The Humanitarian Crisis at the Border is Actually a Foreign Policy Crisis - End Drug War funding of Honduran government

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Arturo J. Viscarra

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Jun 20, 2014, 2:21:53 PM6/20/14
to hondurassolidarity, hondura...@yahoogroups.com
SOA Watch action alert concrning the grave situation on the border, with an emphasis on the disastrous US policy toward Honduras. The below version links to allows you to send emails to your Members of Congress, but you can also just sign a petition that will be delivered to President Obama and Congress at a later time using this link: http://org.salsalabs.com/o/727/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=15910

PS - We would have liked to have highlighted exploitative economic policies further, but we decided to go with emphasizing the drug war and the propping up of the Honduran regime for now.. There are more specific mentions of economic policies in the petition/message to MOCs text.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: SOA Watch <in...@soaw.org>
Date: Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 3:57 PM
Subject: The Humanitarian Crisis at the Border is Actually a Foreign Policy Crisis
To: art...@soaw.org


The Root Causes of Migration: End U.S. Funding of the Drug War and the Corrupt Honduran Regime

The heartbreaking stories emanating from the immigration detention centers near the border have rightly been making the news. However the U.S. media has largely ignored the real lessons from the increasing number of Unaccompanied Minors being detained near the U.S. border. This “humanitarian crisis” has not been caused by the criminal nature of the people of Central America, irresponsible parenting, or the clichéd pursuit of the “American Dream”. Children and their families are coming to the U.S. to survive. At its root, they are too often trying to escape the devastating consequences of past and present U.S. foreign policy in the region.

CLICK HERE to urge your Senator and Representative to end the counterproductive funding of the Drug War and the corrupt Honduran Regime


The number of children attempting to cross the border into the United States has risen dramatically in the last five years: In FY 2009, roughly 6,000 unaccompanied minors were detained near the border. Credible estimates project that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will detain as many as 74,000 unaccompanied minors by the end of FY 2014. Approximately 28% of the children detained this year are from Honduras, 24% from Guatemala, and 21% from El Salvador.The particularly severe increases in Honduran migration are a direct result of the June 28, 2009 SOA-graduate led coup, the abusive policies of the resulting Honduran regimes, and the shameful U.S. support for these corrupt governments that emerged after dubious elections in 2009 and 2013.

Since 2008, the U.S. has spent over $800 million in security aid to Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador through the “Central American Regional Security Initiative” (CARSI) in addition to millions more in bilateral military and police aid to each country. The current humanitarian crisis on the border, is a direct result of the drastic U.S.-led militarization of the drug war, unequal economic relationships (e.g. Free Trade Agreements that have ravaged campesino communities), and U.S. support for the cartel-infiltrated post-coup government of Honduras.

By every conceivable measure - the availability of drugs, mass incarceration, mass immigrant detention, and the effective use of tax money in the U.S.; homicide and violence rates, corruption, the overall power of drug cartels, and migration rates in Central America – the "war on drugs" has been an abject and costly failure. It is time, it has been time, for the U.S. government to take real responsibility for its role in the root causes of migration from Central America. The region will never be “cured” of its ills without an honest, fact-based re-evaluation and a resulting re-implementation of U.S. foreign policy.

CLICK HERE to urge your Senator and Representative to end the counterproductive funding of the Drug War and the corrupt Honduran Regime


The patterns of violence and forced migration established during the dirty wars of the 20th century have continued unabated. It is no surprise that Central American children travel alone to the U.S. to escape violence, especially if one or both of their parents already live there.

Increased militarization under the pretext of the drug war has led to massive human rights violations, including illegal land grabs, and the persecution of indigenous and grassroots leaders, too often at the hands of the military and police funded and trained (many at the School of the Americas) under U.S. security programs. In particular, the situation in Honduras has dramatically deteriorated, yet the U.S. continues to fund the corrupt and brutal Honduran security forces 5 years after the June 28, 2009 SOA-graduate led military coup. Why should the people of Central America continue to suffer and be scapegoated when the root causes of migration are all too often created by damaging U.S. foreign policies?

Peace and struggle,
SOA Watch









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