Well, absolutely there is very systemic impunity. Again, the figures were just published by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and I invite all the members of your subcommittee to read it. I think it's a very important document. It's in Spanish at the moment, but it includes their preliminary findings following their trip to Honduras at the beginning of this month.
There they mention that the civil society groups they consulted—and I think they consulted nearly every key group that works on human rights—indicate that the level of impunity is between 95% and 98% in the country. It's effectively non-existent except for a few cases—generally just a few cases—despite some efforts. A special task force was created, in particular to look into LGBT murders, and some were prosecuted.
An interesting pattern in the prosecutions is that you very rarely see security forces either apprehended or prosecuted, so there seems to be an even higher impunity when it comes to crimes involving security forces. Again, the groups involved with the rights of children have noted an increase in extrajudicial killings involving minors and that these are never investigated. The authorities generally give a blanket justification that these were delinquents, but there's no investigation to see whether that's true.