Honduras: Where the Blood Flows and the Rivers are Dammed
Honduras: Where the Blood Flows and the Rivers are Dammed
Published on Tuesday, August 6, 2013 by Al-Jazeera
Dams funded by foreign investors are threatening the cultural heritage and livelihood of Honduras indigenous peoples.
by Lauren Carasik
It is all too easy for ones eyes to glaze over at the headlines of yet another murder in Honduras, the country that earned the dubious moniker of the worlds murder capital. Forty-nine year-old Tomas Garcia was shot dead on July 15, just one of thousands of victims. Violence marches on unabated as observers become desensitised to the mounting human toll, comforted by the illusion that the carnage is associated with, and perhaps even justified by anti-social behaviour, a convenient misconception that provides a buffer between us and the grief for the fallen.
Yet Garcias murder is not the result of unrestrained gang or narcotrafficking violence, corruption or random crime, and its inclusion as a statistic obscures his murders political motivation and the tragedy it leaves in its wake. The unarmed Lenca indigenous community leader was shot at close range in front of a crowd of witnesses. Garcias 17-year-old son Allan was seriously injured. The act was not random but was instead part of a pattern of systematic and calculated repression by Honduran authorities.
Garcia was killed because he stood at the front of a peaceful protest against the Agua Zarca hydro-electric dam, which is largely financed by foreign investors and threatens the cultural heritage and livelihood of his community. Well aware of the danger he faced but unable to turn away from his communitys struggle, Garcias courageous stand leaves his widow to care for their seven children.
His assassination was preceded by escalating intimidation - threats and harassment, and menacing security personnel. Garcias community is resisting the hydro-electric project that was enticed by Hondurass "open for business" slogan engineered in the wake of the coup that deposed democratically-elected president Mel Zelaya.
More:
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/08/06-6