[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 35 (Thursday, March 3, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1273-S1274]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING BERTA CACERES
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, last night Honduras lost one of its most
courageous, charismatic indigenous leaders, Berta Caceres. Ms. Caceres
was the general coordinator of the National Council of Popular and
Indigenous Organizations of Honduras, and she was assassinated in her
hometown of La Esperanza, Intibuca.
According to initial reports, at least two people broke down the door
of the house where she was staying for the evening and shot and killed
her.
Berta Caceres spent her life fighting in defense of indigenous
rights, particularly to land and natural resources. In 2015, she won
the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize for her outstanding
activism and leadership.
This horrific crime demonstrates that no one, not even an
internationally known social activist, is safe in Honduras if they
speak out against corruption or abuse of authority. Her death will have
a profound impact on the many communities she worked with, her
organization, Honduran civil society, and all who knew her.
Berta Caceres and COPINH have been supporting land struggles
throughout western Honduras. In the last few weeks, threats and
violence towards Berta and the communities she and her organization
support had escalated.
In Rio Blanco on February 20, Berta, her organization, and the
community of Rio Blanco were threatened as they engaged in a peaceful
protest to protect the river and their way of life from the
construction of a large hydroelectric dam by an internationally
financed Honduran company.
As a result of supporting the Rio Blanco struggle, Berta had received
many threats against her life and was granted, like dozens of other
endangered Honduran social activists, precautionary measures by the
Inter-
[[Page S1274]]
American Commission on Human Rights.
Berta Caceres was an inspiration to people around the world, and her
death is a great loss for all the people of Honduras. The immediate
question is what President Hernandez and his government, which has too
often ignored or passively condoned attacks against Honduran social
activists, will do to support an independent investigation,
prosecution, and punishment of those responsible for this despicable
crime and, beyond that, what steps will the government take to protect
the many others, including members of COPINH, who are in need of
protection, and to stand up for the rights of people like Berta who
risk their lives peacefully defending the environment and their
livelihoods.
The answers to those questions will weigh heavily on the Congress's
support for future assistance for that government.
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