A court in Guatemala has sentenced four retired army officers to each serve 6060 years in prison for carrying out one of the most notorious atrocities in the country's 36-year civil war.
The men were given 30 years for each of the 201 people confirmed dead in the 1982 massacre at Las Dos Erres, a village in the north of the country. Another 30 years was added to their jail term for crimes against human rights.
It was the first time that soldiers have been convicted of abuses during the notoriously brutal conflict, which ran from 1960 to 1996 and pitched left-wing revolutionaries against a right-leaning military junta that had seized control of the country in a 1954 coup.
The four men - Carlos Carias, Manuel Pop, Reyes Collin Gualip and Daniel Martinez Hernandez - were among 17 members of an elite special forces unit called the Kaibiles, which attacked the village before dawn on December 7, 1982 looking for missing weapons that had been stolen by rebels days earlier. Having accused locals of collaborating with the guerrillas, the Kaibiles shot, strangled, and bludgeoned scores of villagers to death over the course of three days.
Dozens of bodies were thrown down a well, women and small girls were raped, and several victims were beaten to death with a sledgehammer.