After resigning due to the coup organized by the
United Fruit Company and the United States
Department of State, the Árbenz family remained for 73 days at the Mexican embassy in Guatemala, which was crowded with almost 300 exiles. When they were finally allowed to leave the country, Jacobo Arbenz was publicly humiliated at the airport because the liberationist authorities made the former president strip before the cameras, claiming that he was carrying jewelry he had bought for his wife at
Tiffany's in
New York City, using funds from the presidency; no jewelry was found during the hour-long interrogation. The Arbenz family embarked into exile, going first to
Mexico, then to
Canada, where they went to pick up Arabella who was attending school there, and then on to
Switzerland via the
Netherlands. In Switzerland, the Swiss authorities requested that Arbenz renounce his Guatemalan nationality, so as to prevent him from conducting resistance activities. The ousted president refused this request, as he felt that such a gesture would have marked the end of his political career. Furthermore, Arbenz could not seek political asylum, because Switzerland had not yet ratified the 1951 agreement of the newly created
United Nations Refugees Convention, which was designed to protect people fleeing from communist regimes in Eastern Europe. Árbenz and his family were instead the victims of a
CIA-orchestrated defamation campaign that lasted from 1954 to 1960, which only abated when the Cuban revolution triumphed in 1959, and that included a close friend of Árbenz, who turned out to be a double agent working for the CIA: Carlos Manuel Pellecer.
Seeking shelter After being rejected for entry by Switzerland, the Árbenz family moved to
Paris, France and then to
Prague,
Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovak officials were uncomfortable with Arbenz, unsure if he would demand the government compensate him for shipments of
Second World War-era arms that they had sold Guatemala in 1954. After only three months, the family moved again, this time to
Moscow, which proved a relief from the harsh treatment they encountered in Czechoslovakia. Arbenz tried to return to Latin America several times, finally being allowed to move to
Uruguay in 1957 (Arbenz joined the Communist Party in that year). The Arbenz family lived in
Montevideo from 1957 to 1960. The family's experience turned out to be lukewarm: the former president's communist ties, especially with
José Manuel Fortuny, and forced passage through Czechoslovakia, the USSR and China, aroused suspicions. When the National Party took power in Uruguay in late 1958, the situation worsened for Arbenz there. In 1960, after the
Cuban Revolution,
Fidel Castro invited Árbenz to
Cuba, a suggestion that Árbenz Guzmán readily agreed to. == Independent life ==