State Department spokesperson John Kirby on Wednesday repeatedly denied that the government of Honduras kills its own citizens, saying more than a dozen times that he has not heard “credible evidence” of “deaths ordered by the military.”
His comments came in the wake of a high-profile assassination of Honduran native-rights activist Berta Cáceres in March, and a report in the Guardian that a high-level deserter from the Honduran army said he is “100 percent certain that Berta Cáceres was killed by the [Honduran] army.”
The deserter explained that Cáceres’s name and picture appeared on a kill list including “dozens of social and environmental activists,” which had been distributed to two elite, U.S.-trained units.
Since Honduras’s right-wing regime seized power in a coup in 2009, media and human rights organizations have compiled overwhelming evidence of Honduran military and police violence.
Kirby said he was aware of “media reports alleging the existence of a Honduran activist hit list,” but noted that “at this time, there’s no specific, credible allegations of gross violations of human rights that exists in this or any other case involving the security forces that receive U.S. government assistance.”
Kirby’s comments were even at odds with the State Department’s own human rights reports on Honduras, which for the last two years have referred to “unlawful and arbitrary killings and other criminal activities by members of the security forces.”
The U.S. maintains a very close relationship with Honduran military. Since a military coup deposed leftist President Manuel Zelaya in 2009, the United States has provided nearly $200 million in military aid to the Central American nation. The U.S. also maintains a network of at least seven military bases in Honduras, which house a permanent force of more than 600 special operations troops. In February, the Wall Street Journal published a video showing American forces teaching Honduran forces how to conduct night raids.
In 2009, then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton played a central role in legitimizing the new coup regime. While President Obama initially called Zelaya’s ouster “illegal” and said it would set a “terrible precedent,” Clinton refused to call it a military coup, and aid continued to flow. She also pushed for a sham election to “render the question of Zelaya moot,” according to Clinton’s memoir – which was later scrubbed of references to Honduras during her presidential campaign.
Officially linking U.S.-backed Honduran forces with human rights violation would trigger legally-required reductions in aid – in addition to putting the State Department in the uncomfortable position of criticizing a client state, and casting doubt on Clinton’s wisdom in backing the coup.
After The Intercept asked Kirby to respond to the report that the U.S. trained Cáceres’s killers, he repeatedly denied the existence of “specific, credible allegations.”
After other reporters joined in the questioning, Kirby expressed frustration that he had repeat that there was “no credible evidence” of state murders more than a dozen times. “The reason you’re being asked to repeat it is because it’s kind of hard to believe,” said Associated Press diplomatic correspondent Matt Lee.
Watch the video:
Kirby also refused to outline the steps the U.S. was taking to follow up on the allegation. He insisted that the State Department took the report “seriously,” but admitted that he was “unaware” of any meetings between the Department and Honduran activists, and that the department had not followed up with The Guardian.
CNN’s Elise Labott asked: “Have you been looking for evidence or you’re just waiting for it to fall into your lap, in which case you would launch an investigation?” Kirby insisted it was the former.
The murder of Cáceres – a renowned environmental and native rights activist – drew international condemnation and prompted a U.N.-supported investigation. Cáceres won the prestigious Goldman Prize in 2015 for overcoming death threats and organizing opposition to the Agua Zarca dam – stopping the internationally bankrolled hydroelectric project that threatened the land and livelihood of the native Lenca people.
Since 2009, Honduras has seen a sharp rise in political violence. By 2012, Honduran security forces had assassinated more than 300 people, including 34 opposition leaders and 13 journalists, according to Honduran human rights organizations. In the lead up to the 2013 elections, 18 candidates from Zelaya’s party were murdered.
The A.P. reported in 2013 that in Honduras’s largest two cities, there were more than 200 “formal complaints about death squad style killings” over the previous three years. Reports included the killing of people at military checkpoints, and even police assassination of a top anti-drug government official.
In 2014, more than 100 members of Congress signed a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry, raising concerns about “death-squad style killings by Honduran police” and urging him to abide by the Foreign Assistance Act, which prohibits aid to any military unit guilty of “gross violations of human rights.”
