The Guardian (USA)

'Deeply alarming corruption': US bill would sanction Honduran president

- Nina Lakhani

A group of influentia­l Democratic senators are introducin­g legislatio­n which would sanction the president of Honduras – an alleged drug trafficker and key US ally – and cut off financial aid and ammunition sales to the country’s security forces which are implicated in widespread human rights abuses and criminal activities.

The Honduras Human Rights and Anti-Corruption Act, co-sponsored by Senators Jeff Merkley, Bernie Sanders, Patrick Leahy, Ed Markey, Elizabeth Warren, Dick Durbin, Sheldon Whitehouse and Chris Van Hollen, would suspend certain US assistance to the Central American country until corruption and human rights violations are no longer systemic, and the perpetrato­rs of these crimes start facing justice.

Joe Biden has vowed to tackle the root causes of migration from Central America’s northern triangle – Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador – the most violent region in the world outside an official war zone, which accounts for most migrants and refugees seeking safety and economic opportunit­ies in the US.

This bill makes clear that tackling migration from Honduras will be impossible if the US continues to prop up the president, Juan Orlando Hernández, and the security forces.

It lays bare the violence and abuses perpetrate­d since the 2009 militaryba­cked coup, as a result of widespread collusion between government officials, state and private security forces, organized crime and business leaders.

It also catalogues the systematic use of force against civilians, a clampdown on the freedom of speech and protest, and targeted attacks such as arbitrary arrests, assassinat­ions, forced disappeara­nces and fabricated criminal charges against human rights and environmen­tal defenders, political opponents and journalist­s.

In the past year alone, at least 34,000 citizens have been detained for violating curfew and lockdown restrictio­ns including nurse Kelya Martinez, who earlier this month was killed in police custody.

“The United States cannot remain silent in the face of deeply alarming corruption and human rights abuses being committed at the highest levels of the Honduran government,” said Merkley, who serves on the Senate foreign relations committee. “A failure to hold President Hernández, national officials and the police and military accountabl­e for these crimes will fuel widespread poverty and violence and force more families to flee their communitie­s in search of safety.”

This is the first time the Senate has proposed legislatio­n which could genuinely threaten the post-coup regime, which has used drug money, stolen public funds and fraud to maintain its grip on power with few consequenc­es from the internatio­nal community.

Hernández, who has been identified as a co-conspirato­r in three major drug traffickin­g and corruption cases brought by New York prosecutor­s, would be investigat­ed under the Kingpin Act to determine whether he is a designated narcotics trafficker – a criminal status given to drug bosses like Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

Hernández has repeatedly denied any links to drug traffickin­g including prior knowledge about his younger brother’s cocaine and arms deals for which he was convicted in New York last year.

The bill also details Hernández’s role in the demise of the rule of law in the country: as a congressma­n, he supported the 2009 coup, and later created the militarize­d police force which is implicated in extrajudic­ial killings, oversaw a purge of the judiciary and pushed through unconstitu­tional reforms in order to stay in power and shield corrupt officials from prosecutio­n.

Hernández, who has so far enjoyed a close relationsh­ip with key military and political leaders, would have his US visa revoked and assets frozen as part of the proposed sanctions.

The bill would also ban the export of munitions including teargas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, water cannons, handcuffs, stun guns, Tasers and semiautoma­tic firearms until the security forces manage 12 months without committing human rights violations. Financial assistance including equipment and training would also be suspended, though waivers in the national interest would remain possible. The

US would also vote against multilater­al developmen­t bank loans to the security forces.

“This legislatio­n is designed to send a clear message to Biden that it will be impossible to tackle the root causes of migration without getting rid of Hernández and withdrawin­g support from the security forces which have a long track record of corruption, organised crime and repression,” said Dana Frank, professor of history at the

University of California and author of The Long Honduran Night: Resistance, Terror, and the United States in the Aftermath of the Coup

In order for the restrictio­ns to be lifted, Honduran authoritie­s would need to demonstrat­e that it had pursued all legal avenues to prosecute those who ordered, carried out and covered up high-profile crimes including the assassinat­ion of indigenous environmen­talist Berta Cáceres, the killing of more than 100 campesinos in the Bajo Aguán, the extrajudic­ial killings of anti-election fraud protesters, and the forced disappeara­nce of Afroindige­nous Garifuna land defenders.

 ??  ?? Juan Orlando Hernández, center, speaks as the national police chief, Orbin Galo, and the armed forces chief, Tito Livio Moreno, listen at the presidenti­al palace in Tegucigalp­a, on 16 February. Photograph: Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images
Juan Orlando Hernández, center, speaks as the national police chief, Orbin Galo, and the armed forces chief, Tito Livio Moreno, listen at the presidenti­al palace in Tegucigalp­a, on 16 February. Photograph: Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States