Central American Parliament Explained

Central American Parliament
Native Name:Parlamento Centroamericano
Coa Pic:Emblema del Parlamento Centroamericano.svg
Body:Unicameral
Preceded By:Contadora Group
Leader1 Type:President of the Central American Parliament
Leader1:Silvia García Polanco
Election1:October 2021
Seats:126 deputies
Structure1:File:PARLACEN-2021-2022.svg
Structure1 Res:200px
Political Groups1: Democratic Center (48)
Parliamentary Left (30)
Integrationist Democratic Unity (19)
Non-inscrits (29)
Meeting Place:Guatemala City
Website:https://parlacen.int

The Central American Parliament (Spanish; Castilian: Parlamento Centroamericano), also known as PARLACEN, is the political institution and parliamentary body of the Central American Integration System (SICA). Its headquarters are in Guatemala City.

History

The PARLACEN origins date back to the Contadora Group, a project of the 1980s that sought to help resolve the civil wars in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua. Although the Contadora group was disbanded in 1986, the idea of a greater Central American integration remained, giving rise to the Esquipulas II Agreement, which among other things, created the Central American Parliament. The Treaty establishing the Central American Parliament and other political bodies was signed in 1987; its first formal session was carried out on 28 October 1991 in Guatemala City.

The PARLACEN as a political body in the region is part of the Central American Integration System SICA, established by the Protocol of Tegucigalpa to the Charter of the Organization of American States (ODECA) signed on 13 December 1991. SICA has the fundamental aim to realize an integration that is political and ideological representative in a pluralistic democratic system that guarantees free elections and participation under equal conditions for political parties.

The historic Declaration of Esquipulas I, which was adopted by the presidents of the Central American states in the city of Esquipulas (Guatemala) on 25 May 1986, included the following declaration: "It is necessary to establish and complement activities that support understanding and cooperation with institutional structures. They shall make possible to strengthen the dialogue, the common development, democracy and pluralism as fundamental elements for peace in the region and the integration of Central America. Therefore the foundation of PARLACEN is necessary. Its members are elected freely by universal and direct elections through which the principle of political and participative pluralism is followed."

The agreement of PARLACEN and other political authorities was signed in October 1987 by Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and Honduras. In the beginning, it was an instrument which came into force for only three states (Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras) on 1 May 1990. PARLACEN was formed on 28 October 1991 and has its head office in Guatemala City, Republic of Guatemala.

The Legislative Yuan, Taiwan’s legislative body, was granted permanent observer status at PARLACEN in 1999.[1] However PARLACEN signaled a shift in approach when on 28 April 2022 it made a statement to support a One China policy.[2] The following year, on 21 August 2023, the PARLACEN Plenary Assembly voted to revoke the permanent observer status of Taiwan's legislative body and include China’s National People’s Congress as a permanent observer instead. The vote was made at the request of the Nicaraguan delegation which argued that "Taiwan lacks recognition as a sovereign state at the United Nations” and that the "observer status that Taiwan holds at PARLACEN is illegitimate due to lack of legal status”, also noting a UN resolution concerning Chinese representation at the UN.[3] [4] The Chinese government welcomed the development.[5]

Legal status and mission

PARLACEN is the regional assembly of SICA and acts as a permanent political organ to represent opinions and to carry out analyses and discussions about political, economic and cultural affairs of common interest, of basic conditions for democracy, peace, and the integration of Central America, as well to work out initiatives for its realization. It is charged with furthering human rights and international law, to achieve a peaceful coexistence within the framework of security and social welfare, a mission which is well-founded in representative and participative democracy, in pluralism, and in respect for national legislation and international law.

PARLACEN has the status of a legal entity according to international law.

