The Guardian (USA)

UN rapporteur ‘appalled’ by conviction­s for Honduran environmen­talists who opposed open-pit mine

- Nina Lakhani

Six Honduran environmen­talists have been found guilty of crimes against a mining company, in a case widely condemned by legal and human rights experts.

The activists, from the small community of Guapinol, have been held in pre-trial detention for two and a half years after opposing an iron oxide mine which has polluted rivers relied upon by thousands of people.

The huge open-pit mine, which is owned by one of the country’s most powerful couples, sits inside a protected national park in Tocoa, a municipali­ty in the country’s northern Colón department. It was sanctioned without community consultati­on in a process mired by irregulari­ties, according to internatio­nal experts.

On Wednesday, in a two-to-one divided decision, the court ruled that José Márquez, Kelvin Romero Martínez, José Abelino Cedillo, Porfirio Sorto Cedillo, Orbín Nahúm Hernández, and Ewer Alexander Cedillo Cruz were guilty of criminal damage and illegal detention of the company’s security chief. Two men, Arnold Alemán and Jeremías Martínez, were absolved of the same charges.

Amnesty Internatio­nal, which considers the Guapinol environmen­talists to be prisoners of conscience, described the verdict as “outrageous”.

“The defenders are victims of arbitrary detention and unfounded criminal prosecutio­n, stemming solely from their legitimate work defending the right to water and a healthy environmen­t in Honduras,” said Erika Guevara-Rosas, Americas director at Amnesty

Internatio­nal.

“It’s extremely serious that, despite the lack of diligence in the investigat­ions by the public prosecutor’s office, six of the Guapinol prisoners of conscience are facing prison sentences.”

Mary Lawlor, the UN special rapporteur on human rights defenders, said she was “appalled”, especially given Honduras last month took its seat the UN human rights council.

“Honduras has yet again stained its record by not adhering to agreed internatio­nal obligation­s. The conviction of the six Guapinol defenders should be quashed,” she said.

The defence intends to seek an amnesty for the convicted men, through a controvers­ial law just passed by the new president.

Defence lawyer Edy Tabora said: “All eight men are innocent. The prosecutor­s failed to provide any evidence of a crime, never mind their participat­ion in any activity that could be considered a crime. This is a political verdict that demonstrat­es the power of economic elites in this country.”

Honduras became one of the most dangerous countries in the world to defend natural resources and land rights after the 2009 coup ushered in an autocratic pro-business government, which remained in power until last month.

Since then, hundreds of defenders have been killed, harassed and jailed on trumped-up criminal charges.

The highest-profile victim was the indigenous defender Berta Cáceres, who was assassinat­ed in March 2016 after suffering years of threats and harassment linked to her opposition to an internatio­nally funded dam.

The Guapinol case dates back to 2011, when the Botaderos mountain was declared a national park by Congress, mandating protection of water sources which serve more than 42,000 people, including the Guapinol river.

Yet the following year, Congress reduced the park’s no-developmen­t zone to accommodat­e the mine, owned by Lenir Pérez, a businessma­n previously accused of human rights violations, and Ana Facussé, daughter of the late palm oil magnate Miguel Facussé, a major political powerbroke­r who before his death in 2015 was accused of land grabs, violent repression and links with drug trafficker­s.

Over the next few years, mining permits were issued and road constructi­on began – even as communitie­s filed legal complaints, held protests and pleaded with officials to protect the rivers. The tap water in Guapinol turned chocolate brown and thick with muddy sediment; children began suffering from diarrhoea, while some adults reported skin complaints.

On 7 September 2018, one young protester was shot and seriously injured when scores of armed security guards working for the mine attempted to evict the protest camp. The incident was never investigat­ed, but judicial authoritie­s issued arrest warrants for some of the protesters.

Wednesday’s ruling comes after a trial beset by delays and irregulari­ties, in which internatio­nal observers including the US National Lawyers Guild criticised the flimsy evidence presented by the prosecutio­n, as well as judicial bias in favor of the mining company.

The company Inversione­s Los Pinares did not immediatel­y respond for comment on the verdict.

Gabriela Soto, whose father is among the six men convicted, said that the community would continue to defend the rivers. “We are going to continue stronger, and resist harder in this struggle.”

The sentencing hearing is scheduled for 23 February. The men face prisoner terms of eight to 14 years.

 ?? ?? A family washes clothes in the waters of the Guapinol river on the outskirts of Tocoa, Colón department. Photograph: Orlando Sierra/AFP/ Getty Images
A family washes clothes in the waters of the Guapinol river on the outskirts of Tocoa, Colón department. Photograph: Orlando Sierra/AFP/ Getty Images

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