Showing posts with label land conflict. Show all posts
Showing posts with label land conflict. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

“Made in the U.S.A”: Take Action for Honduran Campesinos

From February 28 - March 8, 2017, a La Voz de los de Abajo delegation was in Honduras for the commemoration of Berta Caceres' murder a year ago. We also visited campesino communities. This is an article by a delegation participant from our Chicago partners in solidarity with Honduras, CRLN. 

“Made in the U.S.A”: CNTC Land Recuperation Efforts Hurt by U.S. “Security” Aid
Reflections by Sharon Hunter-Smith, Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America
Tegucigalpa and La Paz, Honduras; March 6, 2017
Our group from Chicago stood staring at the rough wooden table, which held 2-dozen or so spent tear gas canisters plus a couple of bullet shells, collected by the 9th of July community from the area immediately surrounding the place where we stood. The largest one, designed to be fired from a rifle, was stamped “Made in U.S.A.” The connection between U.S. military and police aid to Honduras and the violent persecution of impoverished Honduran farmers was crystal clear in the objects before us.
The original rural community of 28 families has been tear gassed and evicted from their simple hand-built dwellings and cultivated land 26 times by the Honduran military or police. In the last surprise eviction on January 13, 2017, the police followed the fleeing people, even women and children, across the valley, shooting all the way. One man was shot in the leg and a pregnant woman miscarried after running away, panicked, from the “security” forces. They also tore down and burned houses, stole or burned possessions and tools left in and around the houses, and cut down some of the fruit trees and crops. Since then, the women and children, have moved to a nearby community while the men have re-occupied the land.
“Thanks be to God that we continue to live on this land,” said one man. After each violent eviction, the community’s commitment is to return and resettle on the land within 24 hours of being pushed off, rebuilding houses and restoring crops as they are able. The bravery and endurance that this strategy demands is fed by their hope of land ownership. They experience other threats in the form of arrest warrants against them and death threats from the national or military police. “Every time we receive a group of international people who are in solidarity with us, it gives us the strength to keep going on with our struggle,” said another.
The irony is that if this were a pioneer story under a different government, these people would be heroes. This community of formerly landless people, organized by the Central Nacional de Trabajadores del Campo (CNTC--National Center of Rural Workers), settled this abandoned and desert-like land in 2010. They dug trenches and bought plastic pipes to carry water for irrigation and drinking water from a spring 3 kilometers away. They planted fruit trees and other crops to feed their families. A dry hillside turned green and provided a way to make a living. The CNTC which was founded in 1985 currently works with 203 other communities, like 9th of July, who are reclaiming land and putting it to good use in 14 of the 18 Honduran departments (what in the U.S. would be called states).
The National Agrarian Reform Law of 1962 provided that idle land fit for farming could be expropriated and awarded to indigent and landless persons by the government, and land was redistributed under this Law. However, the 1993 neoliberal Law of Agrarian Modernization gutted the agrarian reform,increasing inequality among landowners and increasing the desperation of the rural poor. To force the issue and obtain the land essential for rural people to support themselves and their families, the CNTC works with landless people to settle and plant on unused, undeveloped or abandoned land. The occupants then file for title with the Honduran National Agrarian Institute (INA) after some years of living on and working the land. 
The 9th of July community is the most persecuted of all the CNTC communities, but others usually are evicted at least several times in their struggle to obtain land. How long do they have to be on the land before they are granted a title? “We don’t know with this administration. They are not on our side,” answered one man. Some of the CNTC communities have lived and worked on their land for 15-20 years and still do not have title. Others have succeeded in their efforts.
Putting this into an even larger context for us, CNTC General Secretary Franklin Almendares explained that 64% of Honduran people are rural, impoverished, and displaced or facing displacement from their land for lack of a title to it. 46% live in extreme poverty. “We are not poor—our land is rich—but we are impoverished, because they throw us off the land on which we live and farm. They want to annihilate those who speak out, who protest, who object to and challenge this system.” At the same time, Almendares pointed out, when large corporate landowners take land without having title to it, the government is complicit with their actions and grant them titles.
Visiting a second land recuperation project, CNTC organizers led us to a piece of land on a plantation that had been abandoned for decades, its owner living in Tegucigalpa.14 young men and boys, most in their teens and early twenties, had arrived on the land 11 days earlier at night.They had made pup tents from pieces of plastic and canvas held up by sticks for shelter, and had begun clearing trees so that they could begin to create fields to plant. The youngest among them appeared to be around 11 years old. They seemed wary and shy,  vulnerable and scared. Most did not talk to us, letting the CNTC organizers and the elected head of their group explain to us their situation.
All wanted to acquire some land to work on and have something to hope for. They eventually wanted to start a family and needed a way to support them. Without land, they had no hope, and without hope, they had nothing to live for.
The CNTC organizers  told us that after arriving, the group did not sleep for three nights, worried that the police would find them and evict them. They also had not slept outside before with insects and snakes in the area, and they were getting used to that. With encouraging words, the CNTC organizers told the group that eviction is just a passing misfortune on the way to acquiring land and homes and community. Every group had experienced this, and many had eventually earned their titles. They must work and have hope that they, too, will be successful one day, because this path is the only one that offers them any hope.

