Yes. There's a variety of groups that have been raising alarms increasingly. I would speak first of the Organization of American States, which has regularly issued alarms. In particular, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has heard testimony from the peasants and the campesinos in the Aguán Valley. They are currently considering a case of so-called judges in resistance, judges and prosecutors who were dismissed by the Lobo government for opposing the coup and have never been restored. They've also expressed alarm about the situation with freedom of the press in Honduras, and the OAS continues to hear a number of different cases at its hearings in Washington, D.C.
Human Rights Watch has issued regular alarms and in their recent report called attention to impunity, to lack of freedom of the press, to repression of the opposition, and repression of transgendered people and the legal profession.
Amnesty International has put out specific alerts, calling in particular for prosecution and investigation of the killing of Antonio Trejo, the lawyer for the campesinos who was assassinated in September, and regular individual alerts about particular cases.
Finally, the United Nations' special rapporteur, Frank La Rue, and Margaret Sekaggya from the United Nations have regularly issued alarms about the human rights situation and lack of the rule of law in Honduras.
I'd be happy to send on all that material.