U.S.-Honduran Delegation
Reports
Escalating Violence
and Repression
In
Aguan Region, Another Campesino Murdered Today
While a delegation
from the Chicago-based La Voz de los de Abajo organization and another
international delegation from Germany are visiting a campesino land occupation in
the Aguan region of northern Honduras, they have just received news of another political
assassination in the country's lower Aguan Valley. The La Voz delegation plans
on visiting the scene of the murder tomorrow.
At approximately
12:30 PM local time, campesinos from the group Refundacion Gregorio Chavez were
fired on by private security guards working for Miguel Facusse, the country's
largest land owner and one of its wealthiest men. Herman Alejandro Maldonado was
killed and Ivis Ortega was gravely wounded.
Maldonado and
Ortega were working on the plantation (finca) of Panama, which is near the town
of Tocoa in Colon province of Honduras. This brings the number of murdered
compesinos in the Aguan Valley to 79 since a U.S.-supported coup in 2009.
"This
latest assassination by Miguel Facusse's employees is one more indicator of an
escalating violence in the midst of an already severe human rights crisis as
the country moves into elections,"
said Vicki Cervantes of La Voz de los de Abajo. Primary elections are scheduled
for this November, and national elections for November 2013.
"This
escalating violence includes the murder of the resistance political party
(LIBRE) candidates and activists, threats against the Honduran human rights
organizations themselves in the country," said Cervantes.
Campesino,
Garifuna and indigenous communities are threatened by new mining and water
concessions, and plans to wipe out labor, civil rights and environmental
regulations in select areas dubbed "Model Cities." Protests are
developing in the capitol of Tegucigalpa today over these plans to sell
Honduras to the highest foreign bidders.
The La Voz
delegation has spent four days visiting campesino communities in the Honduran
provinces of La Paz, Progreso, Cortes, Atlantida and now Colon. The delegation
has been told by community members in Aguan of the presence of U.S. military personnel
in the region.
"We have
witnessed hundreds of campesino families living under plastic sheets after violent
evictions in the last three weeks and have received testimony from the men,
women and children who have been detained and prosecuted for the 'crime' of
wanting to survive," said Alexy Lanza of La Voz. "Everywhere the same
story is told, 'they are trying to exterminate the campesinos,' they want to
eradicate the poor not poverty.'"
Besides
Cervantes and Lanza, members of the La Voz delegation include Sarah Sommers of
Cleveland's Interreligious Task Force on Central America; Lois Martin, Tucson
and a member of No Mas Muertes, an organization dedicated to preventing the
deaths of migrants crossing the deserts in the border region; Sidney Hollander,
an activist with the Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America; human
rights activists Mary Dean and Greg McCain, formerly of Chicago and now of
Colon, Honduras; and Andy Thayer, a Chicago-based anti-war and gay rights
activist.
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