What can those of us in the U.S. do to stop the persecution of communities working with the CNTC? Call your Congressional Representative’s office, ask to speak with or leave a message for the staff responsible for foreign policy, and request that they co-sponsor H.R. 2199, the Berta Cáceres Human Rights in Honduras Act. This would suspend all U.S. security aid to Honduras, including equipment and training, until they cease their human rights violations. We must stop U.S. funding that enables the Honduran government to use violence against its own people, people who only want a chance to support their families and contribute to the life of their communities.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

In the Mountains of La Paz, Campesinos Struggle for their Land

In the municipality of San Jose, high in the mountains of the western province of La Paz the scenic views are breathtaking, mountain peaks covered in vegetation-  pine trees, flowering bushes, coffee plants - with bright colored birds and in the late afternoons a soft damp fog that sinks down into the little valleys. But for the campesinos, most of whom are indigenous Lencas, affiliated to the CNTC and other campesino organizations, the life in La Paz is harsh.

La Paz has one of the most intense agrarian conflicts in the country. Our delegation visited the regional CNTC center and 3 communities that have been recently evicted (desalojados). The CNTC has 53 base communities in La Paz. The land plots in La Paz are much smaller than the extensive plantations in the Aguan Valley and Sula Valley but the population is very concentrated and the large number of landless campesinos is up against a local political and economic elite that includes the family of a former President (Suazo). Land is power in La Paz and now even more so as the big landowners looks towards development of mineral and water resources as well as coffee and other development.



30 of the CNTC communities are involved in intense land conflicts. In 2013 so far there have been 40 violent evictions, two during the month of June. Although there have not been deaths, each time the military/police forces burn down the campesinos’ shelters, destroy their crops, beat even the women and children and arrest and torture the detainees. 200 CNTC members have legal cases against them - some were jailed temporarily and released on probationary measures (having to travel distances each week to sign in at police stations). Others have been held longer and 5 CNTC campesinos were jailed for 5 months last year. The campesinos told us that the La Paz general prosecutor is openly hostile to the campesinos and has implemented measures such as eviction raids in the middle of the night (not actually allowed under Honduran law), and is using conservation laws to prosecute campesinos for supposedly damaging trees and the environment because those laws have tougher penalties than land takeover charges.

We visited three groups: Planes de Calamateca (36 families) which we had visited last September after an eviction - they were evicted again this June.
Fuerza Unida (38 families). They were evicted in June also. The police and soldiers burned down all of their wooden huts - then after those fires spread to the pine forest, the prosecutor accused the campesinos of violating environmental protection laws by causing the fire.
Finally we visited a new recuperation with only 6 months in place, Los Laureles (48 families). They were last evicted in April of 2013 but have replanted many crops although they have not rebuilt homes in the same area.

