These complaints include... I haven't seen the entire 10,000 and I want to [Technical difficulty--Editor]...government itself has given the same figures. So this is not just COFADEH, which is very upstanding, but the Honduran government itself. I would also underscore the statistic from the government itself a few weeks ago saying that 80% of all crimes are an impunity.
The complaints about the state security forces include harassment, threats, killings, intimidation [Technical difficulty--Editor]...failure to act. It's very terrifying, sometimes to the point where people who were supposed to have protection get the very police officers who had threatened them. So it's a wide range of human rights abuses that have been spectacularly documented and if you're looking for the documentation of that, I would underscore that the report of the civil society truth commission is replete with testimony and examples of these kinds of abuses by state security forces.
Maria Luisa Borjas, the former police commissioner who had investigated El Tigre Bonilla, said famously that she'd rather meet five gang members down an alley than meet five police officers. So this is just routine. People come in [Technical difficulty--Editor]...objections and they themselves are harassed and threatened. It's a very terrifying thing to even speak up or to register any kinds of these grievances. People then get threatened for doing so.