In the wake of Cáceres’s murder, Honduran human rights activists have traveled to D.C. to brief lawmakers about the security situation. At a congressional briefing in April, Bertha Oliva, founder of the Committee of Relatives of the Disappeared in Honduras, told lawmakers that “it’s like going back to the past” and that “there are death squads in Honduras.” Oliva compared the situation to the 1980s, when the Reagan administration funded, armed, and trained death squads which disappeared, tortured, and killed hundreds of citizens.
At the briefing on Wednesday, the A.P.’s Lee asked Kirby how much responsibility the U.S. would share if it were true that it had trained Honduran government death squads.
“We absolutely have a responsibility to … hold them to account for those human rights abuses, and we do do that,” said Kirby. “Are we going to blame ourselves for the specific human rights violations of another human being in that regard? That’s a pretty difficult connection to make.”
While the State Department turns a blind eye to the Honduran government’s human rights record, Congress may restrict military aid on its own. Under appropriations laws, Congress can withhold 50 percent of its Honduras aid budgeted for the State Department. Last week, Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., also introduced the Berta Caceres Human Rights in Honduras Act, which would cut off all military and police aid until the government’s human rights record improves.
Dana Frank, a history professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and a widely published expert on Honduras, called Kirby’s remarks “mindboggling.”
“What State is saying sounds exactly like the Reagan Administration, when the State Department denied vast horrors committed by Honduran security forces for years, only to be later exposed for having known all about them and suppressed the evidence,” said Frank. “This denial of any evidence is a scary and newly aggressive counterattack.”
Top Photo: Soldiers and policemen are deployed in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, next to a blockade.
all makes sense, Honduras picks candidate of Austrian neofascist hate party to be its charter cities chief — won’t get bogged down in human rights
https://ofraneh.wordpress.com/2016/06/24/candidata-austriaca-del-partido-fpo-neonazi-actual-presidente-del-comite-de-las-ciudades-modelo-en-honduras/
https://www.google.com/search?q=%22barbara+kolm%22+zede+Vorsitzende+rechnungshof&biw=1920&bih=896&source=lnt&tbs=cdr%3A1%2Ccd_min%3A5%2F31%2F2016%2Ccd_max%3A&tbm=
What else is new?
Here in the USA our own government has a hit-list of over 2-million Arabs, Muslims, and American political dissidents who are persecuted and assassinated.
The list is shared with all government and police agencies with orders to target those named.
Because of my inclusion in the list the NYPD has twice in the last 6 months illegally raided my apartment after breaking its door, while the courts help these terrorists in uniform.
Who are the terrorists?
Assuming U.S. complicity, which seems almost certain, note that when the U.S. trains the death squads, this would include instruction in how to carry out covert operations, employ subterfuge, etc. With the main media outlets owned & controlled by the state, either directly or thru ideological conformity, it would be easy to “manufacture consent,” deny plausibility, and create doubt among the masses as to the state sponsored reign of terror, torture, and death. Disgusting, but easily done.
Welcome back to the days of the assassination of Allende, the plots to kill Castro, the Escuadrones de muerte (murder squad “EM”) and shenanigan time at the CIA.
The more things change, the more they tend to stay the same -in central & south America.
I wasn’t aware that those days had actually ended — just shifted more to convincing the other country’s people to do for them and remove the onus of responsibility and provide plausible deniability. Because, ‘democracy’. Eg, creating and distributing ‘From Dictatorship to Democracy’ by Gene Sharp to students to foment ‘color revolutions’ (not that overturning dictators is per se bad, but the aftermaths are often not great), feeding people at Maiden in Kiev that are protesting a democratically elected leadership, or the social media stuff pushed through under the guise of an NGO in Cuba. But the violent stuff, I assume, still occurs too… I’m guessing 24-hour news cycles and social media (among other things) as well as ‘citizen journalism’ has made silent kills and second or third party topplings far more voguish. Everything that can be used to help a people can also be used to enslave a people (and the latter groups tend to have more organization and money to throw behind it as well as a whole lot more research).