It was heartbreaking and frustrating to speak with the families who described building small homes and planting crops only to have everything destroyed - and repeating this process multiple times. The campesinos told us that the land is their existence and their identity and they can’t give up their struggle. The CNTC regional and national leaders traveling with us explained the importance of national and international support and the current demand of all the campesino organizations in Honduras for an end to all the evictions and for a new Integral Land Reform Law that creates a just distribution of land to increase food production for the whole country and provides the populous countryside with a decent life.

Monday, August 27, 2012

URGENT ALERT in Solidarity with Garifunas in Vallecito, Honduras! Paramilitary groups armed to the teeth threaten Garifuna communities and could perpetuate a massacre.

In the region of Vallecito (Limon in the province of Colon) 6 Garifuna farming cooperatives have launched a land recuperation this week. See the statement below from OFRANEH with urgent actions to be taken right away.

 There is also an ongoing support petition for Garifuna land rights on line. To sign the petition electronically click on this link: http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/defend-the-sovereignty-of-honduras-and-the-culture-and.html

From Triunfo de la Cruz to Vallecito and beyond, the Garifuna communities face threats and violence as the developers for mega-tourism projects in Tela Bay and Trujillo and the agri-business oligarchs like Miguel Facusse try to drive them off of their ancestral lands. La Voz de los de Abajo has visited these communities in permanent resistance (see blog entries from our delegations  and supports the self-determination of the Garifuna people.  This is the link to a previous Honduras Resists post on Vallecito  http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=8955810357788117702#editor/target=post;postID=8294882332289463531 Articulo en español sigue despues del ingles

URGENT ALERT in Solidarity with Garifunas in Vallecito, Honduras!

Paramilitary groups armed to the teeth threaten Garifuna communities and could perpetuate a massacre.

CALL FOR URGENT ACTION!

Six Garifuna cooperatives that have recovered lands, such that they possess titles of full dominion in the community of ICOTEA, Vallecito, Colon department, (Honduras) lands that have been invaded by latinos in collusion with Miguel Facusse,(the largest landholder in Honduras) with the complicity of Cesar Ham, minister of the National Agrarian Institute (INA), are experiencing at this moment the threat of paramilitaries mobilized on motorcycles and 4 x 4 vehicles with heavy weapons of war who could massacre the peaceful Garifuna inhabitants who are resisting the displacement from their ancestral territories of which they have legal ownership title.
We urge the national and international community and in particular organizations that defend human rights to send messages to the Honduran government, to stop what could be a new blood bath.  We ask the national and international media to collaborate in disseminating this urgent news.
We hold the current regime of landlords and military led by Porfirio Lobo Sosa for whatever happens to the Garifuna people organized with OFRANEH.
Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras (Organización Fraternal Negra Hondureña), OFRANEH
Civic Council of Popular Organizations of Honduras (Consejo Cívico de Organizaciones Populares de Honduras) COPINH
Agricultural Missions, Inc (AMI)
****************
Send messages of denunciation of this imminent threat to the following (in English or Spanish):
-Presidente de Honduras, Sr. Porfirio Lobo Sosa:   pepe@pepelobopresidente.com
-Minister of Ethnicities (Ministro de las Etnias), Sr. Luis Green: luisgreen65@yahoo.es
-Attorney General of the Republic (Fiscalía General de la Republica), Sr. Luis Alberto Rubí: lrubi@mp.hn,  gsuazog@mp.hn
-Minister of the National Agrarian Institute (Ministro del Instituto Nacional Agrario), Sr. Cesar Ham: cham@ina.hn,  hrodriguez@ina.hn
-Minister of Justice and Human Rights (Ministra de Justicia y Derechos Humanos),  Sra. Ana Pineda:  info@sjdh.gob.hn,  i.quintanilla@sjth.gob.hn
-President of the Supreme Court (Presidente de la Corte Suprema), Sr. Jorge Rivera Avilés: presidencia@poderjudicial.gob.hn
------------

The Garifuna People Reoccupy Lands That Have Been Usurped in Vallecito (Limon)

