Log in

View Full Version : Honduras: Terror in the Aguán



Paul Pott
12th April 2013, 02:31
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/honduras-archives-46/4225-honduras-terror-in-the-aguan


Written by Greg McCain Thursday, 11 April 2013 12:05 http://upsidedownworld.org/main/images/stories/battalion%20in%20the%20agun.jpgDuring the first week of April, the Honduran daily newspaper La Prensa ran a series of articles (http://www.laprensa.hn/Secciones-Principales/Honduras/Apertura/Los-Perrones-sexto-grupo-armado-en-la-zona-del-Bajo-Aguan#.UWXHDL-HkmT)that included photos, a video and a link to a montage of past articles entitled Terror en el Bajo Aguán (http://archivo.laprensa.hn/especiales/multimedia/AGUAN/index.html). The major thrust of the series is that there are heavily armed clandestine groups of men training in the region. The photos and video show them with AK47s, M16s, and .223 assault rifles, all of which are military issue. All of the men are wearing ski masks over their faces and they appear to be playing to the camera, running in defensive stances, crawling on the ground and being sure to showoff their heavy firepower, all at the direction of whoever is holding the camera. An April 1 article states that there have been more than 90 deaths in the Aguán attributed to people with high caliber arms like the ones shown in the photos. It states that the latest one was a campesino, but it fails to point out that these more than 90 deaths since the coup in 2009 were all campesinos who have been murdered by sicarios: assassins who mainly perform drive by shootings.
Not unexpectedly, the new propaganda campaign being orchestrated by Colonel German Alfaro, commander of Operation Xatruch III and graduate of the School of the Americas, has been carried out with the help of the pro-ruling elite, pro-coup mainstream media. In a further attempt to criminalize the campesino movements, the La Prensa series, by implication and by direct assertions, links the struggles of the campesinos to acquire land that is rightfully and legally theirs to these mysterious armed groups that are roving the Aguán and allegedly terrorizing the private security forces of the rich landowners.
The video of the alleged training maneuvers would be laughable in its obvious staging if the repression that has befallen the campesinos at the hands of the private security guards, the Honduran military, and the National police wasn’t so tragic and ever present. These forces are not just working side-by-side, but are also interchangeable since the security companies that Dinant contracts often hire police and military personnel.
Colonel Alfaro states several times to La Prensa that the identities of these clandestine groups are known and that they even know who the leaders are. In a March 1, 2013 La Prensa article (http://www.laprensa.hn/Secciones-Principales/Sucesos/Policiales/Grupo-armado-ataca-a-militares-en-El-Aguan#.UWXLkr-HkmQ), he asserts that they are being trained by Nicaraguans’ with combat training. He declares that these groups go into the fincas owned by the rich landowners, such as Miguel Facussé’s Paso Aguán, “to terrorize and scare off the security guards. Later, the campesinos go into the plantations to steal the fruit and then money is exchanged at some later date.” No explanation is given as to why it is that campesinos are being killed in overwhelming numbers if this symbiotic relationship truly exists.
The La Prensa “exposé” raises more questions than it answers. If it is the security guards who are being terrorized then why aren’t there huge numbers of their deaths? Furthermore, why are they only a tiny fraction of the campesino deaths, and often found to be the result of infighting among the guards? Why are the campesinos from MARCA who have successfully fought in the courts to retain possession of their land being assassinated? Their lawyer, Antonio Trejo, was assassinated last November in Tegucigalpa after successfully winning the case that secured the land for three of MARCA’s collectives. His brother was later assassinated in Tocoa while investigating his murder. While denying any responsibility, Facussé told an L.A. Times reporter in a December 21, 2012 interview (http://articles.latimes.com/2012/dec/21/world/la-fg-honduras-facusse-20121221) that he certainly had reason to see the lawyer dead. The National Police have attempted to raise spurious claims that the Trejo’s were involved with different less than desirable elements, creating red herrings to take the focus off of Facussé.
There are further questions raised by Alfaro’s claims of there being a connection between armed groups and campesinos. Why are the leaders of MUCA being stopped at every police checkpoint as they drive from Tocoa on their way to a meeting in Siguatepeque in the south. At one checkpoint an officer said to another, “It’s them...they are here.” Later, when they decide that it is safer not to drive any further, they stop at a hotel to rest and then take a bus at 3am to their destination. A group of armed men was seen by the campesino’s driver, who stayed behind, pulling up to the hotel at 3:30 a.m. and question the receptionist about them. Further, why are Facusse’s guards and police and military on a regular basis harassing the MUCA collectives. A truck full of soldiers drove through the community of La Confiansa on the eve of the internal elections shouting out “we’re hunting for Tacamiches” a derogatory term used by the upper classes and police and military to denote campesinos? Why have the military been surrounding the campesino community of La Panama, which borders the Paso Aguán finca, and in which two bodies of members of the community have been dug up near where the private security guards camped? Meanwhile, more are suspected buried there, but why won’t the police and private security, and indeed, the military allow the community to search for the bodies of those missing?
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/images/stories/soldiers%20riding%20on%20dinant%20truck.jpgThese are questions that neither the mainstream media will ask, nor will Colonel Alfaro answer. Instead they work in concert to manufacture a connection between alleged criminal groups and the campesinos. Alfaro’s motives are made clear when he states that they are there to protect the property and the palm fruit of the rich landowners. Soldiers are often seen riding in or along side Facusse’s Dinant trucks and they along with the National Police intermingle on a regular basis with Facussé’s and the other rich landowner’s guards, who have often been described by those living in the Aguán as paramilitaries.