Member states

The following countries comprise the PARLACEN:

Between 1998 and 2010, the Dominican Republic sent 22 appointed members. Since 2010, it has been a full member of the Central American Parliament with delegates elected directly by universal suffrage.[6] (See note)[7]

Panama

President of Panama Ricardo Martinelli vowed he would remove Panama from PARLACEN, fulfilling a campaign promise. On 11 December 2009, law 78 passed withdrawing Panama from PARLACEN, but a resolution of the Central American Court of Justice declared the law unconstitutional. The court said there is no mechanism to withdraw from the PARLACEN and Panama could not opt out. In January 2012, the Panamanian Supreme Court re-affirmed that ruling[8] and Panama returned to PARLACEN. Panama also showed more interest in membership after SICA signed a free trade agreement with the European Union.

Former observers

Competences and tasks

The PARLACEN is the regional and permanent organ of political and democratic representation of the System of Central American Integration (SICA) with the main purpose to realize the Central American integration.

Competencies

Tasks

Bodies of PARLACEN

PARLACEN's organisational structure consists of the Plenum, the Board of Parliament, and the Secretary Office.

Plenum

The Plenum is the highest body of PARLACEN and includes all representatives.The committees and parliamentary parties are also involved with its tasks.

The responsibilities of the Plenum are the following:

The parliamentary committees

The parliamentary committees are parliamentary authorities who – in order to draw up a corresponding report – are supposed to conduct studies and examinations which are either within their sphere of competence or are directed to them by the board or the Plenum.

The working committees of PARLACEN can be structured as follows.

Permanent commissions are established in the internal rules to work on affairs of the commission with unlimited duration. The permanent commissions are formed of at most two representatives per state, not exceeding twelve members in total.

, there were thirteen permanent commissions:[9]

There is also a delegation of EUROLAT.

Extraordinary commissions are established by the Plenum for affairs that are of special importance and institutional significance for PARLACEN as well as for the process of integration. But can also help you when you need the most help like right now.

Special commissions are established by the board of parliament to handle special affairs.

Parliamentary groups

The parliamentary groups monitor the political trend of the Central American representatives and are organized according to the political orientation of their groups.

The parliamentary groups are founded by the adoption of an internal statute by the plenary assembly. The board of parliament registers each parliamentary group. The statute is published and states the group's ideological principles, the political objectives and the regulations.

There are three parliamentary groups: the Parliamentary Group of the Left, Center-Democratic Integration Group, and Democratic Integrationist Union.[10]

Board of parliament

The board of parliament is the executive body for decisions that emerge from the Plenum and is the administrative body of PARLACEN. It is expandable according to its internal rules.

The board of parliament is elected from the members. Its term is one year, made up of one president, five vice-presidents, and six secretaries.

The board makes its decisions by approval of a majority of its members. In the event of a tie, the votes of the presidency count as qualified majority. The presidency is filled by a rota system corresponding to the alphabetical order of the member states, starting with the state which holds the head office.

It is possible to appeal any resolution at the Plenum.

The tasks of the board are

Secretary office

The secretary office is the technical-administrative organ of PARLACEN and is divided into three sections, which have the following basic functions and responsibilities:

The secretary office for parliamentary affairs handles and obeys the decisions of PARLACEN. It reports to the Plenum on a regular basis and is of technical assistance to the Plenum as well as to the commissions in all of their activities. It coordinates and manages the advice of the commissions and has to assist the extended board with developing the agenda for Plenum meetings when necessary.

The secretary office for administration and finance has to administer all branches, manager's offices, departments and administrative units, as well as the personnel of PARLACEN, and has to control the proper administration of its resources.

The secretary office of the board offers technical help to the board in questions relating to the responsibilities of and the topics determined by the board.