The Garifuna people have suffered heavy territorial pressure. These pressures are caused by corporations, politicians, and the military who make up the real political power of Honduras and who have been seizing power for decades.
Through 6 Associative Collectives the Garifunas have accomplished the titling of 1600 manzanas (4.3 square miles) of land in Vallecito, Limon, Colon, since the year 1997. Since then the invaders have begun to try to take over that territory. Miguel Facusse planted 100 hectares (0.4 square miles) of African palm in the Ruguma Collective, one of the six associative collectives. By the end of 1999, the Supreme Court issued an opinion in favor of the Garifuna, invalidating the claims of the “palm of death.” Facusse in 1993 took over Punta Farallones, adjacent to and belonging to the community of Limon.
Beginning in 2005, people associated with organized crime have imposed a reign of terror in the corridor of Limon - Punta Piedras, forcing the Garifuna that are located in Vallecito to minimize their presence and activities on the land belonging to the collectives. Subsequently, foreigners appeared who were allotted 900 hectares (3.5 square miles) of the 1600 (6.2 square miles) INA (National Agrarian Institute) recognized as belonging to the Garifuna people.
In July 2010, the OFRANEH signed a written agreement with INA officials to achieve the remediation of the associative collectives. However the invaders refused entry to members of INA and the Public Ministry.
The proposed installation of the Model City in the strip between the Bay of Trujillo and the Sico River, has sparked a resurgence of territorial pressure on the Garifuna communities; The Lobo administration has not consulted the Garifuna people about its pretensions to deliver our territory to investors and foreign companies in order to create an independent state.
Vallecito is for our people a territiorial reserve to build food security, hence the importance of recuperating the land of the associative collectives, where we have dreamed of also building the future Garifuna University.

Today hundreds of Garifuna from different communities called together by Iseri Lidawamari and OFRANEH are creating a presence in Vallecito, Limon, to reoccupy the territory that belonged to us historically, and is legally titled by the INA to the Garifuna people through the 6 Associative Collectives: Ruguma, Saway, Saway Sufritiñu, Walumugu, Satuye, Sinduru Free.
We urge solidarity, both nationally and internationally!
We do not seek violence; we do not want repression
We struggle for life, food sovereignty, cultural identity and national sovereignty.
Baruada, Satuye, Bandiemu, Walumugu, Lombardo Lacayo are present in this struggle.
Vallecito, Limon, Colon, August 26, 2012

OFRANEH
Honduran Black Fraternal Organization
Calle 19, # 130.
Alvarado Neighborhood
La Ceiba, Atlantida,
Honduras
telefax: 504-24432492
email: garifuna@ofraneh.org / ofraneh@yahoo.com
http://www.ofraneh.org
http://www.ofraneh.wordpress.com


Alerta: garífunas  en vallecito amenazados

Alrededor de 200 garífunas reunidos en Vallecito, Limón,  con el
propósito de recuperar tierras ancestrales, que han sido usurpadas en
los últimos  años por foráneos;  se han visto el día de hoy acosados por bandas de hombres portando armas de alto calibre, algunos de ellos provenientes de la comunidad de Icoteas.

Las especulaciones inmobilarias alrededor de la supuesta "ciudad modelo"
sumado a la ingobernabilidad existente en la costa norte de Honduras,han producido un ambiente de violencia, situación que nos hace temer por a vida de los y las garífunas en Vallecito

Exigimos al Estado de Honduras el reconocimiento  del  territorio
titulado a las empresas asociativas garífunas y la integridad física de
las personas que se encuentran en Vallecito.
 Favor enviar notas de solidaridad a:

> Sr. Cesar Ham
> Ministro del INA
> karolrodriguez15@hotmail.com ,
>
> Abogado Luis Rubi
> lrubi@mp.hn , suazog@mp.hn
>
> Fiscal General
>
> Sr. Luis Green
> Ministro de las Etnias
> luisgreen65@yahoo.es
>
> Sra. Ana Pineda
> Minister of Justice
> i.quintanilla@sjth.gob.hn
> , i.quintanilla@hotmail.com
>

