I have a lot to say about police reform that's going on right now in Honduras. Thank you for mentioning that they have suspended the attorney general of Honduras for a period of 60 days from what I understand.
I think the current police reform that is occurring right now has a lot of important problems with the way it's being carried out. I'm not sure how you can reform the police when there's been absolutely no justice from what occurred after the coup d'état. The people that participated in the coup d'état are the people that are in the congress and are making these decisions about how the police reform is going to be conducted.
I'm not sure how a police reform process can occur if the director of the national police force has himself been accused in participating in death squads, so I'm not optimistic about it achieving any significant change. I think it may remove a couple of low-level police officers that have been involved in human rights violations, but I don't think it addresses in any way the root or the intellectual authors, and the systematic cleansing of the police that needs to occur, and not just the police, but the people that are making these decisions about who is carrying out these reforms.
I'm not optimistic that it will lead to any good results in terms of lowering the levels of violence and insecurity in Honduras. I think we need an independent international body to intervene and not leave these decisions up to the same people that were responsible for the coup and a lot of the ongoing problems in Honduras.