Presidents of PARLACEN

President Term in Office Country
Roberto Carpio NicolleOctober 1991 – October 1992 Guatemala
Ilsa Díaz ZelayaOctober 1992 – October 1993 Honduras
José Francisco Merino LópezOctober 1993 – July 1994 El Salvador
Víctor Augusto Vela MenaJuly 1994 – October 1994 Guatemala
Roland Valenzuela OyuelaOctober 1994 – December 1995 Honduras
Raúl Zaldívar GuzmánDecember 1995 – October 1996 Honduras
Ernesto Lima MenaOctober 1996 – October 1997 El Salvador
Marco Antonio Solares PérezOctober 1997 – October 1998 Guatemala
Carlos Roberto ReinaOctober 1998 – October 1999 Honduras
José Ernesto Somarriba SosaOctober 1999 – October 2000 Nicaragua
Hugo Guiraud GarganoOctober 2000 – October 2001 Panama
Rodrigo Samayoa RivasOctober 2001 – October 2002 El Salvador
Victor Augusto Vela MenaOctober 2002 – October 2003 Guatemala
Mario Facussé HandalOctober 2003 – October 2004 Honduras
Fabio Gadea MantillaOctober 2004 – October 2005 Nicaragua
Julio Enrique Palacios SambranoOctober 2005 – October 2006 Panama
Ciro Cruz ZepedaOctober 2006 – October 2007 El Salvador
Julio Guillermo González GamarraOctober 2007 – October 2008 Guatemala
Gloria Guadalupe Oquelí Solórzano de MacotoOctober 2008 – October 2009 Honduras
Jacinto José Suárez EspinozaOctober 2009 – October 2010 Nicaragua
Dorindo Jayan Cortez MarciagaOctober 2010 – October 2011 Panama
Manolo PichardoOctober 2011 – October 2012 Dominican Republic
Leonel BúcaroOctober 2012 – October 2013 El Salvador
Paula RodríguezOctober 2013 – October 2014 Guatemala
Armando BardalesOctober 2014 – October 2015 Honduras
José Antonio Alvarado CorreaOctober 2015 – October 2016 Nicaragua
Priscilla Weeden de MiróOctober 2016 – October 2017 Panama
Tony Raful TejadaOctober 2017 – October 2018 Dominican Republic
Irma Segunda Amaya EcheverríaOctober 2018 – October 2019 El Salvador
Juan Alfonso Fuentes SoriaOctober 2019 – January 2020 Guatemala
Nadia de León TorresJanuary 2020 – October 2020 Guatemala
Fanny Carolina Salinas FernándezOctober 2020 – October 2021 Honduras
Guillermo Daniel Ortega ReyesOctober 2021 – October 2022 Nicaragua
Amado Cerrud AcevedoOctober 2022 – October 2023 Panama
Silvia García PolancoOctober 2023 – present Dominican Republic

Composition

CountryPartySeatsLast electionNext election
Dominican RepublicModern Revolutionary Party1219 May 20242028
People's Force4
Dominican Liberation Party4
Total:20
El SalvadorNuevas Ideas133 March 20242027[11]
Nationalist Republican Alliance2
Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front2
Grand Alliance for National Unity2
Christian Democratic Party1
Total:20
GuatemalaVamos525 June 20232027[12]
National Unity of Hope4
Semilla3
Vision with Values2
ValorUnionist Party2
Todos1
Will, Opportunity and Solidarity1
Nosotros1
Guatemalan National Revolutionary UnityWinaq1
Total:20
HondurasLiberty and Refoundation1028 November 20212025[13]
National Party of Honduras8
Liberal Party of Honduras2
Total:20
NicaraguaSandinista National Liberation Front157 November 20212026[14]
Constitutionalist Liberal Party2
Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance1
Independent Liberal Party1
Alliance for the Republic1
Total:20
PanamaRealizing Goals95 May 20242029[15]
People's Party5
Democratic Revolutionary Party1
Panameñista Party1
Alliance Party1
Nationalist Republican Liberal Movement1
Independent2
Total:20
Total:120 2024 2025

Elections

The 20 elected members representing every member state the Central American Parliament are elected at the same time as the presidential elections of the member state according to article 2 of the Internal Regulations of the Central American Parliament. The former president of every member state, as well as every vice-president and prime minister, are also de jure members of the PARLACEN from the end of their term till the end of their successor's term.[16]

Effectiveness and challenges

Costa Rica, one of the wealthier countries in the region and an otherwise-active participant in the SICA, has not ratified the Esquipulas II agreement, and is not represented in the Parlacen. Parlacen is seen by some (including former President of Honduras Ricardo Maduro) as a white elephant.[17]

