By John Perry
February 18, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - On the day he was
inaugurated, Joe Biden halted the construction of
Trump’s Mexican border wall. A few days earlier,
1500 miles to the south, a new ‘caravan’ of
at least eight thousand Honduran migrants had
set off northwards, partly in the hope that by the
time they tried to cross into Texas, Biden’s
promised softening of immigration policy might have
taken effect.
Obstacles left by Trump still stand in their way.
Agreements he made with Honduras and Guatemala led
to police attacking and dispersing the refugees.
Scattered groups are still heading towards the
Mexican frontier at Chiapas – according to
one Trump-era official, ‘now our southern
border’ – where they will face Mexican troops. If
they eventually reach the Rio Grande, they’ll join
25,000 asylum seekers in camps, waiting to be
processed by US border officials. Roberta Jacobson,
Biden’s official charged with forming his new
‘secure, managed and humane’ migration policy, has
asked them to be patient and pleaded for no new
arrivals.
Why do people take these risks? The truth is that
Honduras is a failed state and, unless US policy
towards it changes radically, many thousands more
will head north. Since the
military coup in 2009 there have been three
corrupt elections. The last, in 2017, which saw Juan
Orlando Hernández (JOH) re-elected
when he had clearly lost, led to even more
repression. Persecution of human rights defenders is
unceasing, even after international condemnation of
the
murder of Berta Cáceres five years ago. Seven
were killed in 2020, and four young leaders from
Garifuna communities, abducted in a single night
seven months ago, are
still missing.
Curfews during the Covid-19 pandemic appear to
have worsened the day-to-day violence: eleven
corpses were found in the street in one week in
January; bodies are being chopped up and left
wrapped in plastic. Perhaps the most emotive
case occurred earlier this month: a doctor and
student nurse, who had been working with Covid
patients, were arrested for breaching the 9 p.m.
curfew. The doctor was freed, but the nurse died in
police custody. Protests erupted. Five people were
arrested,
tortured by the police and forced to confess to
crimes they didn’t commit.
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In November, two hurricanes
hit a country totally unprepared for them,
destroying 6000 homes and seriously damaging 85,000
more. By December, JOH was touring financial
institutions in Washington looking for money. He
collected more than $3 billion in aid for hurricane
victims, despite well-publicised corruption in the
disbursement of funds donated earlier to tackle
Covid-19. Shortly after his visit, federal
prosecutors in New York –who a year ago established
that JOH had created a
narco-state – filed documents in a
new drugs case. After quoting JOH saying he
would ‘shove the drugs right up the noses of the
gringos’ by flooding the US with cocaine, they
accuse him of ‘embezzling aid money provided by the
United States through fraudulent non-governmental
organisations’. A Honduran narcotics lab, protected
by the military on JOH’s orders, had been sending
hundreds of kilos of cocaine to Miami every month.
The massive disruption caused by the storms
provoked a fresh peak of Covid-19 infections: 1100
new cases on a single day in mid-January, the
highest so far. Weakened by corruption and
underfunding, the health service is overwhelmed. At
least 75 doctors and dozens of nurses have died,
many as a result of overcrowded wards and poor
equipment. ‘We have to wait until someone dies to
give their bed to someone else,’ a doctor
said. To fill the gaps, seven mobile hospitals
were ordered last March but only two are working
properly. The head of the agency which made the $47
million deal, accused of corruption, was sacked.
People protested
under the banner: ‘If it were a narco lab, it
would be working.’
Biden’s immigration policy includes spending $4
billion in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to
address the problems that spur migration. It should
be obvious, not least from the evidence accumulated
by New York prosecutors, that the ruling party in
Tegucigalpa is unfit to govern, even if JOH is
replaced in elections in November. But the problems
go much deeper than that: the whole governing system
serves the needs of big business – often North
American companies – as it exploits both the land
and the workforce, destroying the environment and
maintaining
the second biggest gap between rich and poor in
Latin America. Throwing money at the problems could
simply make them worse unless Biden makes the
fundamental changes in US policy that both Obama and
his secretary of state Hillary Clinton refused to
contemplate. Perhaps aware that this won’t be
achieved quickly or easily, Biden officials appear
to have quietly
asked Mexico and its neighbours to continue to
deter migrant caravans, even as a new one is said to
be forming.
JOH meanwhile faces not only political rejection
but possible extradition if the US turns against
him. He’s
reported to be ‘trying to figure out how to
refashion himself from a Trump ally into a Biden
one’. He tweeted a
photo of himself with Biden in 2015: ‘I hope we
can work together,’ he wrote, ‘like in the past.’