Alfaro claims that, after the National Congress passed a decree in 2012 that banned all firearms from being possessed except by the police, military and private security, they captured 200 weapons in the first month (he does not specify if they were of high caliber like AK47s or if they were .22 rifles or handguns), and then an average of about 14 per month since then. It is evident from his boast that the military has greatly disarmed the general public, while it is evident just by driving up and down the roads between Tocoa and Trujillo that the arms of gruesome caliber, as the newspaper describes them, are in the hands of the police, military and paramilitary of Facussé and the other rich landlords.
There are both police and military checkpoints that randomly stop cars and buses along the main road between these two cities. When a bus is stopped all the men are told to leave and keep their bags and backpacks on board along with the women. The men are then told to press up against the bus with arms and legs spread while the very young soldiers of the 15th Battalion, with their rifles strapped across their chests, do a body pat down while looking at IDs. Other soldiers search the personal belongings on the bus. Off to the side of the road is a military personnel carrier that has a mounted machine gun pointed toward the street. Alfaro doesn’t explain if this is the method that has led to the discovery and confiscation of so many weapons, but it has been successful in labeling every citizen as a potential criminal and preparing the streets for Martial Law as the country prepares for the general elections in November.
In late February, several hundred police, military, and security guards surrounded the community of La Panama, as they have done various subsequent times since then. They proceeded to knock down a security gate that had been erected to keep the paramilitary guards from invading the community. In July of 2012, La Panama found it necessary to put up the gate after one of the community’s leaders, Gregorio Chavez, was disappeared and his corpse later found in the Paso Aguán. His shallow grave was a ten-minute walk from where Facussé’s paramilitary guards had set up an encampment. The community, after pleading with police to accompany them onto the finca, and after international human rights observers had visited and taken testimonies from the community, finally were allowed access. As Señor Chavez’ son and brother pulled the cadaver from the ground it was apparent from marks on the body that he had been tortured. Previous to Chavez’ murder the guards had been harassing him, shooting his chickens, and threatening to do the same to him and his family. They often drove up and down the road that goes through the community with their guns pointing out at the children who played in the yards.
Dinant had put up a building in the middle of the community that functioned as both a guardhouse and a parking space for their palm fruit trucks. A week before his disappearance Gregorio Chavez had gone to this building to complain to someone in charge about the threats and the killing of his chickens. It was also in this building that many in the community had seen the bicycle of one of the disappeared after he went missing. It is suspected that he is buried in the Paso Aguán. It could be the remains that were recently found on April 3. A security guard who had connections to the community tipped them off as to where they could find the body. The community is hoping, with the help of COFADEH and other human rights groups, to get an international forensic team to positively identify who it is.
This latest news was revealed at a press conference in Tegucigalpa held on the April 3 by the Agrarian Platform of the Campesinos of the Aguán (PARCA, in its Spanish acronym). PARCA is a new initiative formed by 13 campesino movements to better support each other as they face ever-increasing threats to their rights to the land. The press conference was called in response to the La Prensa stories. Yoni Rivas, Secretary General of MUCA, reasserted that the campesinos have no connection to any armed groups. In fact, it was the campesinos who had gone to the press in 2011 to point out that there were armed thugs killing campesinos in the Aguán and he showed pictures of armed men with automatic weapons wearing uniforms that matched the clothes worn by Dinant’s security forces.
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/images/stories/dinant%20security%20guard.jpgThe ultimate question is, if Colonel Alfaro and Operation Xatruch are simply doing what they say they are, “maintaining the peace and harmony of the people of Colon,” then why is he conducting press conferences denouncing both Honduran and international human rights groups? On February 18, 2013, in a clear act of aggression toward these groups and in a further attempt at criminalization of the campesinos, he called out human rights observers and campesino leaders. He published the phone numbers of international human rights observers in the US and Europe, and attempted to set up a confrontation between what he refers to as the “Laboriosa población,” the hard working people of the department of Colon against the aforementioned campesino groups referring to them as “a minority”, who create permanent friction and a constant problem of disrespect for the legally established laws and legal authorities. Alfaro’s and the Honduran military’s disdain for the campesinos is further illustrated in the report, Human Rights Violations Attributed to Military Forces in the Bajo Aguan Valley in Honduras (http://rightsaction.org/sites/default/files//Rpt_130220_Aguan_Final.pdf) written by Annie Bird of Rights Action where she states that her report, “describe[es] the abuses, many of them grave human rights violations, in which soldiers from the 15th Battalion were present and/ or direct participants [in the killings of campesinos]; in either case the 15th Battalion is a responsible party to the violations.” The 15th Battalion is where Xatruch III and Colonel Alfaro are stationed.
In a further indictment of Alfaro’s disingenuousness, during Xatruch’s raid of La Panama in February, there was, coincidentally, a human rights delegation from the US-El Salvador Sister Cities organization visiting the community. This forced the military, police and security guards to retreat. Much of the military force moved into the Paso Aguán finca. Later, members of the community who didn’t want their names made public stated that Alfaro attempted to “negotiate” with the community, but told them to stop talking to human rights groups. They of course denied his request. Today, the tensions between the community and the heavily armed forces continue as the military remain in the finca protecting Facussé’s palm fruit.

