The government of Honduras is a signatory to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Who Work and Live in Rural Areas, Agricultural Workers and Indigenous Peoples, approved by the United Nations General Assembly on December 17, 2018. The document calls for protection of several basic rights, including food, land and water, and respect for the cultural identity and traditional knowledge of Indigenous populations.
Clearly, the government is not upholding its obligations to Indigenous and other campesino communities. Here is a recent example. The Lenca Council of Palestine in Marcala, La Paz Department, is embattled in an ongoing land dispute with a private landowner. The Indigenous families of the campesino cooperative have 229 hectares of ancestral lands that were titled to them by the Honduran government in 1999. Nevertheless, the private landowner succeeded in getting a judge to issue an eviction order to force some families from some of the land. On May 18, about 200 employees of the private landowner arrived with 40-50 state security personnel (police and military) to carry out the eviction. When Ramon Domínguez and Juan García, two members of the Lenca campesino cooperative, showed resistance, they were arbitrarily detained for seven hours even though they were not charged with any crime.