A people have the right to protest their own leadership. But do other countries? If so, when, and how? And do they have the right to say who’d replace that leadership (at all) — or influence/fund it? Yes, it’s the Big Great Geopolitical Game, and I’m sure they’d argue if they didn’t other countries would (and they probably would). But most countries seem to think they’re the only ones who can responsibly handle power — but they believe this while being incredibly irresponsible and/or murderous. I wish I were naive enough to believe countries could just be convinced that peace were possible — and that noone would overstep those bounds. I wish I could trust that no country would greatly overstep them. But the US seems to overstep them more than anybody. I see no way to stop them, either. It’s too easy to influence others to do one’s bidding and convince them it’s their own idea. I suspect a lot of political revolts come about in just this manner.
I’m definitely not giving CIA a pass when I say this, but I tend to think someone else WOULD be doing it if the US didn’t. That said, I do wish the US didn’t (and if they didn’t before, I guess they do now, HT @Snowden :().
This story is enraging, but inexplicable. It doesn’t explain motivation at all. WHY is the U.S. helping this brutal regime? Usually in this situation I hear people just claim it’s the oil, which serves about the same purpose as “the Jews” on the far-right. But there’s not a whole hell of a lot of oil in Honduras. Is the U.S. government backing this shit for cheap sweatshirts and T-shirts and coffee??? Really???
The presence of drug cartels is an obvious culprit. But are they controlling the government or fighting it? And how entangled is the opposition with them?
The figures for murders here 34 opposition leaders, 13 journalists, 18 opposition candidates (LIBRE), these are intolerable. But they would be stronger with control data. Honduras is the most murderous country in the world, nearly 1 in 1000 per year killed. So how many LIBRE candidates were there total, how many journalists, how many “opposition leaders” (what is an opposition leader), and what were the corresponding figures for non-opposition leaders and candidates?
Bottom line: when you only tell one side of the story, you can only be so convincing, no matter how right your side is.
If you check the source of this page, you will see a previous comment posted by me with attributes: “status”:”hold”, … “date”:”2016-06-25T00:42:12″ …; (more than 9 hours ago) partially answering some aspects of your question.
“Why” and “how” don’t mean the same in the Physical sciences and Math where you can actually, factually and logically prove stuff (in ways that no sensical scientist would question); as they compare to our social, mental (some even say “rational”) aspects. Most questions combine “Why” and “How” aspects related to some essential, direct and/or marginal extents:
* “Why” + “How”: Why do we eat? How does digestion work?
* “Why” + no “How”: Why” should parents, family (not governments) be the primary care providers of their children?
* no “Why” + “How”: Why do some people serve and/or contribute (by not airing such issues to public awareness (as TheIntercept explicitly admits of “responsibly” doing)) in torture, persecution programs to individuals they know are not criminal under any standard?
“Why” didn’t USG dismantled NATO (in fact, they invigorated it “after winning the cold war”) and still keeps military basis all over the planet even after the Warsaw Pact ceased to exist and Russians unilaterally stopped patrolling the U.S. coasts with their nuke submarines? (which by the way USG never stopped, but when, after more than a decade, Russians resumed their pesky practices, they wondered “‘why’ did Russians do so!” (giving them a polite, “diplomatic” call through the “respective channels”))
* no “Why” + no “How”: What constitutes the mind body link?
…
~
At times working on the “how” debases the “why”. USG “freedom-loving” uses our tax payers monies to fund “their pigs” whom they train in torture, policing, persecution, assassination … They have always done so. This is what they “freedom-lovingly” do. It would be like asking why dogs pee on corners, smell other dogs’ butts.
I don’t have an answer to your question (I doubt Alex Emmons does), but I haven’t stopped trying to find a plausible one and, more importantly, demand one from them. What I understand so far in that regard:
1) gringos (“‘the’ free and ‘the’ ‘brave'” …) essentially are very abusive people, they see abuse as “logical”, “normal”
2) gringos watch too many movies (in which they portray themselves as “the tough guys” (yes, they believe in such movies which intended audience should be under 10-year olds). They took star wars as hard core philosophy and believe in that kind of cr@p even in cosmic ways. On an average they spend 4 hours (roughly (1/5) of the waking time of their entire lives watching TV, movies … (they also make fun of North Koreans bowing to their sh!tty leaders and mass prayers by Muslim people (you go figure!)))
