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Today, on International Women's Day, we raise our voices in indignation at the brutal murder of our sister Berta Caceres - indigenous Lenca leader, community organiser, grassroots feminist and environmental justice activist.
Today, on International Women's Day, we raise our voices in indignation at the brutal murder of our sister Berta Caceres - indigenous Lenca leader, community organiser, grassroots feminist and environmental justice activist. Berta was murdered in her home in the Intibuca department, Honduras, early in the morning of the 3rd March, at the side of Mexican activist Gustavo Castro Soto from Otros Mundos/FOE Mexico, who was badly hurt by the same gunmen.
Honduras has been the scene of a widening crackdown on peaceful dissent since the coup in 2009. Communities and organizations opposing destructive projects, such as Berta and her comrades at COPINH - the National Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras - organisation co-founded by Berta in 2003, have been intimidated, persecuted and murdered. The government is aiding and abetting the theft and appropriation of the commons and peoples' territories by large transnational corporations. Mining and damming projects are being rolled out with little or no consultation with the peoples affected.
"We will take Berta's political messages and image onto the streets on International Women's Day itself, as we make visible our struggles to end violence against all women and for women's autonomy over our bodies, lives and work."
Berta Caceres is a leader who has inspired us for many years as an indigenous woman activist raising her voice in the defense of women's bodies - our primary territory - and community territory, land, water and the commons. Through her actions, she has strengthened the role of women in resisting destructive transnational corporation activities and state-level repression, and in constructing alternatives based on centuries-old knowledge and collective practices. In recent interviews, she once again encouraged us to rise up in collective solidarity, in the global South and North, against the predatory capitalist, patriarchal system in order to save women's lives, human lives and the planet.
Berta has shown us in practice that there is no environmental justice without an end to all forms of violence against women and to the exploitation of women's reproductive and productive work. Violence is used as a tool to control women's lives, bodies and work within the patriarchal, racist capitalist system, just as it is used to control community territories and the commons. Capital accumulation in a time of multiple crisis - economic, social, environmental - is made possible through the oppression and domination of both nature and women's work: both are considered infinite, elastic resources, to be exploited according to the interests of elite groups.
During this week, Friends of the Earth Member Groups are organising urgent actions in front of Honduran embassies in countries around the world to demand immediate justice for the murder of Berta. Women and men FOE activists will mobilise widely, with allied groups and movements, to show our indignation towards the Honduran government for state level violence against environmental and human rights defenders in the country, and for acting hand in hand with transnational corporations who are given a free reign over Honduran land and community territories. As women FOE activists, we will take Berta's political messages and image onto the streets on International Women's Day itself, as we make visible our struggles to end violence against all women and for women's autonomy over our bodies, lives and work.
We take the lead from COPINH in supporting the following list of demands:
We demand justice!
We demand an end to impunity!
We demand an independent investigation into Berta's assassination, with international judges and experts!
We demand an end to paramilitary activities and training in the country, supported by foreign governments!
We demand an end to the persecution of those who defend the rights of the indigenous people and the entire population!
We demand the necessary changes in Honduras!
We demand respect for life!
Friends of the Earth International is working for a peaceful and socially just world. This world will remain out of our reach as long as the majority of women have to limit their daily movements and choices, and take risks in the most ordinary of settings because of the threat of violence. We express our solidarity with our sisters around the world who are fighting for sustainable societies and for equality between women and men. We stand in solidarity with Berta's family and the Lenca community and renew our commitment, as women and men FOE activists, to continue the feminist and socialist fight for an end to violence against all women, and against environmental human rights defenders who are harassed, threatened or killed for their activism around the world.
On International Women's Day and everyday... We are all Berta Caceres!
Mobilise, Resist, Transform!
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Today, on International Women's Day, we raise our voices in indignation at the brutal murder of our sister Berta Caceres - indigenous Lenca leader, community organiser, grassroots feminist and environmental justice activist. Berta was murdered in her home in the Intibuca department, Honduras, early in the morning of the 3rd March, at the side of Mexican activist Gustavo Castro Soto from Otros Mundos/FOE Mexico, who was badly hurt by the same gunmen.
Honduras has been the scene of a widening crackdown on peaceful dissent since the coup in 2009. Communities and organizations opposing destructive projects, such as Berta and her comrades at COPINH - the National Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras - organisation co-founded by Berta in 2003, have been intimidated, persecuted and murdered. The government is aiding and abetting the theft and appropriation of the commons and peoples' territories by large transnational corporations. Mining and damming projects are being rolled out with little or no consultation with the peoples affected.
"We will take Berta's political messages and image onto the streets on International Women's Day itself, as we make visible our struggles to end violence against all women and for women's autonomy over our bodies, lives and work."
Berta Caceres is a leader who has inspired us for many years as an indigenous woman activist raising her voice in the defense of women's bodies - our primary territory - and community territory, land, water and the commons. Through her actions, she has strengthened the role of women in resisting destructive transnational corporation activities and state-level repression, and in constructing alternatives based on centuries-old knowledge and collective practices. In recent interviews, she once again encouraged us to rise up in collective solidarity, in the global South and North, against the predatory capitalist, patriarchal system in order to save women's lives, human lives and the planet.