 OFRANEH
Organizacion Fraternal Negra Hondureña
Calle 19, #130.
Barrio Alvarado
La Ceiba, Atlantida,
Honduras
telefax: 504-24432492
email:garifuna@ofraneh.org/ ofraneh@yahoo.com
http://www.ofraneh.org
 http://www.ofraneh.wordpress.com

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

UPDATE - CAMPESINOS IN HONDURAS APRIL 17

April 17th,  8pm Central time - Eviction of one recuperation - Military threats to another

This afternoon armed private guard employed by the big landowner and businessman Jaime Rosenthal evicted 80 campesino families from the coop Allianza La Lima in La Lima, Yoro in northern Honduras. The land which consists of sugar cane fields was recuperated as part of the day of campesino action. Another of the new recuperations in San Manuel, Cortes appears to be under threat by the military --- troops have arrived in the area but have not moved in. This recuperation is one of the largest, 3200 hectares and 1500 campesino families - the land is also sugar cane fields and is claimed by sugar producer landowners.

At a press conference at noon today , campesino leaders announced that during the very early hours of April 17th, simultaneously 3,000 campesino families recuperated approximately 12 thousand hectares of land across the country- in Cortes, Yoro, Santa Barbara, Intibuca, El Paraiso, Choluteca, Comayagua and Francisco Morazan. The organizations the CNTC, ANACH, COMDIMCA, UCIH, MUCA, ADROH, MOCASAM and FENAJUC held the press conference with Via Campesina the FNRP and the CPTRT.
Rafael Allegria of Via Campesina emphasized that the recuperated lands under Honduran agrarian law are national lands that should have been handed over to the campesinos who filed the solicitudes years ago. The campesino organizations are demanding that the Integral Agrarian Reform Law that they proposed to the congress last October be passed, that Porfirio Lobo convoke a national dialogue to end the land conflicts and the recuperated lands be titled to the campesinos now.

Thank you to Jesse Freeston and to an article posted by German Reyes for some of the information in this posting.

Dia Internacional de Acción Campesina - Campesinos Hondureños - La toma de tierras en 5 provincias.




Un comunicado en español sigue el articulo en ingles

APRIL 17 - International Day of Campesino Struggle
by Victoria Cervantes, La Voz de los de Abajo - Chicago
Honduran Campesinos mobilize for land and survival. - Land takeovers in 5 provinces.  
January 26, 2012, Tutule, La Paz ---defensoresenlinea.com
After the massacre of campesinos of the MST in Brazil on April 17, 1996 the date was declared the International Day of Campesino Action by Via Campesina and other campesino organizations. Today, April 17, 2012, amidst constant attacks and violence from the big landowners and oligarchy that control the police,military and government, Honduran campesinos are mobilizing in defense of their rights to land and survival. At least 13 campesino groups today recuperated land in 5 different provinces in Honduras. The action is organized by the National Center for Rural Workers (CNTC) a sector of the National Association of Honduran Campesinos (ANACH) and others on lands that according to agrarian law should be owned by the campesinos. The land recuperations are occurring now In Olancho, Francisco Morazan, Paraiso, Yoro, and Cortes.

Honduran campesinos have always faced violence and repression, but since the June 28, 2009 military coup the situation has deteriorated dramatically with increasing impunity, militarization and power of the land owning oligarachy and corporate agribusiness. To make matters worse, the Honduran National Congress in December 2010 annulled former President Zelaya’s order (Decree 18-2008) for a limited land reform that would have given dozens of campesino communities title to disputed lands.


Campesino organizations denounce an increase in terror tactics and violence in which national police and other military or mysterious men, dressed in black with their faces covered but carrying police and military weapons, arrive in communities before dawn, knock down doors, pull men women and children violently out of their homes and then destroy the homes and detain community members. Bulldozers and fire have been used to destroy homes and crops. The local leaders in the communities are held in jail or placed on probation requiring them to travel distances every week to sign in at a police station. Always the threat of another traumatizing and violent attacks hangs over the community. These attacks on campesino communities have occurred in the Tutule region of La Paz (20 evictions as many as 3 in one week), in Olancho, Atlantida and other regions. 


