Thursday, December 15, 2011

Honduras: Garifuna Communities of Trujillo Take Legal Action Against Canadian Porn King

This was originally posted on the Friendship Office of the Americas website.

Original Spanish version of this statement by the Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras (OFRANEH) can be found on OFRANEH's blog.

Suggested background information:

---

Garifuna Communities of Trujillo Take Legal Action Against Canadian Porn King

December 15, 2011

On Monday, December 13th, leaders from the communities of Cristales and Río Negro, part of the Municipality of Trujillo, accompanied by OFRANEH, presented a lawsuit to render null and void various fraudulent contracts for sales of community lands held by Canadian Randy Roy Jorgensen.

The majority of these transactions were carried out under pressure, offering derisible sums of money to victims in exchange for their homes in the neighbourhood known as Río Negro, where the Canadian intends to build a pier for Panamex cruise-ships under the name Banana Coast.

In addition to the fraud carried out against the inhabitants of Río Negro, adjacent lands belonging to the Garífuna community of Cristales, southwest of the City of Trujillo, have also been affected. These lands are known as "Campamento," and were also subject to fraudulent land sales favouring Randy Jorgensen.

Presence of the Garífuna People in Trujillo Bay

Garífuna people arrived to the island of Roatán, Honduras on April 12, 1797 following expulsion from the island of St. Vincent by the British, after having fought two consecutive wars in defense of the island, which was the last bastion of the Carib people (Kalinagu and Garinagu) in the Lesser Antilles.

The city of Trujillo was founded in 1524 and was later uninhabited between 1643 until shortly before the arrival of our people to Honduras. In 1901, then president Manuel Bonilla granted to the "dark" people of the neighbourhoods of Cristales and Río Negro, on the perimeter of the city, five thousand hectares of land southwest of the lands of Cristales and two thousand hectares in the vicinity of the Guaimoreto Laguna.

It was in 2007 that local intermediaries participated in illegal purchases on the part of the Porn King and in this way initiated the expulsion of the Garífuna from Trujillo Bay, a situation that our people have had to face in many areas of the territory we have peacefully and permanently occupied over the last two centuries.

The Porn King also acquired lands in the Garífuna communities of Santa Fe, San Antonio and Gualadulupe, acts that were denounced to the Ministry of the Attorney General before the 2009 coup d'état, without any intervention by the appropriate authorities to halt these illegal acts.

The Porn King and his Banana Coast

In 1904 the US writer O'Henry spent some time in Trujillo, where he wrote his book Cabbages and Kings, which takes place in the fictitious port of Coralio, based on the real port city of Trujillo. In the novel, O'Henry coined the term "banana republic," which he used to describe Honduras.

One century later, the Porn King appeared in Trujillo, appropriating the lands of the Garífuna people in order to build an empire under the name "Banana Coast." His acquisition methods and the current political climate of the country differ little from the colonialist techniques employed by the banana companies and the situation in Honduras at the turn of the twentieth century.

Jorgenson, in the midst of the political tragedy in Honduras in 2009, managed to quickly obtain environmental licenses to build in an area declared as a buffer zone for the Capiro and Calentura National Park (Parque Nacional Capiro y Calentura) and built villas on the iron-bearing hillsides facing the Caribbean Sea.

The Porn King has received a huge amount of support from Mr. Ramón Lobo Soso, the brother of President Porfirio Lobo, which has allowed him to cut through any red tape and avoid the opposition mounted by Garífuna communities against the pressure upon them and dispossession of their lands. On June 21 of this year, Jorgenson received a ‘special award’ from Lobo during a ministerial cabinet session in Trujillo.

The Canadian received financing from the Canadian Shield Fund, the controversial mining company Barrick Gold, and the company Canadian Oil and Gas, which provided funds to Life Vision Properties, the company under which the Porn King hides his name.

From the Banana Coast to Charter Cities

The coup d'état has allowed a series of neoliberal laws to be passed that are serving to reverse the scant progress gained over the last half century: the flexibilization of the labour market, the overprotection of foreign investment, and the most degrading form of neocolonialism: Charter (or Model) Cities.

US economist Paul Romer, preaching his gospel of charter cities, led the Madagascan government, under the now-deposed Ravalomanana, into the abyss at the beginning of 2009, with the announcement that two charter cities would be established on this African island. The Malagasy people revolted, resulting in the overthrow of Ravalomanana. In Honduras the story has played out in reverse. There was a coup d’état to support the neoliberal offensive, culminating in constitutional reform surrendering part of the national territory to foreign capital.