Berta has shown us in practice that there is no environmental justice without an end to all forms of violence against women and to the exploitation of women's reproductive and productive work. Violence is used as a tool to control women's lives, bodies and work within the patriarchal, racist capitalist system, just as it is used to control community territories and the commons. Capital accumulation in a time of multiple crisis - economic, social, environmental - is made possible through the oppression and domination of both nature and women's work: both are considered infinite, elastic resources, to be exploited according to the interests of elite groups.
During this week, Friends of the Earth Member Groups are organising urgent actions in front of Honduran embassies in countries around the world to demand immediate justice for the murder of Berta. Women and men FOE activists will mobilise widely, with allied groups and movements, to show our indignation towards the Honduran government for state level violence against environmental and human rights defenders in the country, and for acting hand in hand with transnational corporations who are given a free reign over Honduran land and community territories. As women FOE activists, we will take Berta's political messages and image onto the streets on International Women's Day itself, as we make visible our struggles to end violence against all women and for women's autonomy over our bodies, lives and work.
We take the lead from COPINH in supporting the following list of demands:
We demand justice!
We demand an end to impunity!
We demand an independent investigation into Berta's assassination, with international judges and experts!
We demand an end to paramilitary activities and training in the country, supported by foreign governments!
We demand an end to the persecution of those who defend the rights of the indigenous people and the entire population!
We demand the necessary changes in Honduras!
We demand respect for life!
Friends of the Earth International is working for a peaceful and socially just world. This world will remain out of our reach as long as the majority of women have to limit their daily movements and choices, and take risks in the most ordinary of settings because of the threat of violence. We express our solidarity with our sisters around the world who are fighting for sustainable societies and for equality between women and men. We stand in solidarity with Berta's family and the Lenca community and renew our commitment, as women and men FOE activists, to continue the feminist and socialist fight for an end to violence against all women, and against environmental human rights defenders who are harassed, threatened or killed for their activism around the world.
On International Women's Day and everyday... We are all Berta Caceres!
Mobilise, Resist, Transform!
Today, on International Women's Day, we raise our voices in indignation at the brutal murder of our sister Berta Caceres - indigenous Lenca leader, community organiser, grassroots feminist and environmental justice activist. Berta was murdered in her home in the Intibuca department, Honduras, early in the morning of the 3rd March, at the side of Mexican activist Gustavo Castro Soto from Otros Mundos/FOE Mexico, who was badly hurt by the same gunmen.
Honduras has been the scene of a widening crackdown on peaceful dissent since the coup in 2009. Communities and organizations opposing destructive projects, such as Berta and her comrades at COPINH - the National Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras - organisation co-founded by Berta in 2003, have been intimidated, persecuted and murdered. The government is aiding and abetting the theft and appropriation of the commons and peoples' territories by large transnational corporations. Mining and damming projects are being rolled out with little or no consultation with the peoples affected.
"We will take Berta's political messages and image onto the streets on International Women's Day itself, as we make visible our struggles to end violence against all women and for women's autonomy over our bodies, lives and work."
Berta Caceres is a leader who has inspired us for many years as an indigenous woman activist raising her voice in the defense of women's bodies - our primary territory - and community territory, land, water and the commons. Through her actions, she has strengthened the role of women in resisting destructive transnational corporation activities and state-level repression, and in constructing alternatives based on centuries-old knowledge and collective practices. In recent interviews, she once again encouraged us to rise up in collective solidarity, in the global South and North, against the predatory capitalist, patriarchal system in order to save women's lives, human lives and the planet.
Berta has shown us in practice that there is no environmental justice without an end to all forms of violence against women and to the exploitation of women's reproductive and productive work. Violence is used as a tool to control women's lives, bodies and work within the patriarchal, racist capitalist system, just as it is used to control community territories and the commons. Capital accumulation in a time of multiple crisis - economic, social, environmental - is made possible through the oppression and domination of both nature and women's work: both are considered infinite, elastic resources, to be exploited according to the interests of elite groups.
During this week, Friends of the Earth Member Groups are organising urgent actions in front of Honduran embassies in countries around the world to demand immediate justice for the murder of Berta. Women and men FOE activists will mobilise widely, with allied groups and movements, to show our indignation towards the Honduran government for state level violence against environmental and human rights defenders in the country, and for acting hand in hand with transnational corporations who are given a free reign over Honduran land and community territories. As women FOE activists, we will take Berta's political messages and image onto the streets on International Women's Day itself, as we make visible our struggles to end violence against all women and for women's autonomy over our bodies, lives and work.
We take the lead from COPINH in supporting the following list of demands:
We demand justice!
We demand an end to impunity!
We demand an independent investigation into Berta's assassination, with international judges and experts!
We demand an end to paramilitary activities and training in the country, supported by foreign governments!
We demand an end to the persecution of those who defend the rights of the indigenous people and the entire population!
We demand the necessary changes in Honduras!
We demand respect for life!
Friends of the Earth International is working for a peaceful and socially just world. This world will remain out of our reach as long as the majority of women have to limit their daily movements and choices, and take risks in the most ordinary of settings because of the threat of violence. We express our solidarity with our sisters around the world who are fighting for sustainable societies and for equality between women and men. We stand in solidarity with Berta's family and the Lenca community and renew our commitment, as women and men FOE activists, to continue the feminist and socialist fight for an end to violence against all women, and against environmental human rights defenders who are harassed, threatened or killed for their activism around the world.
On International Women's Day and everyday... We are all Berta Caceres!
Mobilise, Resist, Transform!