3) as some sort of functional “Lebensraum”, gringos essentially are imperialistic. they must mess with other people to secure the cheap resources their corporations existentially need “by any means necessary” …
4) … we all humans are gullible hominids. You can convince any individual of anything, absolutely anything! Gringos see themselves (they actually believe so) as “good Christians” fighting for “‘progress’, ‘democracy’, ‘justice’ … in the Universe …” ™, they even “hear God telling them to do so …” No, they are not collectively deranged, they “responsibly” change the language and tone of their rhetoric when it comes to China and Russia. As of late, some promising good developments apparently are bound to happen in the very near future (in fact, they are happening right now):
// __ THE ‘INEVITABLE WAR’ BETWEEN THE U.S. AND CHINA. BY JONATHAN BRODER ON 6/22/16 AT 2:28 PM
http://www.newsweek.com/south-china-sea-war-nuclear-submarines-china-united-states-barack-obama-xi-473428
By the way Emmons, I applaud your kind of on their faces’ reporting! Unfortunately TheIntercept has become way too “rhetorical”. TheIntercept would rightly criticize the New York Times for accepting silly gag orders from the Israeli government and positively published the name of that emming effing moron (to Israelis a “hero”): Cpl. Elor Azarya or El’or Azariya
https://he-il.facebook.com/people/%D7%90%D7%9C%D7%90%D7%95%D7%A8-%D7%90%D7%96%D7%A8%D7%99%D7%94/100003478460414
https://theintercept.com/2016/03/30/complying-with-israeli-censorship-order-nyt-conceals-name-of-soldier-who-shot-wounded-palestinian/
https://theintercept.com/2016/04/19/thousands-israelis-rally-support-soldier-executed-wounded-palestinian/
but then comply with gag orders from the NSA, after a long history of abuses by U.S. and Canadian academic and medical institutions “innocently” (Greenwald would say) abusing people to the point of killing and totally destroying their lives as part of COINTELPRO.
How on earth could you criticize those agents committing and rationalizing crimes against humanity
https://theintercept.com/2016/04/29/the-joke-of-u-s-justice-and-accountability-when-they-bomb-a-hospital/
But then play along with “redacting suggestions” of the NSA, the enablers of those actions and calling NSA agents “innocent individuals”!?!
truth and peace and love,
RCL
Alas, I don’t see an answer in this wall of text. And your response to the NSA is absurdly simplistic. They are one of many organizations that cannot be trusted to do the right thing, but doesn’t always do the wrong thing. If some schmuck ratted out some local Baathist official who was pulling fingernails, do you want their name to be known to ISIS? Now I will not go so far as some who really glorify the ethos of redaction – to me it seems that full disclosure is an option; if we hold such details back that is a choice, but it is not truly a moral duty because ultimately it’s not the person telling the truth who is doing the harm. But it’s not necessarily wrong for a person to refuse to publish the name pending further consideration either! (This is all the exact same issue as with outing in the gay community back in the 80s-90s, but grimmer. In starkest case my feeling is that if you point a gun at a child’s head and tell a priest to pray to the Devil or you will shoot, he does not have a moral duty to pray to the Devil, but he also has a complete pass as far as I think if he does so. When morality breaks down, I say it breaks down to allow those under fire MORE latitude, not less)
First, this Kirby is a USG official, what would you expect? Ask mobsters if they have ever committed any crimes and tell me if you notice any difference in their reactions.
Second, had you asked them if USG trained units “freedom loves” environmental and social activists, he may have understood you a little better, just a little.
People in the U.S. would use Clapper’s “least untruthful”, “not wittingly …” statements to pint out how corrupt and “too big to fall” he is, when in fact one of the greatest b#llsh!tt3rs who has ever walked the earth isn’t any better, with the difference that Clapper is police (he is expected, supposed to lie), while the other is our glorious “constitutional lawyer” president:
// __ Obama: ‘Nobody Is Listening to Your Phone Calls’
youtube.com/watch?v=KVY3mq6B-5w
~
Notice the faces of the two idiots on the back. They seem to me like they are having a hard time holding their laughters.
