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CONTACT: Women Nobel Peace Laureates & Women’s Rights Leaders Rachel Vincent, Nobel Women’s Initiative, 613-276-9030 Lisa VeneKlasen, Just Associates, 202-232-1211 |
Women Nobel Peace Laureates & Women’s Rights Leaders Urge Secretary of State Clinton to Condemn Violence Against Women in Honduras
WASHINGTON - November 25 - More than 175 human rights and feminist leaders--including three Nobel Peace Prize winners and leaders of national and international women’s organizations—today sent an Open Letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton today, urging her to condemn widespread violations of women’s human rights in Honduras.
“In the lead up to the November 29 elections, we are extremely concerned about the increase in a pattern of repression and abuse of women at the hands of the de facto regime, especially women who form part of the opposition to the coup,” said Nobel Laureate Jody Williams. “Recent reports that the deployment of troops and police has intensified, and women opposition leaders are being targeted, should give the US government ample reason to reconsider its apparent willingness to endorse the elections as legitimate.”
Williams received the Nobel in 1997 for her prominent role in the international campaign to ban the use of anti-personnel landmines and has worked extensively in Central America to promote peace and human rights.
“Given Secretary Clinton’s commitment to women’s rights and her pledge to fight violence against women, we are asking her to speak out about the dangerous and appalling situation faced by Honduran women, ” she added.
The letter was also signed by Rigoberta Menchu, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992 for her work in advancing reconciliation following Guatemala’s civil war, and by Mairead Maguire, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 for her efforts to promote a peaceful resolution to the civil conflict in Northern Ireland.
Other signatories to the letter include Mary Robinson, the former President of Ireland and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights from 1997 to 2002.
Human rights organizations have noted a sharp rise in violations against women since the June 28 military coup d’état in Honduras. The letter summarizes 240 cases of violations of women’s human rights recently presented before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. These include physical abuse, sexual abuse, rape, sexual harassment, threats, arbitrary detentions, a rise in femicides, the closure of feminist radio programs and other media, and impunity for crimes against women.
It concludes, “We urge you to condemn the orchestrated campaign of violence against women being waged by the current de facto regime. Finally, we urge you to insist on a withdrawal of armed forces from the streets, neighborhoods, and homes of Honduras.”
Honduras has national elections scheduled for November 29, which are being actively boycotted by Honduran women’s groups. The letter states that free and fair elections cannot take place under current conditions.
“Hastily improvised elections—without the full participation of Honduran society, international recognition, or the reinstatement of the elected president—cannot be free or fair and do not guarantee a return to rule of law. Only a return to rule of law can reestablish legal institutions for redress of human rights violations and end the current situation of impunity for crimes against women."

2 Comments so far
Show AllSecretary of State Hillary Clinton? Our government backed this SOA trained junta.
She might wring her hands and lick her chops in anticipation but never in dispare.
How much American blood and treasure was wasted to secure Honduras from becoming a socialist nation, in the horrible 1980's? Must this part of the world go back or continue to have dictators that have death squads that kill, injure, arrest without trials,and torture their own people. Isn't that one of the reasons Bush used to justify the invasion Iraq? The country's in central and south America that were getting help from America to fight and kill advocates of socialized medicine, unions leaders, land rights,and public schools for the poor people were labeled fledging Democracies, being taken over by advocates of communism. Is this Honduras, that brutally abuses women,a democracy? . When will we ever learn that war, proxy war, low intensity conflicts, terrorism or what ever violence is called is not the answer.