Honduras: Líder indígena assassinada tot i tenir potecció policial
- DDAA
- 17 mar 2016
- 4 Min. de lectura
Sovint costa trobar notícies rellevants en els mitjans de comunicació convencionals. Per això de vegades hem de recórrer a pàgines web diverses per contrastar la informació.
En aquest cas, la notícia ha estat l'assassinat de l'activista i dirigent indígena Berta Cáceres (Hondures, 1971-2016). Guardonada amb el Premi Goldman pel Medi Ambient i a desgrat d'estar sota protecció policial, tot apunta que una negligència de les forces armades d'Hondures ha estat la responsable de l'assassinat de l'activista. Dos homes armats haurien arribat a casa seva a Cáceres, Ciudad de la Esperanza, a l'est del país, la nit del dimecres 8 de març de 2016 i varen matar.
Several unknown assailants broke into Caceres' home early Thursday and killed her. She was a prominent Indigenous and social movement leader

Goldman Environmental Prize Berta Cáceres, the coordinator and co-founder of the Council of Indigenous Peoples of Honduras, or COPIHN, was killed by unknown assailants early Thursday morning at 1:00 a.m. local time inside her home in La Esperanza in the western province of Intibuca. Cáceres was leader of the Lenca Indigenous community and was a staunch human rights defender. She won the prestigious Goldman Environmental Price
in 2015. Her assassination has rapidly sent shock waves across the country and sparked outrage over her death.
“Berta Caceres is one of the leading indigenous activists in Honduras. She spent her life fighting in defense of indigenous rights, particularly to land and natural resources,” said Karen Spring, Honduras-based coordinator of the Honduras Solidarity Network, in a statement. “Her death will have a profound impact on the many Lenca communities that she worked with, COPINH, the Honduran social movement, and all that knew her.” The attackers waited until the victim went to sleep before breaking into her house and assassinated her. Her brother was injured during the attack, according to local reports. According to Spring: family and COPINH demand an independent, international investigation that is not led by Honduran officials, the Organization of American States, or the newly launched OAS and government-backed anti-corruption body known as Maccih. "They want a thorough investigation, they don't want it to remain in impunity, and they obviously remain very skeptical that the police and the Honduran government will adequately respond and do a thorough investigation," said Spring.

Cáceres was a key leader in a Lenca struggle against the Agua Zarca Dam, a controversial development project in the community of Rio Blanco that was put in motion without consent from local communities. She, along with other residents, led a successful campaign to halt the construction of the dam, but the community has continued to face systematic harassment.
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As Adrienne Pine, anthropologist professor at American University, described Cáceres as a "powerhouse" and a key figure in fighting racist and exploitative policies and projects that threatened Indigenous rights in the name of corporate profit. "She was a leader of the popular resistance movement against the 2009 coup, and never stopped fighting," Pine, who considered Cáceres considered as a friend. "Even when she had to go underground to hide from the illegitimate Honduran government’s attempts to criminalize her activism, even when faced with multiple — obviously credible — death threats." Caceres’s fellow COPINH leader Tomas Garcia was shot dead in a peaceful protest in 2013. Caceres also faced a slew of repeated death threats and other harassment from state security forces and the company behind the dam project. There have also been past reports that hitmen were hired to assassinate her.

Last month, COPINH issued an alert noting that repression against the Río Blanco community, including Cáceres, had spiked once again. They condemned the harassment and threats community members received for participating in protests and walking to the Gualcarque River, where Agua Zarca planned to build the dam. "People that have been following the land sturggles and terrirotiral defense that COPINH has been involved with know that violence and threats have increased in the last couple of weeks against Berta Caceres and against COPINH and lenca communities," said Spring.
"It's important for people to remember what an important activist she is both for indigenous rights and human rights, not just for the Lenca people, not just for Indigenous people from Honduras, but the the entire Honduran social movement," said Spring. "Her role in the resistance after the military coup was incredibly important." Since the 2009 coup against democratically-elected President Mel Zelaya, the human rights situation in Honduras has deteriorated gravely as human rights defenders and social movements have been systematically criminalized. It remains unclear who was behind the assassination. "She is such an important and strategic leader of the honduran social movement and she has been for her entire life," said Spring. "So this was a very strategic decision by the Honduran state and her killers to get rid of somebody that is so important for the honduran social movement on so many levels." According to Global Witness, Honduras is one of the most dangerous and deadly places in the world for land and environmental rights defenders. There is widespread outrage and indignation across Honduras over Caceres' assassination. While Caceres' community and movement are in mourning, there is also no doubt that they will continue to carry on the legacy of Caceres' struggle.
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