Okay. Thanks so much.
Let me just start off by saying thank you so much for inviting me to speak. It's really an enormous honour. I want to start by saying that, and also how grateful I am to the committee for caring about the human rights situation in Honduras, which is so terrible.
I have an opening statement that I'm going to read.
I am a professor of history at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and have been researching and writing about modern Honduran history for the past 12 years. Since the coup, I have written 26 articles and opinion essays on the current situation in Honduras, including for The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, foreignaffairs.com, and regularly in The Nation magazine. I'm also very involved in advising numerous members of the United States Congress regarding U.S. policy in Honduras, and I have continued to travel to Honduras regularly since the coup.
I would like to open by speaking about the dramatic degeneration of the rule of law in Honduras since the June 2009 military coup that overthrew President Manuel Zelaya. The coup itself was an enormous criminal act in which the top leadership of the military, the entire supreme court, and the majority of the Honduran congress all participated. No one has ever been convicted of this most basic of crimes, although the Lobo government's own truth and reconciliation commission has called for the prosecution of the perpetrators of the coup, as did U.S. Representative Howard Berman, former ranking Democrat on the committee on foreign affairs of the U.S. House of Representatives just this past October.
The current Honduran president, Porfirio Lobo, also known as “Pepe” Lobo, came to power through an illegitimate election in November 2009—the ballots were controlled by the very same military that had just run the coup—which was boycotted by most of the opposition and by all international observers, except the United States Republican Party. Once in office, Lobo reappointed most of the same military figures who had perpetrated the coup. The current government is still composed largely of coup perpetrators at the very top, as is the congress and the supreme court.
As you know well by now, since the coup, the basic rule of law in Honduras has continued to degenerate dramatically, and the country now boasts the highest murder rate in the world. The judicial system is largely non-functional. Human Rights Watch recently reported the following:
Human rights prosecutors face obstacles conducting investigations, including limited collaboration by security forces, lack of sufficient resources, and an ineffective witness protection program.
There is near complete impunity, even for the government itself. The attorney general said on April 10 that 80% of all cases remain in impunity.
According to the top human rights group of Honduras, COFADEH, the committee of families of the detained and disappeared of Honduras, over 10,000 complaints of human rights abuses by state security forces were filed in 2010 alone. Almost none of them have been addressed.
The police are largely corrupt and are widely acknowledged to be so, and they regularly kill people with complete impunity, as the president himself admits. Three successive commissions charged with cleaning up the police since November 2011 have failed, by their own admission, to make progress.
At a deep level, the Lobo administration lacks the political will to deal with the alarming state of the police. This is largely deliberate. Widespread critics charge that the government itself is interlaced with organized crime, drug traffickers, and those who profit from gang extortion. Marlon Pascua, the minister of defence, has himself even spoken of “narco judges” who block prosecutions and “narco congressmen” who run cartels.
I'd like to underscore that the current national chief of police, Juan Carlos Bonilla, is the documented leader of a death squad in the late 1990s and early 2000s that was engaged in social cleansing assassinations, which, according to a recent investigation by the Associated Press, still continue to this day.
The current head of the transit police, Héctor Iván Mejía, is under an arrest warrant and a restraining order for his role in violently repressing a peaceful demonstration by the opposition in September 2010 when he was chief of police of the country's second largest city, San Pedro Sula. President Lobo continues to support both Bonilla and Mejía, and neither has even been suspended.
The Honduran congress, for its part, is now running roughshod over the rule of law at an increasing rate. In December, the president of the congress, Juan Orlando Hernández, who is also now the ruling party candidate for president, staged what is being called a “technical coup” in which the Honduran congress completely and illegally deposed five members of the supreme court at three in the morning and named replacements the next day. Since that time, the congress has re-passed several laws that the supreme court had quite correctly ruled unconstitutional, including a law allowing for so-called model cities in which the Honduran constitution itself doesn't even apply, a law allowing for exploitative mining, and a law permitting lie detector tests of the police, in violation of international legal norms against self-incrimination.
Perhaps most alarmingly, Lobo and the Honduran congress are using the crisis in the police for a terrifying intrusion of the military into civilian life. In violation of the Honduran constitution, which only permits the military to engage in policing in an emergency, Lobo has recently authorized policing by the military well into 2014.
Large bands of soldiers now routinely trot through neighbourhoods throughout the large cities several times a day, accosting people and erecting checkpoints with no clear purpose except intimidation and randomly locking down whole neighbourhoods by night. The military, which is itself interlaced with drug traffickers and organized crime, is by no means a clean alternative to the police.
In May, soldiers engaged in policing in the capital chased down, shot, and killed a boy who passed through a checkpoint, and a top officer led a concerted cover-up of the operation. Just last week, President Lobo and the new minister of security, Arturo Corrales, appointed four retired military colonels to top positions in the police and as the vice-minister of security. One of those three new appointees has been explicitly linked to death squad activities conducted by the infamous Battalion 3-16 in the 1980s; one is linked to the prominent assassination of a Jesuit priest in the 1980s; and a third is part of a company that has been censured by the United Nations for mercenary activities in Iraq.
Finally, I would like to underscore that while repression is terrorizing the entire population, it continues to explicitly target the opposition in particular. At least six candidates and officers from Libre, the opposition party, have been assassinated since last May, including one quite recently, and they are among 206 members of the opposition assassinated since the coup, by conservative estimates.
As you have already heard in previous testimony, 96 small farmer activists from the Aguán Valley who are struggling for land rights have been killed, many of them allegedly by members of the army's 15th battalion working in tandem with large landowners and their private armies of unregulated security guards. According to Human Rights Watch, those who perpetrate violence and threats against human rights defenders, against prosecutors, against peasant activists and transgendered people "are rarely brought to justice".
In sum, I'd just like to say that the situation in Honduras is not what is being called in some cases “random violence”, caused just by growing drug trafficking, but the concerted policy of a corrupt government deliberately destroying the rule of law. That Honduran government, in turn, is vigorously supported by both the United States and Canada. I would be happy to discuss U.S. policy toward Honduras in more detail in my testimony, and I'd be happy to also discuss the growing and powerful opposition to it in both houses of the U.S. Congress.
Thank you.