The shrewd Canadian businessman who, at one point, was reported in Honduras for pedophilia, has now, in the climate of powerlessness and lack of justice prevailing in the country, become one of the major promoters of the Charter City. The Lobo administration is withholding the information on the planned location of the charter city, which will include Trujillo for certain, and it will apparently extend along the coast from the Bay of Trujillo to Río Sico, right where the haven of Garífuna culture is located.

The disappearance of the Río Negro community (Trujillo) and the expulsion of the Garífuna people from Honduras
The Canadians seem intent on driving our people out of Honduras, and we have the sad case of Trujillo Bay as an example, only this time it will be right along the coast.

When the Honduran Congress held a special session in the city of Gracias, Lempira, with the aim of passing the statute providing for REDs (Regiones Especiales para el Desarrollo – Special Development Regions, or Charter Cities), the Canadian senator Gerry St Germain was present, along with several potential investors from that country.

The ease with which Jorgenson achieved his objective in Río Negro – a community which has almost entirely disappeared – and the way in which the current administration has sold out to foreign capital, we can safely say are a consequence of the coup d’état as well as of the deterioration in the respect for human rights, an indicator of Honduran failed state.

Unfortunately, the history of our country is plagued with leaders and politicians who have made themselves rich at the expense of national sovereignty. It so happens that it was exactly a century after the invasion of Honduras by Sam Zemurray and his sidekick Manuel Bonilla (January 1911) that the National Congress passed the legislation adopting Charter Cities (January 2011).

The Garífuna authorities of Cristales and Río Negro, in presenting the Porn King and his local henchmen with a lawsuit, are taking a step towards regaining what has been lost. It remains to be seen whether there is justice in Honduras, or whether the only result, as usual, will be the physical disappearance of the plaintiffs.

La Ceiba, Atlantida, 14 December 2011

OFRANEH (Black Fraternal Organisation of Honduras)

OFRANEH
Organizacion Fraternal Negra Hondureña
Calle 19, #130.
Barrio Alvarado
La Ceiba, Atlantida,
Honduras
telefax: +(504) 2443-2492
email: garifuna@ofraneh.org / ofraneh@yahoo.com
http://www.ofraneh.org
http://www.ofraneh.wordpress.com

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Betty Matamoros: Canadian Solidarity Tour


From November 9-19, 2011, the Atlantic Regional Solidarity Network, along with other Canadian social movements and civil society groups, hosted Betty Matamoros, Honduran human rights defender, longtime social activist, and representative of the Central American coordination of the Hemispheric Social Alliance (HSA).

Betty was welcomed by organizations and communities in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec and Ontario, including ARSN, Common Frontiers Canada, the Latin American and Caribbean Solidarity Network (LACSN), the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC), the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU), the Ontario Secondary School Teacher's Federation (OSSTF/FEESO), the Toronto Haiti Action Committe (THAC), the Social Justice Committee, and Peace Brigades International - Canada.

Common Frontiers Canada compiled this video from solidarity activities Betty was part of in Toronto, Ontario. Take a few minutes to catch a glimpse of Betty's inspirational visit.

Monday, October 24, 2011

ARSN Gathering 2011


Friends, the annual meeting of the Atlantic Region Solidarity Network (solidarity with Latin America) promises to be an engaging and rewarding experience.  It takes place at the Tatamagouche Centre from Friday, Nov. 11 to Sunday, Nov. 13.  Given the current Canadian and Latin American political contexts, the organizing committee (Wyanne Sandler, Brian O'Neill, Kathryn Anderson) felt it was important to re-visit the eternally critical theme of human rights.  As you will see below, our guests bring provocative perspectives on both civil-political and social-economic rights.

Please complete registration and submit this at your earliest convenience!
 Registration form here.


Opening the lens on this discussion from the current reality in Honduras will be Betty Matamoros, a highly respected human rights and women's rights leader. She is the Central American Coordinator of the Hemispheric Social Alliance.  As many of you realize, in June 2009 the democratic government of Manuel Zelaya was overthrown by brutal military coup, suppported by the traditional oligarchy.  An illegal, fraudulent election subsequently took place amidst widespread repression, producing the presidency of Porfirio 'Pepe' Lobo.  Even Lobo's supporters have never gone so far as to claim – as Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper inexplicably did during his recent visit in August – that the man who was installed as President after a military coup, fraudulent elections and a violent and murderous crackdown on dissent was “a prominent human rights leader in this country.”  We're sure that Betty will set the record straight!


