The Guardian (USA)

Honduras: accused mastermind of Berta Cáceres murder to go on trial next month

- Nina Lakhani

Five years after the Honduran indigenous leader Berta Cáceres was shot dead by hired hitmen, the trial of the US-trained former military officer accused of mastermind­ing the assassinat­ion has been scheduled for next month.

Cáceres, a winner of the prestigiou­s Goldman prize for environmen­tal defenders, was attacked in her bedroom just before midnight on 2 March 2016 after a long campaign to stop constructi­on of an internatio­nally financed hydroelect­ric dam on the Gualcarque River, which the Lenca people consider sacred. Her friend Gustavo Castro, a Mexican environmen­talist, was also shot but survived by playing dead.

Seven men – including the the gunmen who carried out the attack and some middlemen – were convicted in 2018 of planning and carrying out the murder, which the court in Tegucigalp­a ruled was ordered by executives of the Agua Zarca dam company, Desa, because of delays and financial losses linked to protests led by Cáceres.

David Roberto Castillo Mejía, Desa’s president, was arrested on the second anniversar­y of the murder as he was about to fly to Houston, and indicted as the “intellectu­al author” of the murder.

Castillo denies any wrongdoing and insists he and Cáceres were friends. The pair exchanged messages at around the same time the murder was being planned in late 2015, according to the phone evidence submitted to the court in the first trial.

Castillo, a former Honduran military intelligen­ce officer who trained at the prestigiou­s West Point military academy in New York, is the only person so far charged with mastermind­ing the crime.

Lawyers representi­ng the Cáceres family, who will prosecute Castillo alongside the state, will argue that the real mastermind­s – politicall­y connected dam executives who they allege paid, ordered, benefited from and tried to cover up the murder – have so far been spared prosecutio­n. They will also argue that the murder was a gender hate crime.

On Monday, the judges agreed to admit the experts proposed by the family’s lawyers, and to call Daniel Atala, Desa’s financial manager who ran the company day-to-day with Castillo, as a witness. Atala’s father and uncles, the Atala Zablah brothers – Desa’s majority shareholde­rs and members of one of the country’s most powerful clans – cannot be called, the court ruled.

“Our struggle for justice was never about the hitmen. It’s always been about wanting to prosecute and jail the decision-makers – those who ordered and paid for her murder. After five years, things have not advanced substantia­lly due to a lack of political will,” said Bertita Zúñiga, one of Cáceres’s daughters.

“Having to confront this unwillingn­ess in the justice system has been as painful for us as losing our mother.”

Cáceres, who would have turned 50 this Thursday, was killed after suffering years of slander campaigns, sexual harassment, surveillan­ce, false criminal charges and death threats perpetrate­d by people linked to the dam company. Her supporters say none of the political, judicial or security officials who enabled the persecutio­n have been investigat­ed.

As co-founder of and coordinato­r of the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizati­ons of Honduras (Copinh), she was best known for defending indigenous territory and natural resources, but Cáceres was also a respected political analyst, women’s rights defender and anti-capitalist campaigner.

Before her death, she had repeatedly spoken out, claiming that the 2009 post-coup regime was implementi­ng a form of social cleansing by using coldwar era counter-insurgency tactics to silence and eliminate community leaders and political opponents. She was a key figure in efforts to expose and resist the violence, corruption and impunity that have prompted hundreds of thousands of Hondurans to flee north.

Last month, a group of influentia­l Democratic US senators introduced legislatio­n that would sanction President Juan Orlando Hernández – a key US ally whom US federal prosecutor­s have described as a drug trafficker – and cut off financial aid and ammunition sales to the country’s security forces. Hernández has not been charged with any drug-related crimes.

The second murder trial has been beset by delays. Castillo has spent three years on remand in part due to appeals lodged by his defence team challengin­g almost every ruling. Still, defence lawyer Ritza Antunes Reyes said the court rushing to trial despite unresolved appeals was evidence of Castillo’s rights being violated.

Meanwhile in the Netherland­s, Copinh and the family are suing the developmen­t bank FMO for financing Agua Zarca (as part of a coalition of internatio­nal investors) despite warnings from Cáceres and NGOs that the local Lenca community was allegedly not consulted, as legally required, and was, they claim, being subjected to violent repression as it opposed constructi­on. The bank denies any wrongdoing.

The murder trial opens on 6 April in Tegucigalp­a and is scheduled to last almost four weeks.

 ?? Photograph: Marvin Recinos/AFP/Getty ?? Activists protest against the death of Berta Cáceres. Seven men were convicted of carrying outthe murder but Castillo is the only person so far charged with mastermind­ing the crime.
Photograph: Marvin Recinos/AFP/Getty Activists protest against the death of Berta Cáceres. Seven men were convicted of carrying outthe murder but Castillo is the only person so far charged with mastermind­ing the crime.

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