2007 parliament members killing

See main article: February 2007 Salvadoran congressmen killings. On February 19, 2007, a group of three Salvadoran representatives were murdered by four Guatemalan police officers, including the head of the Guatemalan National Police organized crime unit. The killers were arrested three days later and detained in a Guatemalan prison, where they were themselves murdered several days later by a group of gunmen disguised as prison guards. Guatemalan president Óscar Berger attributed the officers' murders to an apparent mafia hit aimed at hindering investigation into the representatives’ murders. The killings raised questions regarding corruption and drug trafficking in Central America as well as the high level of infiltration of the Guatemalan national police force by organized crime.[18]

See also

External links

[19] [20] [21]

Notes and References

  1. https://english.president.gov.tw/NEWS/4147 President Ma meets delegation led by Central American Parliament President Jose Leonel Vasquez Bucaro; Office of the President of the Republic of China press release of 30 April 2013
  2. Web site: 28 April 2022 . Parlacen pide integrar a China en el SICA y retirar a Taiwán como observador . Articulo66 . es.
  3. News: Lopez . Ismael . 2023-08-22 . Central America parliament expels Taiwan, makes China permanent observer . en . Reuters . 2023-08-23.
  4. https://www.facebook.com/parlacen/posts/pfbid0Yv6oMPMiQcLcuKbCk4nkNP5DSX57vsr1JaSQQj5Q9RLmHWizsYB5ZuqRaQtCzXKvl PARLACEN statement of 21 August 2023
  5. english.scio.gov.cn/pressroom/2023-08/23/content_106549803.htm ‘Spokesperson: NPC appreciates Central American Parliament's Taiwan-related move’; 23 August 2023 statement issued by The State Council Information Office, PRC
  6. Web site: Directorio de diputados . PARLACEN . https://web.archive.org/web/20120321141651/http://www.parlacen.org.gt/diputados/vinculo-2-diputados-v-001-buscar.html . 11 May 2021 . 2012-03-21 . dead.
  7. Web site: Juramentan a diputados dominicanos al Parlacen. listindiario.com. 13 October 2014.
  8. Web site: Panamá retornará al Parlamento Centroamericano (Parlacen). Telemetro. 13 October 2014.
  9. http://www.parlacen.int/Funcionamiento/Comisiones2015-2016.aspx Comisiones 2015 - 2016
  10. Web site: Grupos Parlamentarios. Central American Parliament Website. 3 November 2021.
  11. Web site: PARLACEN. es. 18 June 2023. Supreme Electoral Court.
  12. Web site: Resultados Electorales Preliminares 2023 . es. 11 July 2023. Supreme Electoral Tribunal.
  13. Web site: Resultados. es. 18 June 2023. National Electoral Council. 28 November 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211128203141/https://resultadosgenerales2021.cne.hn/#resultados/DIP/HN.8. dead.
  14. Web site: Diputados. es. 18 June 2023. Supreme Electoral Council.
  15. Web site: Bustamante . Aminta . 2024-06-10 . Junta Nacional de Escrutinio oficializa a los diputados del Parlacen . 2024-06-12 . Tvn Panamá . es.
  16. Web site: Parlamento Centroamericano | Sitio oficial. https://web.archive.org/web/20131005020358/http://www.parlacen.int/Informaci%C3%B3nGeneral/MarcoPol%C3%ADticoyJur%C3%ADdico/ReglamentoInterno.aspx . dead . Human Brands Guatemala . PARLACEN. 5 October 2013. Parlamento Centroamericano.
  17. Web site: América Central . 4 April 2018 . europa.eu.
  18. News: 4 Jailed Cops Killed in Guatemala Prison. The Washington Post.
  19. Web site: Parlamento Centroamericano | Sitio oficial. Human Brands Guatemala . PARLACEN. Parlamento Centroamericano.
  20. Web site: Panameña Priscilla Weeden de Miró, nueva presidenta del Parlacen. 26 October 2016. TVN.
  21. Web site: Google. www.google.com.mx.