Presenting on the Right to Food and Food Sovereignty will be Roberto Perez Rivero.  Roberto is a Cuban permaculturalist who has been instrumental in Cuba’s truly Green Revolution, which has resulted in more than 85 percent of that country’s agricultural production becoming organic. He is featured in the documentary “The Power of Communities: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil” (2006) and is currently the director of the Environmental Education and Biodiversity Program at the Havana-based Antonio Núñez Jiménez Foundation for Nature and Humanity.


Also we are extremely fortunate to have Garry Leech, our own resident expert on Colombia.  Garry is an independent journalist and author of numerous books including Capitalism: A Structural Genocide (Zed Book, Forthcoming, May 2012); The Failure of Global Capitalism: From Cape Breton to Colombia and Beyond (CBU Press, 2009); and Beyond Bogotá: Diary of a Drug War Journalist in Colombia (Beacon Press, 2009). He is also the director of the Centre for International Studies and a lecturer in the Department of Political Science at Cape Breton University.


In terms of tapping the veins on labour rights and Canada-Latin America solidarity, we are looking forward to hearing from Louise Casselman, with the Social Justice Fund of the Public Service Alliance of Canada.  Louise lived for some decades as a solidarity activist in various parts of Latin America and will bring us news that connects the struggles of working people there with the labour movement in Canada.


Finally, Wyanne SandlerBreaking the Silence Maritimes Coordinator (and one of the organizers of this meeting), will have just returned from Guatemala, immediately after the Presidential Election and will report on the implications of that very serious situation.
Together we will see how we can act in solidarity with our Latin American sisters and brothers, especially in light of the current Canadian and Latina American contexts.
We look forward to being with you.  Please register soon! 
Wyanne, Brian, Kathryn

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Honduran human rights organizations have yet to locate alleged war criminal

Note: This article was translated from the Honduran national daily newspaper El Tiempo print edition for Wednesday, August 10th. We were not able to find the article on the digital edition of El Tiempo at http://www.tiempo.hn. The original title of the article in Spanish is Organismos humanitarios todavía no ubican a supuesto criminal de guerra.

Honduran human rights organizations have yet to locate alleged war criminal

Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Tegucigalpa

Francisco Rodríguez

Human rights organizations plan to ask the Government of Canada for detailed information regarding ex-Batallion 3-16 member Cristóbal González Ramírez, an alleged war criminal.

The Canadian Border Services Agency deported González Ramírez, age 44, on August 2nd, but his whereabouts are not known by humanitarian organizations in Honduras.

The coordinator of the Committee of Families of the Detained and Disappeared of Honduras (COFADEH), Bertha Oliva, says that González Ramírez's deportation was announced August 2nd in Canada.

"We are going to approach the Canadian government for detailed information regarding why they have him on a list of 30 war criminals," says Oliva.

She indicated that all they know is that the individual was deported, but that they have not been informed of the specific charges against him nor his whereabouts. "He must be here (in Honduras), but we don't know where exactly," she added.

According to reports in the hands of the Canadian Government, approximately eight Honduran ex-military linked to extrajudicial executions in the 1980s are residing as undocumented in Canada.

[The information below was included as a separate insert to the print edition of the article. A reproduction of other names on Canada's list of alleged war criminals was also included in the El Tiempo article.]

Rejected:
In August of 2008, González Ramírez moved from Vancouver to Edmonton, and in January of 2009 he was told that his application for refugee status had been rejected due to suspician that he had participated in crimes against humanity in Honduras.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Harper Trades in Human Rights for Economic Concessions in Honduras

Versión en español abajo


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 9, 2011


Latin American and Caribbean Solidarity Network
Location: 608 College St. West Toronto, M6G 1A1

Media Contact: Raul Burbano
Tel: +(416) 522-8615, E-mail: rburbano(at)hotmail.com or lacsncanada(at)gmail.com

HARPER TRADES IN HUMAN RIGHTS FOR ECONOMIC CONCESSIONS IN HONDURAS

Investment and trade interests trump Human Rights concerns in Honduras

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has undertaken a tour through Latin America with stops reportedly including Honduras. The goal according to Harper is “expanding and enhancing market access to create jobs, economic growth, and opportunities for Canadians”. Some believe he will take the opportunity to announce a Free Trade Agreement or significant trade deals between both countries, despite repeated and serious concerns highlighted by both Honduran and International Human Rights organizations.

The Harper Government has consistently downplayed and at times even ignored what many believe to be a state organized campaign of intimidation, violence and murder of Human Rights defenders in Honduras since the June 28, 2009 military coup d’état. The coup was painted by its perpetrators as a constitutional succession undertaken by the Supreme Court and National Congress.

