-based killing roughly every two hours. The figure is so large it risks becoming abstract. Cristina’s photograph is the correction.
Guatemala appears near the top of the regional rate table, second in the notes at roughly 1.9 femicides per 100,000 women, behind Honduras and above several countries that have also become shorthand for gendered violence. The exact comparisons across borders require caution, since femicide is defined and counted differently from country to country. Some systems count only killings by partners or ex-partners. Some do not include disappeared women. Some lose cases when the aggressor dies by suicide. But caution is not comfort. The direction is clear enough.
Latin America has not lacked laws. Eighteen countries have special legislation to address femicide, and the 1994 Belém do Pará Convention, sponsored by the Organization of American States, made state responsibility for violence against women a regional obligation. The failure is not that the region never learned the language of rights. It is that the language often stops at the courthouse door, the police desk, the prosecutor’s budget line, the rural road, the family living room.
Juan Luis Siekavizza, Cristina’s father, denounced years of maneuvers to obstruct justice and the later reduction of resources in the prosecutor’s office handling the case. Claudia Hernández, director of Fundación Sobrevivientes, which has accompanied the family legally and psychologically, urged the state to confront the structural impunity surrounding the process. “We have been waiting 15 years to be able to find her,” she said, according to EFE, asking for clear information so Cristina’s children and family can finally bury her.
That plea is modest only on the surface. To ask for a body in Guatemala is to ask the state to admit that disappearance is not closure. It is an open wound, passed from parent to child.

Impunity Is Also a Crime Scene
Cristina’s disappearance sits inside a Central American history where women’s bodies have too often carried the marks of war, migration, inequality and organized violence. Guatemala’s armed conflict normalized secrecy and fear. Postwar democracy brought elections but not always protection. The same country that can produce brave prosecutors, women’s organizations and community defenders can also produce delay, witness intimidation and the quiet exhaustion of families asked to prove their pain again and again.
Femicide is not only a murder category. It is a social diagnosis. It says that gender, power, and impunity met before the killing, then met again afterward. In the home, where many women in the region are most vulnerable. In institutions, where stereotypes still ask why she stayed, whom she loved, what she provoked, whether the family should keep quiet. In budgets, where specialized units are praised in speeches and starved in practice.
This is why the Siekavizza family’s call for anonymous information matters. It recognizes the fear around the case. It also challenges it. Someone may know where Cristina’s remains are. Someone may have heard a confession, seen a movement, carried a secret too long. In Guatemala, where silence is often a survival skill, speaking can feel like crossing a border.
But countries are built, or rebuilt, when that border is crossed.
The data show a region where homicide may fall while femicide refuses to move with it. That stubbornness reveals a particular kind of violence, one that general security policy cannot solve alone. More patrols are not enough. More statutes are not enough. The justice system must be accessible to women before they disappear, credible to families after they do, and strong enough to resist influence when defendants have money, rank, or connections.
Cristina Siekavizza’s case asks Guatemala to do something simple and enormous. Find her. Name what happened. Protect the living. Stop treating time as if it washes away responsibility.
Fifteen years later, her family is still asking the public to lose fear. The country should hear that as more than a family’s request. It is a national instruction.
Also Read: Rigoberta Menchú Warns Guatemala Justice Turns Peace Into Impunity Again




