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Coup's Impact on Honduran Women

Margaret Knapke | October 22, 2009

Editor: John Feffer

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Foreign Policy In Focus

Ms. Magazine's inaugural cover featured President Obama in Superman pose, ripping open his suit coat and dress shirt to reveal a T-shirt that proclaims: "This is what a feminist looks like."  Photoshop tricks aside, Honduran women need this to be true.  They need the Obama administration to fully grasp the plight of Honduran women and their families and act decisively on their behalf.

Since the June 28, 2009 coup that ousted President Manuel Zelaya from office, the de facto regime has tried to stanch the flow of incriminating information coming from Honduras. But human rights organizations and grassroots delegations keep working to focus the Obama administration's gaze on the dire situation, particularly for Honduran women.

Mourning, Organizing 

The Committee of Relatives of the Detained and Disappeared of Honduras (COFADEH) began investigating abuses immediately after the coup, searching hospitals and jails. Their July 15 report documents 1155 human rights violations during the first two weeks of the coup. These include 1046 illegal detentions, 59 beatings, 27 assaults on reporters and the independent press, and four executions. Three of those killed are named: Isis Obed Murillo Mencías (19-years-old), Gabriel Fino Noriega (radio-journalist), and Caso Ramon Garcia.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) issued their first and most comprehensive report on the Honduran crisis on August 21. Consistent with COFADEH's findings, the IACHR charged the coup government with "disproportionate use of public force, arbitrary detentions, and the control of information aimed at limiting political participation by a sector of the citizenry."

A scant six weeks after that IACHR report, at the end of September, the National Front Against the Coup in Honduras (FNR) estimated more than 100 coup fatalities — an appalling escalation.

But if the violence appalls, it is not unprecedented. During the 1980s, the Battalion 3-16 death squad was responsible for forced disappearances, detentions, and torture in Honduras. COFADEH warns that members of the Battalion are returning to positions of power and influence. A particularly notorious Battalion leader, Captain Billy Joya Améndola, is now special security adviser to "Interim President" Roberto Micheletti.

And it should be noted, the notoriety of Battalion 3-16 reaches back to the U.S. Army School of the Americas (SOA), where 19 Battalion members were trained, as were the generals who deposed President Zelaya. 

Gender Violence 

Women often pay a special price during military conquests, and Honduran women have paid dearly for demanding a return to democracy. The IACHR notes that, "in the context of the demonstrations and the repression and detentions carried out by police officers and members of the military, women were especially subject to acts of violence and humiliation because of their gender."

Salvador Zuniga, of the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH), believes the June coup was prompted in part by a socially conservative religious reaction to feminist organizing around reproductive rights. "What I can say is that the feminist compañeras (companions or comrades) are in greater danger than any other organization," he says.

A young mother named Irma Villanueva made her own story public in mid-August. She told Radio Progreso how she had been arrested at a recent demonstration and then raped by four policemen. One of the rapists implied they were punishing Villanueva for her political activity: "[N]ow you're going to see what happens to you for being where you shouldn't be."

Villanueva is not alone. Honduran Feminists in Resistance, a group formed immediately after the coup, reported to the Latin American Herald Tribune on September 3 that they had documented 19 cases of rape committed by Honduran police. Honduran feminists believe that this number is probably conservative.

Yet despite and perhaps because of all this, Women's Human Rights Week was vigorously observed in Honduras in August. An international fact-finding mission participated, speaking with representatives of the European Union and United Nations in Honduras, local authorities, lawyers, academics, human-rights workers, and popular organizations. The mission reports that, according to the special prosecutor for women, 51 Honduran women were murdered in the month of July; the mission calculates that "femicide has increased by at least 60 percent." 

Women Respond 

The Feminists in Resistance wrote Obama a rather "tough love" open letter in July. "Mr. President, Honduras was among the countries in the world that saw with great hope your arrival to the presidency…We applauded your expressed desire to establish [a] new type [of] relations with the region." But six months and many deaths later, their great hope is on hold. There is suspicion of U.S. actors, rogue or otherwise, having been complicit in the coup. At the very least, the Feminists in Resistance see the Obama administration's response to the coup as weak and "leading to a situation of violence in our country that we do not deserve."

