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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Thu Apr 7, 2016, 03:27 AM Apr 2016

Land Grabbing Is Killing Honduras' Indigenous Peoples

http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/36166-land-grabbing-is-killing-honduras-indigenous-peoples

The pattern of murder and criminalization of those who would defend land and the rights of rural people has only become more evident. We argue that this pattern responds to the land grab phenomenon that has intensified since the global financial and food crisis of 2007-2008.

On March 15 another Honduran environmental and Indigenous activist was murdered. Nelson Garcia was an active member of the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras or COPINH. His murder took place “when he came home for lunch, after having spent the morning helping to move the belongings of evicted families from the Lenca indigenous community of Rio Chiquito,” said COPINH.

Garcia was a colleague of the recently slain Caceres, working with communities opposing the Agua Zarca hydroelectric dam project. The Agua Zarca dam project, now on hold, would provide energy for the numerous extractive projects slated for Honduras in the coming decade. Since the 2009 coup d’etat against President Manuel Zelaya, 30 percent of Honduran territory has been allocated to mining concessions.

The eviction after which Garcia was killed was one of many recent violent evictions carried out by Honduran military police in Indigenous territories. Elevated levels of state violence and disregard for due process are business as usual nowadays in Honduras, according to civil society organizations.
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Land Grabbing Is Killing Honduras' Indigenous Peoples (Original Post) eridani Apr 2016 OP
Evil went into overdrive after the gift of that coup to the ruling families. Judi Lynn Apr 2016 #1

Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
1. Evil went into overdrive after the gift of that coup to the ruling families.
Thu Apr 7, 2016, 07:51 PM
Apr 2016

The cluster#### of fascists who supported that coup yet still claimed it wasn't a coup, then claimed Zelaya brought it upon himself still snuffle around this forum. It's clear for the world to see what kind of people supported that coup.

From the article posted:


Harassment takes the form not only of targeted criminal attacks, as we have seen in the case of Berta Caceres, Nelson Garcia and many others, but a much broader net that has been cast against environmental and Indigenous leaders. Official state entities, enacting formal legal procedures, have used the judicial system to catch activists in false charges, resulting in months or years of preventive prison, bogus sentences, legal fees and often a permanent criminal record. In a context in which state violence intertwines with the violence of international economic power, corruption and unethical practices, hundreds of leaders have been prosecuted for crimes such as usurpation of land and damage to the environment.

What we see in Honduras is part of the global land grab phenomenon, a term that in the words of Phillip McMichael, professor of development sociology at Cornell University, “invokes a long history of violent enclosure of common lands to accommodate world capitalist expansion, but it sits uneasily with the ‘free market’ rhetoric of neoliberal ideology.” Land grabs are a symptom of a crisis of accumulation in the neoliberal globalization project, which has intensified since the global financial and food crisis of 2007-2008. This in turn is linked to an acceleration of a restructuring process of the food regime as a consequence of a large-scale relocation of agro-industry to the global south.

According to the 2011 Oxfam briefing paper, “Land and Power, the growing scandal surrounding the new wave of investment in land,” recent records of investment show rapidly increasing pressure on land, resulting in dispossession, deception, violation of human rights and destruction of livelihoods. It is a war on Indigenous peoples conducted in order to establish modern corporate capitalism.

Indeed, all around the world peasants and Indigenous people are being displaced from their territories in order to develop large-scale agribusiness, such as massive palm oil and soy plantations, mining projects, hydroelectric dams and tourist resorts, among other investments. State-sanctioned violence and impunity create the conditions for investors to acquire land that would otherwise not be for sale. The result is a serious threat to the subsistence and socio-ecological resilience of millions of people across the world.

One of the most dramatic examples of this process is the case of the Honduran Palm Oil Company Grupo Dinant, which has an extended record of violence and human rights abuses associated wutg the killing of more than 100 peasants in Lower Aguan Valley. Ghe Unified Peasants Movement of the Aguan Valley or MUCA waged a long battle to defend their land rights, sustaining many losses. In addition, international human rights groups such as FoodFirst Information and Action Network brought pressure to bear, and in 2011 the Honduran government was forced to convene MUCA and the company to negotiate a deal. Paradoxically, according to the deal, the farmers have to buy back the disputed land at market prices (Oxfam 2011).

The owner of the palm oil company was a monster named Miguel Facussé Barjum. Please check the google images page for a good look at his actions toward the people who originally lived upon the land he stole:

https://www.google.com/search?q=Grupo+Dinant+honduras+Miguel+Facuss%C3%A9+Barjum++murder+peasants&biw=1756&bih=728&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjvzKDJ2v3LAhUBQyYKHeksB2sQ_AUIBygC&dpr=0.75#tbm=isch&q=+honduras+Miguel+Facuss%C3%A9+Barjum+campesinos
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