Venas Abiertas
12th April 2013, 02:52
This article is 100% accurate. The military has been conducting these roadblocks and searches of male passengers all over the country in the last few weeks. Word on the street is that they're preparing to postpone, cancel, or annul the coming elections in November since there is a good possibility of the new left-leaning party winning.:mad:

tuwix
12th April 2013, 06:21
After overthrowing of Zelaya en coup sponsored by US government, local oligarchy use the worst methods known form dictatorships in Latin America. Nothing strange...

Paul Pott
13th April 2013, 22:59
This article is 100% accurate. The military has been conducting these roadblocks and searches of male passengers all over the country in the last few weeks. Word on the street is that they're preparing to postpone, cancel, or annul the coming elections in November since there is a good possibility of the new left-leaning party winning.:mad:

Most certainly it will.

But here in the US, everyone will hear about the sore loser Venezuelan opposition and their efforts to destabilize the country, and little about the terrors and repressions against the Honduran people.

La Guaneña
13th April 2013, 23:22
After overthrowing of Zelaya en coup sponsored by US government, local oligarchy use the worst methods known form dictatorships in Latin America. Nothing strange...

And the glorious internet revolutionaries from the Communist Party of Tumblr, Revleft, various brands of left communism and badass flame-spitting anarchists will once again say "Fuck those reformist bourgeois liberal red flag waiving soc-dems!" while communists in Honduras are being tortured and murdered.

Hope you are rejoicing right now, my friends.

Venas Abiertas
5th September 2013, 02:11
Unfortunately I don't have enough posts to be able to include links but there is a lot going on in Honduras right now. The national congress illegally appointed a new attorney general and there have been more deaths of farmers in the Aguán valley and of indigenous activists in other parts of the country. Journalists, judges, and lawyers are being assassinated right and left as well.

Honduras is going to elections in November and the leftist candidate and wife of the deposed president Manuel Zelaya, Xiomara Castro, is leading in the polls. The oligarchs cannot permit her victory. There have been a series of senseless and brutal murders of totally innocent people, including small children, which I am convinced are a smoke screen to cover up the very real repression of activists by the government.

I don't mean to be an alarmist but if there is fraud in November's elections Honduras could turn into another Syria. The people cannot take it anymore and have lost all fear of killing or being killed. The oligarchs who run the country are bent on selling off its natural resources to transnationals and driving the rest of the population into exile in the USA.

Something has got to give...

Google "Honduras Resists blogspot" or "hondurasculturepolitics.blogspot" for more details in English.

On YouTube see ComunHonduras and Dick Emanuelsson.

Paul Pott
5th September 2013, 05:07
Are you from Honduras yourself?

Paul Pott
5th September 2013, 05:20
Here is the most recent presidential election polling:

Xiomara Castro 19.8%
Juan Hernandez 16.7%
Mauricio Villeda 7.0%
Salvador Nasralla 6.2%
Andres Pavon 0.6%
Romeo Vasquez 0.4%
Jorge Aguilar 0.2%
Orle Solis 0.2%
Not reporting/Not Stated 17.5%
None of the Above 31.4%

Castro is the leftist, she's the wife of Manuel Zelaya who was overthrown in 2009.