And U.S. activists have appealed to Secretary of State Clinton as an advocate for women. Women of Steel, an organization within the United Steelworkers, wrote Clinton on August 31, asking her "to denounce this violence (against Honduran women) just as you have recently denounced such violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo."

Clearly, the Honduran crisis is a real opportunity for Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to prove their human-rights and feminist mettle. Conversely, a failure of resolve toward the illicit and abusive coup regime could do lasting harm to Obama's and Clinton's political credibility — and cost many more Honduran lives.

Margaret Knapke is a longtime Latin America human-rights activist and a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Margaret Knapke, "Coup's Impact on Honduran Women," (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, October 22, 2009).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/6518

Production Information:
Author(s): Margaret Knapke
Editor(s): John Feffer
Production: Jen Doak

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name Ron Sparkman Date: Oct 22, 2009
I live in Honduras and have yet to speak to one American living here that supports the return of Zelaya. If there are, and I use the word "if" rather strongly, human rights abuses in Honduras I would suggest they have declined since his ouster. If you really care about the women in Honduras and wish to ask Mr. Obama anything, why not ask him why he does not support the upcoming elections and the right of Honduran to uphold democracy?
Name Robert Eletto Date: Oct 22, 2009
Ron,

You insist, providing no evidence beyond the anecdotal, that no AMERICANS support the return of Zelaya, as if this is somehow more important than polls done by COIMER & OP (a legally-certified Honduran polling agency) that suggest about 52% of HONDURANS do want Zelaya back (33% said no and 15% were unsure).

Furthermore, you suggest - again, with no evidence - that human rights abuses may not even exist in Honduras, and may have even declined. Well MY suggestion is that you read the reports issued by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which conclude that the Micheletti government is "systematically persecuting" Zelaya's supporters, through violent means.

The coup-supporters' line has now shifted away from defending the ouster of Zelaya to insisting upon the recognition of elections in November, further revealing the schizophrenia of the coup. Yet it also reveals the flawed way that many people, particularly Americans, think about modern "democracy".

For them, it's not democracy itself - constituted by the rights of all people to freely engage a wide range of ideas, collectively decide which ones are the best, and actively sustain and defend those ideas through the exercise of personal and communal sovereignty - that matters, only the illusion of a democratic process.

Indeed, the harassment and closure of anti-coup media, the militarization of public political discourse, and the continued restrictions on free movement are all things that prevent an authentically democratic election from taking place.

These are the same paltry conditions for democracy that allowed Latin American "presidents" to stay in power for decades during the Cold War. Ironically, Zelaya is being erroneously compared to these dictators by the coup government, despite their own real connections to the said right-wing political establishment that orchestrated farcical democracy in Central America for decades, if not centuries.

Of course, you may, like many in American ex-pat community, simply retreat into the ingenious argument that "Zelaya was only ever popular at all because most Hondurans are poor". While the intellectual proportions of that argument are astounding, its frightening how common this sentiment is amongst many of the well-off in Honduras.

Name expatyank Date: Oct 22, 2009
Why has the Honduran constitution not been read by the Obama administration? Why does the Obama administration keep Manuel Zelayas expulsion from the country and his removal from the Presidency as one incident when in fact it was not even on the same day?
Name Roxanne Hanson Date: Oct 23, 2009
Thank you Margaret for so eloquently documenting the particular threats that women are facing during this crisis in Honduras. When I was in Honduras just two weeks ago I witnessed the intimidation and repression of peaceful protesters with my own eyes. Women's organizations that met with our group were specifically targeted after we left their offices. We must continue to ask the US administration to press for a resolution to the human rights crisis and restoration of the democratically-elected president before anything even approaching free and fair elections can be held. Our feminist sisters in Honduras are asking us to do more.
 
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