The violence and attacks on organized campesinos is infamous in the lower Aguan region in Colon where more than 50 assassinations have taken place since January 2010, and there are constant threats, violence detentions and harassment. Just during the past 4 weeks 2 members of the Unified Campesino Movement of Aguan (MUCA) were murdered and two others detained. The Campesino Movement of Rigores were harassed by armed troops after the community verbally confronted the government’s Agrarian Institute director Cesar Ham and on March 18th a land recuperation in Las Brisas, Colon was violently evicted.

Government and agro-business terror against the campesinos is paired with bad-faith negotiations or promises of negotiations to supposedly resolve land disputes. On February 23 of this year, Cesar Ham convened a meeting of campesino groups, many of whom have been recently evicted or are in imminent danger of eviction. According to some participants the meeting was “a lot of talk about possible negotiations but nothing concrete”. So far, when negotiations have resulted in settlements either the land-owners have openly refused to full-fill the agreements (the case of African Palm grower magnate, Miguel Facusse and MUCA communities) or the negotiations have resulted in untenable, smaller amounts of land and large debt burdens for the campesinos , for example, a February 17th agreement with some MUCA communities.

No wonder then that campesino organizations have decided to step up their struggle for land and to be allowed to produce food and other crops that can sustain their families and the rural economies. Honduras is one of the poorest countries in the region; the United Nations World Food Programme estimates that chronic malnutrition in the countryside is as high as 48.5% and the average rate is 34%. In a recent interview with Jesus Ponce, Secretary General of the CNTC, the campesino leader denounced the violence and attacks on the campesinos and stated, “we only want land to plant and to be productive; the campesinos will never leave land abandoned when so many are hungry; we can be part of a solution to the problems but instead the government, the big landowners, consider us to be less than animals and an obstacle to their plans. The land belongs to us and we demand Justice, Land, and Liberty! ”.

Support the campesinos - Dennounce the violence against campesino communities.
Send an email in Spanish or in English in support of the campesino movement demands for an end to attacks and violence against their communities and organizations and for a recognition of their rights to the land.

Cesar Ham, Director of the National Agrarian Institute: cham@ina.hn
Porfirio Lobo, President of the Republic of Honduras: diseloalpresidente@presidencia.gob.hn with a copy to La Voz de los de Abajo: lavozchicago@yahoo.com 



Comunicado de Prensa -Abril 17, 2012
La Voz de los de Abajo, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Campesinos se movilizan para la tierra y la supervivencia. - La toma de tierras en 5 provincias.
Después de la masacre de 19 campesinos el 17 de abril de 1996 en Brasil, en la movilización por la reforma agraria. Campesinos Brasileños y Vía Campesina declaran el 17 de Abril Como día Internacional del Campesino.
Hoy, 17 de abril de 2012, en medio de constantes ataques y la violencia de los grandes terratenientes y la oligarquía que controla la policía, el ejército y el gobierno, los campesinos hondureños se movilizan en defensa de sus derechos a la tierra y la supervivencia. Hoy más de 13 grupos campesinos hoy están recuperado la tierra en 5 departamentos de Honduras. (Olancho, Francisco Morazán, El Paraíso, Yoro y Cortés). La acción está organizada por La Central Nacional de Trabajadores del Campo (CNTC) y un sector de la Asociación Nacional de Campesinos de Honduras (ANACH)


Los Campesinos hondureños siempre han enfrentado la violencia y la represión, pero desde el golpe de estado militar del 28 de junio 2009 la situación se ha deteriorado dramáticamente con la creciente impunidad, la militarización y el poder agroindustrial de la oligarquía y los terratenientes. Para empeorar las cosas, el Congreso Nacional de Honduras en diciembre de 2010 anuló la orden del ex presidente Zelaya (Decreto 18-2008) que daba la oportunidad de titular tierras de campesinos en disputa.