One could say the Harper government has gone as far as enlisting the support of coup conspirators here in Canada. It’s no coincidence that this week the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade along with the International Development Research Centre have invited the Attorney General, Luis Alberto Rubí of Honduras to speak as part of a panel on “Confronting Crime and Impunity in Central America”.

According to multiple news, academic and diplomatic sources say Rubí was a key figure in the manipulation of the legal system that helped pave the way for the 2009 military coup d’état. In fact Wikileaks and the El Faro declassified cables reports show Rubí was “directly involved in the decision to remove Zelaya and used the “legal apparatus under his control to stifle dissent and intimidate/persecute members of Zelaya’s team”.


Additional information:

  • The government of Canada supported a Truth and Reconciliation Commission convened by the current Lobo regime in Honduras that issued it's final report July 7th and Former Canadian Diplomat Michael Kergin (of law firm Bennet Jones - based in Ottawa -) was a member of that Commission.
  • Honduran Human Rights organizations convened a seperate Commission of Truth, supported by international civil society organizations and some European governments, whose report is due in November 2011, and York University Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Craig Scott is a member of that Commission.

Latin American and Caribbean Solidarity Network (LACSN)

------------


COMUNICADO

9 de agosto, 2011


Red de Solidaridad con América Latina y el Caribe (LACSN)
608 College St. West Toronto, M6G 1A1

Contacto: Raul Burbano (español o inglés)
Tél: +416-522-8615 (Toronto, Canadá)
E-mail: rburbano@hotmail.com or lacsncanada@gmail.com

PRIMER MINISTRO CANADIENSE SACRIFICA DERECHOS HUMANOS A CAMBIO DE CONCESIONES ECONÓMICAS EN HONDURAS

Intereses económicos valen mas que el respeto de los derechos humanos en Honduras

El Primer Ministro canadiense Stephen Harper está de gira esta semana en América Latina. Conforme a la página web oficial de su oficina, contempla una parada en Honduras el viernes, 12 de agosto. Según Harper el objetivo del viaje es de "ampliar y mejorar el acceso al mercado para crear empleo, crecimiento económico, y oportunidades para canadienses." Se espera que anuncie la firma de un tratado de libre comercio (TLC) con Honduras u otros acuerdos económicos importantes, a pesar de inquietudes y denuncias destacadas por organizaciones de derechos humanos hondureñas y internacionales.

De manera sistemática, el gobierno de Harper ha minimizado e incluso ignorado una denominada campaña estatal de intimidación, violencia y asesinato a defensores de derechos humanos en Honduras desde el golpe de Estado militar que se dio el 28 de junio de 2009. Los que ejercieron y avalaron el golpe de Estado lo han pintado como sucesión constitucional realizada por la Corte Suprema y el Congreso Nacional.

Se puede decir que el gobierno de Harper ha llegado al punto de reclutar el apoyo de los golpistas aquí en Canadá. No es una coincidencia que también esta semana el Departamento de Asuntos Exteriores y Comercio Internacional, junto con el Centro de Investigación sobre el Desarrollo Internacional (International Development Research Centre) han invitado al Fiscal General de Honduras, Luis Alberto Rubí, para exponer como parte del panel "Enfrentando el Crimen y la Impunidad en América Central."

Según varias fuentes mediáticas, académicas y diplomáticas, Rubí fue una figura clave en la manipulación del sistema legal que facilitó el golpe de estado militar en el 2009. Informes de Wikileaks y El Faro demuestran que Rubí fue directamente involucrado en la decisión de quitar el Presidente Zelaya de su puesto y usó el aparato legal a su alcance para reprimir la oposición y intimidar o perseguir miembros del equipo de Zelaya.

Información adicional:

  • El gobierno de Harper apoyó oficialmente a la Comisión de la Verdad y la Reconciliación del régimen de Lobo, que emitió su informe el 7 de julio pasado. Ex-diplomático canadiense Michael Kergin (del bufete legal Bennet Jones con base en la capital canadiense) fue miembro de esa Comisión.
  • Catedrático y jurista canadiense Craig Scott, de la Facultad de Derecho Osgoode Hall de la Universidad de York en Toronto es miembro de la Comisión de Verdad, la comisión convocada por organizaciones de derechos humanos en Honduras y con el apoyo de la sociedad civil internacional que va a entregar su informe en noviembre de 2011.

Red de Solidaridad con América Latina y el Caribe