U.N. says post-election repression in Honduras involved excessive lethal force (March 13, 2018)
The Office of the UnitedNations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Honduras found that the government's response to post electoral protests starting last November led to serious human rights violations. A new report details "that elements of the security forces, especially the Military Police of the Public Order and the Army, used excessive force, including lethal force, to control and disperse protests, leading to the killing and wounding of protesters as well as passers-by."
By the end of January, the OHCHR registered at least 23 people killed in the context of post-electoral protests, all but one were civilians. "Based on its monitoring, OHCHR considered that at least 16 of the victims were shot to death by the security forces, including two women and two children, and that at least 60 people were injured, half of them by live ammunitions. In addition, OHCHR found that mass arrests took place, and that at least 1,351 people were detained between 1 and 5 December for violating the curfew. OHCHR also received credible and consistent allegations of ill-treatment at the time of arrest and/or during detention. It also received reports of illegal house raids conducted by members of the security forces. Another concern during the period under review is the surge in threats and intimidation against journalists, media workers, social and political activists."
The report indicates that all the deaths attributed to the security forces resulted from firearms wounds and could amount to extra-judicial killings. "The analysis of the type of injuries suffered by the victims32 indicate that the security forces made intentional lethal use of firearms, including beyond dissuasive purpose, such as when victims were fleeing. This was illustrated in particular by the case of seven victims who died as a result of the impact of live ammunitions in the head. These cases raise serious concerns about the use of excessive lethal force and may amount to extra-judicial killings."
The report places the violations "in the context of a political, economic and social crisis, which can be traced back to the 2009 military coup d’état, and the subsequent delay in undertaking critical institutional, political, economic and social reforms."
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said in a statement that things were likely to get worse unless Honduras prosecuted people for the killings.
"The already fragile human rights situation in Honduras, which suffers from high levels of violence and insecurity, is likely to deteriorate further unless there is true accountability for human rights violations, and reforms are taken to address the deep political and social polarization in the country," he said.
News Briefs
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- At Buzzfeed, Karla Zabludovsky details some of AMLO's unlikely alliances with ideological opponents that have alienated some of his base.
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- As Venezuelans increasingly flee their country's crushing crisis, the U.N. has asked countries in the region to treat them as refugees, rather than economic migrants, reports the Miami Herald. The UNHCR recommends countries that have received Venezuelans to not deport them, even if they entered illegally or lack proper identification papers. The guidelines are an apparent rebuke to Colombia, which has been struggling to manage the incoming flow and has implemented stricter policies. (See Feb. 9's post.)
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- Outgoing U.S. ambassador to Panama John Feely has come to symbolize the depletion of the State Department under Trump, a situation that has particularly affected diplomats specialized in Latin America, reports the Washington Post. (Plus check out the endearing and humorous goodbye videos Feely posted online.)
- In a year of key elections around the region, continuous setbacks could challenge the perception that democracy is more entrenched in Latin America than other developing regions, write Beverly Goldberg and Francesc Badia i Dalmases in Open Democracy. "Endemic corruption continues to penetrate society from its very roots up, and self-serving politicians, in a pursuit for power, have left a trail of devastation in their wake."
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- Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said he'd resume peace talks with the ELN, suspended in January after a wave of attacks by the guerrilla group, reports EFE.
- Chile's Congress was joined by the first two Mapuche women lawmakers, reports the BBC.
- Brazilian President Michel Temer announced two new marine protection areas that would ensure a quarter of the country's oceans are protected, reports Reuters.
- Mistrust of the Brazilian government among citizens is hindering efforts to vaccinate against a deadly yellow fever outbreak, reports the Associated Press. Rumors and misinformation, particularly via Whatsapp, are impacting a public policy and could lead to an urban outbreak in the country's megacities.
- Brazil’s Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles is analyzing a presidential run in October, reports Reuters.
- Will it ever be possible to enjoy quinoa without guilt? A few years ago it was stories about how fashionable cosmopolitan consumers were pushing the Andean staple out of economic reach for its indigenous cultivators. Now the bust has dashed the dreams of small-scale farmers, reports Nacla. "The quinoa boom-bust trajectory also challenges the wisdom of commercializing so-called “traditional crops” as a sustainable development strategy. ... Although small-scale quinoa farmers benefitted early on from the commercialization of this “underutilized species,” once its price became attractive to non-Andean farmers, there were no institutional mechanisms in place to ensure that small Andean farmers could continue to reap their fair share of the benefits from “sharing” this food with the world. Instead, farmers with no cultural link to quinoa but with more capital to invest and larger, more productive farms are now outcompeting the small farmers in the Andes that quinoa’s commercialization initially had the potential to benefit."
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