Las organizaciones campesinas denuncian el aumento en las tácticas de terror y violencia de la policía nacional y otros militares o sicarios vestidos de negro con el rostro cubierto, que llegan aterrorizando a las comunidades, quemando y demoliendo sus casas, destruyendo sus cosechas, torturando a Mujeres Niños y hombres. Disparando contra campesinos indefensos, arrestando y procesando a lideres, como una clara muestra de intimidación para que claudiquen en su lucha. Estos ataques contra las comunidades campesinas se han producido en diferentes regiones del país, incluyendo La Paz, Olancho, y Atlantida, mas sin embargo es en la región del valle aguan donde se registran las mayores violaciones donde más de 50 asesinatos han tenido lugar desde enero de 2010, y constantes amenazas, detenciones violencia y el acoso. Sólo durante las últimas 4 semanas 2 miembros del Movimiento Unificado Campesino del Aguán (MUCA) fueron asesinados y otros dos detenidos.

Por lo tanto no es de extrañar que las organizaciones campesinas han decidido intensificar su lucha por la tierra, para la sobrevivencia de sus comunidades, para producir alimentos y otros cultivos que puedan sostener a sus familias y las economías rurales.
Honduras es uno de los países más pobres de la región, según el programa mundial de alimentos de las Naciones Unidas, se estima que la desnutrición crónica en el campo es tan alta como 48,5% y la tasa media es del 34%. En una reciente conversación con Jesús Ponce, Secretario General de la CNTC, el líder campesino denunció la violencia y los ataques contra los campesinos.


"sólo queremos la tierra para sembrar y para ser productivos, nosotros queremos ser parte de la solución al problema, pero el gobierno favorece siempre a los grandes terratenientes y a nosotros nos trata como animales, y no es justo por que esta tierra a fin de cuentas nos pertenece y por ella estamos dispuesto de luchar hasta el final, solo queremos lo que nuestro lema dice. Justicia, Tierra y Libertad”



Apoyemos la lucha de los campesinos, denunciando la violencia contra sus comunidades campesinas.
Chicago IL, 17 de Abril del 2012 

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Death Threats and Harassment - Buenos Amigos Community in Aguan














March 9, 2011
This afternoon La Voz spoke via telephone with one of the leaders of the Buenos Amigos community in Saba, Colon (Aguan) Blanca Espinoza. The La Voz de los de Abajo delegation that traveled to Honduras January 22-30 of this year met Blanca and the campesino land recuperation of Buenos Amigos. While we were still in Honduras the community was violently evicted from the land. (See our previous posts from January for more history and detail).

Today Blanca informed La Voz that the campesinos remain off their land since their eviction on January 27th. Fourteen community members, including Blanca, have had legal proceeding against them. But most concerning are the ongoing death threats and harassment by paramilitary/private guards. Blanca has received death threats on her cell phone saying that "you are going to die with all of your children" (she has 9 children). She has also been followed and knows she is being watched.

Last night (March 8) around 10:30 at night a motorcycle with two men wearing ski masks pulled up in front of her house. She was terrified, suddenly a truck happened to pull up and the motorcycle took off. She believes that they were scared off by the arrival of the truck and that is the only reason that something worse didn't happen.
Two other members of the campesino group have been followed and threatened, Santos Rios and Santiago Rodriguez. Men showed up looking for Santos where they thought he was working but he was not there so they left. Santiago has been followed and threatened.

Blanca told us that representatives of the National Agrarian Institute (INA) in Colon who are looking into the land conflict at Buenos Amigos have also been threatened. The land in dispute was forclosed on and should be available for the campesinos (100 families) to obtain. The previous owner, Cesar Velasquez, aided by local police and other land owners opposed to the campesinos, is using the paramilitary, private guards, threats and harassment to drive the campesino families out of the area. Since the eviction, due to the constant threats and persecution, Blanca and others in the group have not been able to work in order to maintain their families. Because of the threats and the appearance of masked men at her house, Blanca and her family are being forced to leave the house and find other shelter.

The campesinos have filed a complaint with the human rights organization COFADEH.
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