No, not at all. In fact, there have been statements from government officials that go in the other direction, particularly in the wake of the publication of the preliminary findings of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Following their visit at the beginning of December, you had at least one military official who criticized their findings and also rejected their concerns over the increasing militarization that's occurring in Honduras.
Beyond the rhetoric, or absence of rhetoric from the government, certainly in terms of their actions, it's very worrying to see that precautionary measures that have been granted to individuals believed to be threatened with attacks and human rights abuses by the Inter-American Commission—and many have been granted since the 2009 coup—on the whole are not being implemented. You have various witness accounts from the grantees indicating that the national police of Honduras is often completely unaware of the precautionary measures and unaware of what to do to try to protect these individuals.
So these measures are not being implemented at a time when attacks against human rights defenders are increasing.