Well, there go TI journos making up sh!t again. Isn’t the fact that those kill lists are written in Russian with the handwriting of the very Vladimir Putin to know from where they originated?
I love Matt Lee. He is one of the few journos with the balls to get in the face of all those pathological and psychopathic liars. Also, I like very much the younger journo calling Kirby’s b#llsh!t for what it is. Nice to see the spirit of Michael Hastings in that meeting.
Great Lord! What a b#llsh!tt3r! emm effing USG psychopatic liar Kirby, that connection to the actions of another “human” being is not that hard to make as you believe. If USG politically supports and finances the Israeli occupation of Palestine of course you can’t then say that USG plays no part in their actions, or, just citing one of possibly thousand other examples, if you train a terrorist, who then “freedom-lovingly” blows up a plane full of teenagers, repeatedly “protecting” such individuals (who of course would not fit that “terrorist” term, when they are “‘our’ pigs”), even pardoning them out of prison, of course, there is a connection to those “human”‘s actions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubana_de_Aviación_Flight_455
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luis_Posada_Carriles
Also, why does USG use tax payers monies “to ‘aid’ Honduran forces” when Guatemala has far more serious problems? All they have ever done is messing with them or as they would say “freedom-lovingly” “protecting” U.S. interests.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobo_Árbenz
// __ John Perkins about Jacobo Árbenz
youtube.com/watch?v=KsRuUgKhKrM
~
// __ 60 years since Jacobo Arbenz was overthrown in Guatemala
youtube.com/watch?v=YNRLygWQr7A
~
Árbenz was the first to start a social process of reforms to benefit Guatemalan people. He even made sure the lands and business of the United Fruit company would not be affected, but of course, “Red Jacobo” (as USG called him) was doing something “very dangerous” …
RCL
That Kirby fellow looks suspiciously like Sam Beckett from Quantum Leap. He sounds like he’s just timed warped into the situation and doesn’t know what’s going on too.
Al will be scrolling through a big long list of US funded death squads trying to find out what he has to do to get out of there: “Just tell the truth for once Sam, Ziggy’s 99% certain that’s all you have to do”.
Jun 24, 2016 Obama’s assasination policy; Media censorship & war on whistleblowers w/ Mickey Huff
Will Barack Obama be remembered for opening the doors to Cuba and denuclearizing Iran, or for his bloody drone wars? In this episode of “Behind The Headline,” Mnar Muhawesh, editor-in-chief of MintPress News, exposes the reality of America’s policy of worldwide targeted drone assassinations that have resulted in the deaths of thousands of innocent men, women and children.
https://youtu.be/NtznIBOVhy0
And Democrat spoiler theorists continue to insist the Democrats are the “lesser” evil or even the “good guys”. Thanks for the excellent journalism as always.
Hank Johnson was quite eloquent presenting his reasons for the bill on Democracy Now!
The lying liars of State are not at all convincing – and while sure that they know they are not, what are we doing about it?
It’s a different world today. And once again the US is leading the world of the Liar’s Club. It’s a very exclusive club. There’s no WMD. Yes there is, we said so. Guantanamo? What Guantanamo?
So this fellow decided to lie for no reason at all? Well if he is telling a lie, then he would be a member of the Liar’s Club. But he’s not.
[“STATE DEPARTMENT SPOKESPERSON John Kirby on Wednesday repeatedly denied that the government of Honduras kills its own citizens, saying more than a dozen times that he has not heard “credible evidence” of “deaths ordered by the military.””]
http://www.goldmanprize.org/recipient/berta-caceres/
Make up your own mind after reading this…
For me this not only indicts the State Dept. but points the finger at them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zh9Sn9oJR94
Berta Cáceres, 2015 Goldman Environmental Prize, Honduras
Goldman Environmental Prize
With the World Band withdrawing funding because of human rights violations…you can’t tell me the State Dept didn’t know.
Liars
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AR1kwx8b0ms
Berta Caceres acceptance speech, 2015 Goldman Prize ceremony
Goldman Environmental Prize
Take note @3:06 and the alignment of the circle…
RIP Berta Caceres and amazing woman full of courage and conviction. If only we could have you as a President. God Bless your soul.
