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IRTF News
RRN Letter
May 24, 2022
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.
News Article
May 23, 2022
Many Latin American and Caribbean governments are unhappy with the US government’s decision to exclude Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua from the summit. Countries throughout the hemisphere have grown accustomed to US double standards where democracy and human rights protections are flaunted. Who can forget that the United States managed to have Cuba expelled from the Organization of American States (OAS) but never batted an eye over the memberships of Chile under Augusto Pinochet, Argentina under Jorge Rafael Videla, or Guatemala under Rios Montt, to name but a few murderous governments?
News Article
May 23, 2022
May 23 was to be the end of a shameful chapter in the recent history of human rights in the United States. Back on April 1, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had determined that the COVID-19 pandemic had eased sufficiently to make the so-called “Title 42” border policy unnecessary. So far in 2022, U.S. immigration courts have granted asylum or other relief in 48.4 percent of the 23,590 cases they have heard. Title 42 has prevented tens of thousands of other cases from even being filed. This means there is a gigantic probability that the pandemic measure, which did not expire on May 23, has sent many people back to severe harm or death. This is the most serious consequence of keeping Title 42 in place. But there are others.
RRN Letter
May 23, 2022
For many years, Garífuna communities along the Atlantic coast have suffered violence, killings, disappearances, and forced displacement due to powerful economic interests. This includes Honduran elites, international tourism, charter cities (aka ZEDEs), drug traffickers, industrial scale agriculture (e.g., African palm oil plantations), and more. The government of Honduras has enabled the stealing of Garifuna land because of its failure to ensure Garifuna communities the right to their ancestral territories, even when ordered to do so by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
On May 1, unknown persons shot community leader Alonso Salgado Caballero to death while he was sitting in a hammock outside the home of his cousin in Río Tinto, a Garífuna community in Tela municipality, Atlántida Department. The assailants then entered the home and attacked two of his relatives. They seriously injured the wife of his cousin, Zury Quintanilla, a school teacher and the current secretary of the board of trustees of the community. His sister-in-law, Sury Mariela Quintana, was also hospitalized with two gunshots to the head. Alonso Salgado Caballero, age 51, was the former treasurer of the board of trustees.
We are urging that the government of Honduras create and implement legal instruments to eradicate all types of violence against those who lawfully work to protect the land, natural resources and territorial rights of Garífuna communities.
News Article
May 22, 2022
Discussions about the possible installation of an International Commission Against Corruption and Impunity (CICIH) —president Xiomara Castro's campaign promise— has stirred up lobbying to control the Judiciary and the Public Ministry. There are intense movements in the National Congress to adjust the election processes of the Attorney General and the 15 new magistrates of the CSJ in 2023. To analyze this situation, the experiences of the CICIG in Guatemala and of the CICIES in El Salvador are useful, as they are similar commissions despite being in different contexts.
RRN Letter
May 22, 2022
Violence continues in El Estor, Izabal Department, where Maya Indigenous residents have been organizing resistance to the El Fénix nickel mine for the past decade. On May 16, pro-mining residents inflicted serious harm on Adela Choc Cuz, a 68-year-old member of the Ancestral Council of Maya Q’eqchi’ and well-respected spiritual guide in El Estor. Assailants waged an attack on her after accusing her of witchcraft. They burned down her home, held her and her daughter Sandra Tec Choc captive, threatened to burn her alive, and threatened to decapitate her. When police arrived on the scene, the assailants threw rocks at them and attempted to burn their patrol car, thwarting the rescue attempt.
While this might appear to be an interpersonal dispute, investigators must note the political context. Adela Choc Cuz and her family are vocal and active members of the organized resistance to the El Fénix nickel mine. The assailants are associated with a pro-mining evangelical church and radio station and the pro-mining community development council COCODE. Fifteen members of COCODE were at the house when the women were finally released after 18 hours.
News Article
May 22, 2022
Mexican immigration agents can no longer conduct stop and search operations on buses and highways after the country’s supreme court ruled that such checks are racist, discriminatory and therefore unconstitutional. The landmark ruling, handed down in Mexico City on Wednesday, found in favour of three young Indigenous Mexicans who were detained and abused by immigration (INM) officials in 2015 during a US-backed crackdown. “The decision represents an opportunity to stop the discriminatory and racist practices by immigration authorities and the national guard who utilize racial profiling to detect migrants, that have led to arbitrary detentions of both immigrants and Mexicans,” said Gretchen Kuhner, director of the Institute for Women in Migration which helped bring the case.
News Article
May 22, 2022
The decision of a federal judge that forced the United States to continue the immediate expulsion of migrants under Title 42 placed Ciudad Juárez on the cusp of a new humanitarian crisis, due to the daily increase in the migrant population on this border. The flow of more than 100 expelled per day from U.S. territory under Title 42 and the growing arrival of migrants waiting to cross the border has the shelters close to being saturated. Hundreds of other migrants are in spaces that they rent on their own in hotels or homes, while others live in houses in abandoned conditions. Even with the continuation of Title 42, officials are concerned the massive concentration of migrants in this community will continue to increase due to the expulsion of people from the north and those who continue to arrive from the south.
RRN Letter
May 21, 2022
Honduras is one of the most dangerous places on Earth for environmental defenders. We wrote to officials in Honduras demanding justice for the assassinations of three environmental defenders in recent weeks. (1) Justo Benítez (April 30): defender natural resources of the municipality of San Francisco de Ojuera, Santa Bárbara Department; (2) Wilmer Domíngez Madrid (May 10): defender of natural resources in the Lenca peoples’ movement against the Agua Zacra dam in Río Blanco, Intibucá Department; and (3) Donaldo Rosales (May 15): active member of the Environmental Committee of the Municipalities of the Northeast of Comayagua (Camneco), Comayagua Department. In addition to demanding thorough investigations, we are also urging the state to create and implement legal instruments to eradicate all types of violence against those who lawfully work to protect the land, natural resources and territorial rights, especially those of Indigenous communities.