Latin America
Related: About this forum“We’re Witnessing a Reactivation of the Death Squads of the ‘80s”:
Were Witnessing a Reactivation of the Death Squads of the 80s: An Interview with Bertha Oliva of COFADEH
Written by Alex Main
Friday, 29 March 2013 16:10
Bertha Oliva is the General Coordinator of COFADEH, the Committee of Relatives of the Disappeared and Detained in Honduras. Berthas husband was "disappeared" in 1981, a period when death squads were active in Honduras. She founded COFADEH together with other women who lost their loved ones, in order to seek justice and compensation for the families of the hundreds of dissidents that were "disappeared" between 1979 and 1989. Since then Bertha and COFADEH have taken on some of the countrys most emblematic human rights cases and were a strong voice in opposition to the 2009 coup dEtat and the repression that followed. We interviewed her in Washington, D.C. on March 15th, shortly after she participated in a hearing on the human rights situation in Honduras at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). During the hearing she said that death squads are targeting social leaders, lawyers, journalists and other groups and called on the IACHR to visit Honduras in the next six months to take stock of the human rights situation ahead of the November general elections (Berthas testimony can be viewed here, beginning at 17:40).
Q: On various occasions youve said that what youre seeing today in Honduras is reminiscent of the difficult times you experienced in the 80s and Id like you to elaborate on that.
In the 80s we had armed forces that were excessively empowered. Today Honduras is extremely similar, with military officers exercising control over many of the countrys institutions. The military is now in the streets playing a security role often substituting for the work of the police forces of the country.
More:
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/the-americas-blog/were-witnessing-a-reactivation-of-the-death-squads-of-the-80s-an-interview-with-bertha-oliva-of-cofadeh
ocpagu
(1,954 posts)Thanks a lot for posting it.
So right after a coup, the military started taking control of the country's institutions... Yes, we know how this ends.
Quite important of Bertha Oliva said here:
"Its certain that death squads are a product of the impunity that weve seen in Honduras. The death squads of the past were never really dismantled. What were witnessing is a reactivation of these death squads."
She's absolutely right. Impunity empowers the right-wing criminals launching this war on the poors and the leftists in Honduras. I'm really disgusted by the fact she has to live frightened by these monsters and I hope she finds peace and protection to continue her job.