Here is proof that the US Embassy in Honduras and the State Department knew…
http://www.goldmanprize.org/blog/program-officer-ryan-remembers-berta-caceres/
The state department also claims ignorance of key facts of the Brazilian coup that have been topping news headlines for weeks. They’re treating the US public like idiots.
I would estimate that at least 85% are defiantly idiots, easily relied upon to believe and even defend whatever they are being told.
“What State is saying sounds exactly like the Reagan Administration”
Maybe that is why Brent Scowcraf endorsed HRC!
For anyone who is unaware of how the Monroe Doctrine has been interpreted by State for the past century, the playbook is out of Guatemala, 1954: http://www.consortiumnews.com/archive/story38.html
Another country severely abused by U.S. foreign policies has been Haiti.
The CIA deposed a genuinely democratic effort (first time ever they had elections) in the country by Jean-Bertrand Aristide, because as some gringo uninhibitedly and colorfully put it, “he was some ‘black guy’, ‘speaking French’ and ‘trying to make out of Haiti another Cuba'” … I don’t like the Castro government a bit, but nor do I the embargo. I don’t believe that “you can make another Cuba out of Haiti”, but to most Haitians/people, given the options, things in Haiti would be much, much better if they were like in Cuba.
I could hear that Kirby U.S. official pointing out that “they respect the rule of law”, that they are not to blame for the actions of those other “human” beings who assassinated “the agronomist”:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Dominique
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Agronomist
~
however their US-trained, Leopard Corps pigs live happily ever after under their protection:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raoul_Cédras
De facto leader of Haiti (1991–1994): Cédras was a Lieutenant General in the Forces Armées d’Haïti (the Haitian army) and was responsible for the 1991 Haitian coup d’état which ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on 29 September 1991. Under Aristide, Cédras “was one important source for the CIA, providing reports critical of President Aristide.”[4]
~
Even if some people in Latin American countries have been affected by the Monroe doctrine more than other. It is not a “doctrine” that was exclusively designed for Guatemala and Haiti.
// __ Lets Make Money (English Subtitles)
youtube.com/watch?v=NETxzILPokw
~
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, by John Perkins:
ISBN: 0452287081
Paperback: 303 pages
Publisher: Plume; First Thus edition (December 27, 2005)
~
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confessions_of_an_Economic_Hit_Man
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Perkins_(author)
~
// __ Confessions Of An Economic Pitman
~
youtube.com/watch?v=AynGBMUgdmg (1/3)
youtube.com/watch?v=1sNV6h7DOyY (2/3)
youtube.com/watch?v=kOwE0nGLvR4 (3/3)
~
// __ Im Dienst der Wirtschaftsmafia-ein Geheimagent (Deutsch)
~
youtube.com/watch?v=pED5gExuTzY (1/6)
youtube.com/watch?v=4SMKMP30ELk (2/6)
youtube.com/watch?v=9M_twxvs4HE (3/6)
youtube.com/watch?v=BRhg6g5fhzM (4/6)
youtube.com/watch?v=aq6TbzxE38Q (5/6)
youtube.com/watch?v=8t2gQh_N1ng (6/6)
~
// __ Apology Of An Economic Pitman (English)
~
youtube.com/watch?v=S8mk_YIinic
~
truth and peace and love,
RCL
From the Marx brothers’ Duck Soup,
“Well, who ya gonna believe, me or your own eyes?”
John Kirby…professional tap dancer and script reader on the USG stage.
http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/forests/justice-for-berta-caceres/
[“Today I’m writing to you to help me seek justice. They murdered my mother, Berta Cáceres. Her death pains me in a way I cannot describe with words.
She was killed for defending life, for safeguarding our common goods and those of nature, which are sacred, for defending our rivers that are sources of life, and that are also source of ancestral strength and spirituality.
I am Salvador from the Lenca people of Honduras. My mother became a woman of resistance, of struggle, so that our deep connection with nature is not destroyed. So that the life of our peoples is respected. They tried to silence her with bullets, but she is a seed, a seed that is reborn in all men and women, in her people that follows that same path of resistance.
