With regard to the 45 teachers who have been murdered, the denunciations are presented to public safety, which is a department in charge of conducting the investigations, and the denunciations are then presented to the public prosecutor. The result is a bogging down in red tape of the denunciations that are presented to the public prosecutor's office.
The recent attorney general went to the national congress in Honduras and was asked to explain what his job is. His answer was that of the denunciations or accusations that have been transmitted to the public prosecutor's office, there were only 20% that were being processed; the other 80% were not being processed. A discourse was intended to save the public ministry from any blame, but there was no effort to actually investigate the cases that were presented. That is what has been happening.
We're not the only ones who say this. The authorities of the Supreme Court in our country told a delegation of Spanish parliamentarians who recently visited Honduras to conduct an observation of human rights and stated that impunity is what prevails in Honduras. Imagine. The Supreme Court is in charge of implementing justice. With these cases, what we are trying to do is to create a report with the teachers' union so that we can actually present the cases to the International Labour Organization, and also, if possible, to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the International Criminal Court. We have to find ways and means to give Hondurans back the certainty that the rule of law must work because we want the rule of law to work in our country.