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Honduras Human Rights Abuses Worse One Year After President Lobo Took Office
In recent remarks on U.S.-Latin American relations made at the Brookings Institute, Arturo Valenzuela, a State Department official with responsibility for the region, commented that Honduras, two years removed from a coup that U.S. officials on the ground called illegal, had “made significant progress in strengthening democratic governance…[and] promoting national reconciliation...” Viewing the situation on the ground here in Honduras, one can only wonder where the Assistant Secretary is getting his information. In fact, as President Porfirio Lobo Sosa approaches the anniversary of his first year in office, the reverse is true. Gross violations of human rights directed against activists, opposition leaders and journalists reveal a government that is far removed from democracy and a nation that is far from reconciling.
Only two days after Valenzuela’s remarks, a resistance leader named Juan Chinchilla was abducted at gunpoint by masked men in police and military uniforms. After suffering two days of being burned, beaten and interrogated he was able to escape in the night. In an interview after his kidnapping, Chinchilla stated that his interrogators had numerous surveillance photos of himself and other resistance leaders. Indeed, reports of political murders, kidnappings and torture are common here and resistance leaders report constant surveillance. While there are no official counts, we have learned of 36 activists and leaders murdered since Lobo took office. At least 50 other people were killed in political violence for simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. In addition, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights reports it received information that the children of anti-coup forces were being kidnapped, attacked and threatened as a strategy to silence the resistance.
Unprecedented violence against journalists is not an indicator of democratic governance and reconciliation. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), eight journalists were killed in the first half of Lobo’s first year in office, prompting Reporters Without Borders to name Honduras the most dangerous country in the world for journalists.
Another disturbing development in the wake of the coup has been an increase of violence directed against LGBT activists, many of whom are associated with the opposition to the coup and have played a vital organizing role in the resistance. The pattern is continuing in 2011. The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission reported that since the beginning of January three transgendered people were murdered. Since Pam has been in Honduras two more murders of members of the LGBT community have been reported.
In the midst of this escalating political violence, Assistant Secretary Valenzuela’s blithe comment is disturbingly dissonant. Rather than provide cover for the regime the State Department should use its influence to consistently and publically denounce politically motivated violence and the systematic violation of human rights and, as thirty members of Congress requested of the administration last October, they must cut off U.S. assistance to Honduran authorities, particularly the police and military. Then, maybe, we can talk about “progress” in Honduras.



7 Comments so far
Show AllI think Honduras was a US Corporate coup.
I have refused to buy anything from Chiquita (United Fruit) or Dole ever since.
the author requires some clarification on the remarks made
he writes: honduras has "made significant progress in strengthening democratic governance…[and] promoting national reconciliation."
let me parse that for you - it is pax amerikana double speak. here is the literal translation:
we finally got those latino fucks back in line and have once again made the country safe for corporate plunder. plus we got a new stooge in place to run the country the way we want it run
hope that is helpful
MED: Sometimes the vernacular is what cuts closest to the bone, and unmasks all the lies best. Great post.
The "news" about Honduras is like the news about the American economy. To the moneymasters, it's all good; while for everyday citizens, injustice piles atop injustice. The good news is that the sleeping giant of a complacent public is waking up, nation by nation.The grounds have begun to shake.
Why did Obama support the illegal fascistic right-wing coup in Honduras?
Why did Obama support the right-wing dictator in Tunisia?
Why does Obama support the 30-year-old dictatorship in Egypt?
* Why did Obama support the illegal fascistic right-wing coup in Honduras?
Why? Duh! Because he's a true-blue, anti-fascist lover of freedom and democracy.
* Why did Obama support the right-wing dictator in Tunisia?
Why? Duh! Because Obama believes deeply in democracy and human rights.
* Why does Obama support the 30-year-old dictatorship in Egypt?
Why? Duh! Because Obama believes deeply in the 'will of the people.'
It's simple. Obama is no different than any American President: they all extoll the noble ideals of freedom, democracy and human rights. And if our allies happen to practice exactly the opposite policies, well ..., gosh, can't we just forgive them? After all, they're our allies, aren't they?
And their vile policies don't hurt Americans, do they? In fact, they probably help American international corporations, which boosts the value of American stocks, and that's good, isn't it?
The business of America is business, lets not forget. And while noble ideals are okay, they don't hold a candle to making money and exerting power. To believe otherwise is worse than being un-American, it's downright unprofitable.
GaryA
Oval, What makes you think Obama has any say in any of this?
In a horrible kind of way it is almost good that the US is still up to it´s old tricks. The rest of the Americas need look no further for confirmation that US policy has not changed; and that they need to continue to build bridges,stand together, and to be vigilant to protect themselves from their meddling northern neighbor. Having said that, I feel for the people of Honduras. Their poverty in the Americas is second only to Haiti, and at par with Nicaragua. The countries of South America have their distinct media, that we are not part of. They know fully well about the Honduran coup, and about the Wikileaks confirmation of that knowlege. They will not easily forget their own suffering at the hands of former US dictators. Dilma Rousseff, the current president of Brazil, was tortured by the Brazilian dictatorship years ago. Today Brazil is a model of development,and doing it´s best to correct generations of mismanagement. Similar comments can be made about Chile, Bolivia, Argentina, Equador,and Venezuela. Colombia, sadly, is still under the US boot and suffers from massive human rights violations.