Honduras is the most dangerous country for environmental activists. Over a 100 were murdered between 2010 and 2014. It is a figure that makes one shiver. They lost their lives defending what belongs to us all. My beloved mom was no exception. She had been threatened and persecuted many times for safeguarding our people’s territory.
Two of my sisters had to leave the country. Nevertheless, my mother did not stop fighting, not for a minute, against the hydroelectric project of Agua Zarca. The project would lead to the displacement of our people, and the privatization and destruction of our territories. It has already led to the murder of those who have the determination and the clarity to understand that life is not a commodity.
But the dam builders could not stop my mother; with her people beside her, she became invincible. So murderers broke into her house and opened fire against her chest. We are outraged by the murdering bullets, but also because impunity for the killers still remains.
As a citizen of the United States there is a unique way you can help end the impunity and demand justice for Berta. The Honduran government receives a significant amount of aid from the United States and will listen to the U.S. State Department.
Ask Secretary of State John Kerry to insist on an independent investigation of the murder of Berta Cáseres right now.
Berta used to say: “Defending human rights is a crime in Honduras”. She knew that what she did posed a risk for her and her loved ones. But she did not care. Along with the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH) she defended the indigenous communities and gave her life. Today, our family, all the Lenca people and thousands of Hondurans are demanding justice.
We will only succeed if we press my country’s president into accepting that the Inter American Commission on Human Rights investigates the murder. We cannot trust the Honduran justice. Please take action.
“You have the bullet… I have the word. The bullet dies when detonated, the word lives when spread”. Today we must be that word. She gave her life defending humanity and the planet. You can give a minute of your time to help me seek justice for her.
Thank you for your support,
Salvador Edgardo Zuniga Cáceres
Son of Berta Cáceres
Dear Editors:
I strenuously object to the use of the term “kill list” instead of “watch list”. Next you will be calling “enhanced interrogation” torture.
I must apologize, after skimming the article, although the United States is mentioned, “kill list” is used to describe Hondurans, not Americans (pause with mug to camera) — you may continue as before.
No the “kill list” is also for American citizens, but you just have to be in a country like Yemen, where Hellfire-armed drones are flying about overhead, to be targeted.
The federal government hasn’t yet tranferred Predator drones to local police departments as part of the domestic militarization program, but it’s probably just a matter of time.
The legal justification is essentially the same, though. Obama could kill Bill Gates legally (I’m not a lawyer, so feel free to correct me). This is really Pandora’s Box that Obama opened up. The only thing restraining the president is political blowback – but if you can kill your opponents, so what? The path to a dictator of the United States is clear.
If there is an award for the sleaziest, most dishonest branch of the U.S. government today, it surely must go to the U.S. State Department.
Their agenda can be summed up as conflating ‘national security’ with ‘commercial interests’ to justify covert and overt militaristic intervention in foreign countries for the benefit of large corporate interests. When it comes to national security issues (like support for ISIS) that are in conflict with those commercial interests (like oil deals and arms sales in Saudi Arabia), the national security issues are always ignored as ‘the price of doing business.’
Whether it’s electricity and agribusiness deals in Honduras, or oil pipeline deals in Syria, or oilfield deals in Iraq, or a whole host of similar projects in African countries, the game is always the same – use the national security line to justify military aid to dictatorships and thugs who deliver business deals to US corporations.
The State Department functionaries and apparatchiks who facilitate these deals are rewarded for these actions in various ways – board positions on major corporations after they leave government being the most common. It really reveals the hypocrisy on the current domestic gun debate as well, with the US State Department signing off on weapons deals to despotic states like Bahrain, while the Democratic Congressmembers complain about domestic gun sales.
Hillary Clinton is a starring example of how these corrupt operatives leverage their government positions into lucrative kickbacks to private foundations, speaking fees for family members, and other sleazy profiteering activities:
http://www.ibtimes.com/political-capital/hillary-clinton-state-department-approved-weapons-sales-company-made-sandy-hook
Really, the hypocrisy of the U.S. corporate-political class knows no bounds. This is the main reason that nobody with a conscience should vote for Hillary Clinton; she’s a war profiteer consumed with greed and the lust for power.
I don’t think it will end until the US and its military, and its empire, breaks down or up or apart.
Perfectly stated.