The Guatemalan trial of four soldiers accused of killing more than 250 people during the country's brutal civil war began on Monday as two of the alleged murderers testified in court.
According to investigators, former lieutenant Carlos Antonio Carias and his former assistants Manuel Pop, Reyes Collin and Daniel Martinez were part of Guatemala Army's elite Kaibil forces when they carried out a massacre in the northern Guatemalan community of Dos Erres, La Libertad, in December 1982
Carias and Collin were the first to testify to the court, and both of them denied participating in the violence, claiming to be elsewhere during the slaughter.
A lawyer for the Association of Relatives of the Detained-Disappeared of Guatemala, said that so far seven of the 18 alleged perpetrators of the massacre have been detained.
One of the accused murderers was extradited from North America earlier this month, while two more are currently being detained in the United States.
The massacre occurred during General Efrain Rios Montt's military regime, and Montt is considered the author of the attack. The former army chief currently has two open cases in Spain and Guatemala against him for crimes against humanity.
The massacre at Dos Erres is one of the 699 cases documented by the Historical Clarification Commission, whose report cites around 200,000 casualties from Guatemala's 36-year civil war that ended in 1996.