Note how large None of the Above and Not Stated are. A lot of people are probably too intimidated to answer the poll.

Flying Purple People Eater
5th September 2013, 06:22
I read this from the blog:


Xiomara Castro: "Those that supported the coup d'etat, the constitutional crisis, the destruction of the rule of law, the destruction of democracy accusing us of being communists and radical leftists are the only ones interested in ideologically polarizing this campaign.....We of Libre, represent exactly the opposite."

So obviously they're soc-dems but judging by the McCarthyist labeling by the right it seems like they're in hot water and/or afraid of the military. Did they exist before the Coup? The organisation sounds a bit like lavalas in Haiti (which is still not allowed to run in elections to this day, I believe).

Paul Pott
5th September 2013, 15:42
LIBRE (standing for Liberty and Refoundation) was founded after the coup by leftists and breakaway liberals who were pro-Zelaya.

They pretty much look to Venezuela as a model, unofficially.

I don't think most Hondurans believe the military will actually let LIBRE take power, hence the huge "no answer" polling.

Red Commissar
5th September 2013, 17:14
It's paradoxical when the media here usually tries to hand wave the current president's ascension as being a response to crime, and yet shit like this happens. There's been news articles I've seen popping up about these death squads becoming more active in the streets of Honduras. I mean fuck his last name is Lobo, a fitting last name for a nasty piece of work.

Venas Abiertas
7th September 2013, 06:20
No, I'm not, but I've lived here since the late '80's. The repression now is worse than it was during the "death squad" era of the late 70's and early 80's when the civil wars were raging in Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador.

The death toll from homicides in Central America is higher now than the the deaths from the fighting during the wars!

Venas Abiertas
7th September 2013, 06:31
LIBRE arose as a result of the coup. Deposed President Zelaya was a member of the the Liberal Party, one of the two traditional parties that has dominated Honduran politics for 150 years. (Sound familiar?) He was betrayed and ousted by oligarchic elements in his own party. His supporters took to the streets and labor leaders and other prominent leftists founded an umbrella group called the FNRP or "Resistencia" soon after the coup.

LIBRE resulted when that group decided to participate in this year's presidential elections and by Honduran law candidates need to be members of legally recognized political parties. Because it was formed too late to take part in the last elections it has no congressional representatives but it does have sympathizers among the more disgruntled members of the ousted President's old party. LIBRE will also be fielding candidates in mayoral races around the country. It seems to have at least a solid 20-25% support among the populace, more than any other party by itself.

In addition, there are two other leftist parties, the Unión Democrática or UD and the PST or Socialist Workers Party (Trotskyite), but the UD has never gotten more than 2 or 3% of the vote. It's made up of some old-guard Marxists who are well-known but have never been able to capture the attention of the population as a whole. The news media has done a good job of whipping up anti-communist hysteria and holds out the specter of the country turning into "another Cuba", as if that would be so terrible. Any poor Honduran would love to live in socialist Cuba.

Paul Pott
7th September 2013, 13:52
What are the odds of serious unrest if there is a popular belief that there was fraud?

Venas Abiertas
7th September 2013, 22:08
What are the odds of serious unrest if there is a popular belief that there was fraud?

I think the odds are high. The people can't take it anymore. The corruption, violence, and inflation are so rampant that very few people, rich, middle class, or poor, haven't been affected by it.

Mind you, I'm not talking here about a specifically revolutionary uprising. That would depend on the ability of the various leftist groups to successfully take advantage of the situation. Personally, I doubt that they will be able to. They don't have either the discipline, the training, the experience, or the weaponry to do so. I don't think they will receive the necessary support from any other government. Neither Venezuela nor Cuba nor Nicaragua are in a position to act decisively and I don't sense that they are willing to give their unconditional support to the LIBRE party. The truth is that LIBRE is a leftist party but not a revolutionary one.

Also, there are other groups waiting in the wings to seize power and they would have to be neutralized as well for LIBRE to be able to keep hold of the presidency.

With or without fraud in the November elections there will be violence. There are many arms circulating in the country, and I'm not just talking about revolvers and shotguns. At least once a week the press reports someone arrested carrying grenades, plastic explosives, RPG's, AK's or AR-15's. Even bazookas and 50 mm's have been found. Nobody ever follows up to say where those arms were going or who bought them so I assume that many different groups are involved. Sometimes whole truckloads of armaments are seized. The common wisdom is that drugs are flowing north and arms south. We know why the drugs are being used but as for the arms there are only rumors. All I know is that they are destined for a higher purpose than just robbing or self-defense. They are expensive and sooner or later whoever is buying them is going to want to use them.