[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 52 (Monday, April 13, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S2095]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONDURAS
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, over the course of the Easter recess, I
went to meet with the President of Honduras, President Hernandez, about
the limited albeit progress his country is making against crime, as
well as all the drugs that are coming in. I had gone to Honduras with
our four-star Marine general, General Kelly, the Commander of United
States Southern Command.
Between the U.S. military and the Coast Guard, we have been
successful--as a matter of fact, I even went on some simulated drug
interdictions out in the Caribbean off of Key West. They showed me how
one Coast Guard fast boat can interdict a drug smuggler's fast boat,
and basically they shoot out the engines. They can do that from another
fast boat or they can do that from a helicopter.
That has had an effect. There are less drugs coming out of South
America going into Honduras, which is one of the three Central American
countries that had become so prime for the drug trade.
They arrive in big shipments into Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala.
Then they break them down into much smaller packets and go through this
very efficient distribution system that goes north through the rest of
Central America, into Mexico, and from there to the United States.
It is hard to catch them when there are the much smaller packets of
cocaine going north. Therefore, we have really made an effort to assist
the three Central American countries: Guatemala, El Salvador, and
Honduras.
Needless to say, there is a lot of corruption in the governments and
the local police of all of those three countries. As a result, the drug
lords find it fairly easy pickings to buy off people and buy off
judges, so President Hernandez came into office wanting to really make
a difference.
He started doing some shows of force. He has worked with General
Kelly on this issue, but the fact is it is still a very violent
country, with not only the drug trade but also human trafficking, but
the trends are in the right direction.
One year ago, Honduras was the murder capital of the world. It was
about 86 murders per 100,000 of population. They have cut that number
down to about 66 per 100,000 of population--still very high, but the
trend is in the right direction.
I commend President Hernandez, and I commend the First Lady of the
country. They have been trying to help their country with its economy
so the extreme poverty that is so evident in that part of the world is
not a caldron bubbling that is ripe for corruption and for paying off
people to transport the drugs.
In addition, of course there is the human trafficking. There is part
of it for the sex slaves, and that is a trade where often parents are
sending their children north--thinking they will have a better life--
and the young girls are just brutally treated and ultimately forced
into prostitution. But part of it is also, because of the poverty, the
hopelessness of the parents that their children have no future. They
are willing to turn--after paying thousands and thousands of dollars to
a human trafficker--their children over to a coyote to transport those
children to the north.
Some of them don't make it, and it is true some of the reforms that
the Hernandez government have been putting in place have lessened the
migration of these young children, but there is a lot more to do. That
is where I would commend the Senate to take a look at the
administration's request for Central America. It has a name, something
such as Alliance for Progress. It is about a $1 billion appropriations
request that will help with the economic development and the medical
care in that very poor region of the world. If the Congress will
approve that request, I think we will continue to see the fruits of our
labors--a very positive outcome.
As long as there is such a difference between the economic elites and
the very poor--a huge majority who are very poor--we are always going
to have those problems, but at least we are seeing the steps in the
right direction.
While I was there, our Ambassador Nealon asked me in the assembled
press to announce that in another week the Naval Hospital ship the
Comfort will be anchoring off the coast of Honduras. For 1 week it will
offer the medical services of Navy doctors, nurses, and a whole host of
private doctors and nurses from this country who are volunteering their
time to go to Honduras and help with the medical attention that is so
desperately needed in that part of the world.
I commend to the Senate that we seriously consider favorably the
request of the administration for this $1 billion into Central America.
At the end of the day, it is going to lessen the drug trade going north
through those countries and stop the family deprivation--lessen the
family deprivation--of which they would dare risk their children to be
sent north with a coyote.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Ernst). The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BROWN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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