The Honduran Coup’s Ugly Aftermath
As Secretary of State in 2009, Hillary Clinton helped a right-wing
coup in Honduras remove an elected left-of-center president, setting
back the cause of democracy and enabling corrupt and drug-tainted
forces to tighten their grip on the poverty-stricken country.
By Jonathan Marshall
August 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortiumnews"
- Imelda Marcos will forever be
remembered for her hoard of 3,000 pairs of shoes, an ostentatious
symbol of the billions of dollars in spoils she amassed as First
Lady of the Philippines. Now shoes are again emerging as a symbol of
corruption, this time in Honduras, where prosecutors are
investigating
allegations that a former first lady improperly
purchased, or never distributed, 42,100 pairs of shoes for the poor,
at a cost to the state of $348,000.The
allegations are just the latest to surface in a wide-ranging
corruption investigation that has reenergized grass-roots politics
and triggered a nationwide protest movement in Central America’s
original “banana republic.”
Every Friday evening for the past three months,
thousands of protesters have marched through the streets of
Tegucigalpa and smaller cities,
carrying torches and signs reading “The corrupt have
ripped apart my country” and “Enough is enough.”
The protesters, who
call themselves the oposición indignada (the
outraged opposition), demand that President Juan Orlando Hernández
be held accountable for fraud and graft, which allegedly bled the
national health service of more than $200 million to enrich senior
officials and
finance the 2013 election.
“This is a really historic time in Central
America,”
said an analyst for the International Crisis Group. “The
question is whether this will really turn into a critical juncture
in which society, civil organizations, the private sector and
political parties can . . . come together in making the best out of
this opportunity [to begin] cleaning up our state institutions.”
Although President Hernández has promised to
prosecute the guilty, he has so far refused to follow Guatemala’s
example and appoint an independent investigative body under United
Nations supervision to attack government corruption.
Revelations in Guatemala of customs fraud, political
bribery and money laundering have prompted similar weekly protest
marches in that nation’s capital and the resignation of the vice
president.
The Obama administration has expressed sympathy
for anti-corruption movements in Central America, but has yet to
acknowledge its failure to protect democracy in Honduras against a
military coup in 2009, which set the stage for that country’s
current crisis.
Bowing to pressure
from conservative Republicans in Congress, Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton refused to condemn the ouster of leftist President
Manuel Zelaya in 2009. By her own admission, she
began plotting within days to prevent him from returning to
office.
Her
recently released emails show that she sought help from a
pro-coup lobbyist for Honduran business interests to establish
communications with the new military-backed president. She also
approved the continuation of U.S. aid to the illegitimate new
regime, blocked demands by the Organization of American States for
Zelaya’s return, and
accepted subsequent presidential elections that were
condemned by most international observers as unfair and marred by
violent intimidation.
In 2011, President Obama officially welcomed
Honduras’s dubious new president to the White House and
praised his “strong commitment to democracy.” (His wife
is the target of the shoe purchase investigation noted above.)
A year later, two leading human rights
organizations
reported that more than 100 political killings had
occurred since the coup, accompanied by “death threats against
activists, lawyers, journalists, trade unionists, and campesinos,
as well as attempted killings, torture, sexual violence, arbitrary
arrests and detentions.”
The coup represented a disastrous step backward
for Honduran society as well as its politics. University of
California historian Dana Frank observed that “A vicious drug
culture already existed before the coup, along with gangs and
corrupt officials. But the thoroughgoing criminality of the coup
regime opened the door for it to flourish on an unprecedented scale.
“Drug trafficking is now embedded in the state
itself . . . all the way up to the very top of the government . . .
A former congressman and police commissioner in charge of drug
investigations declared that one out of every ten members of
Congress is a drug trafficker and that he had evidence proving
“major national and political figures” were involved in drug
trafficking. He was assassinated on December 7 [2011].”
Yet the Obama administration has continued giving
tens of millions of dollars in aid to Honduran police and military
in the name of fighting drugs.
Such crime and corruption have rendered millions
of Hondurans destitute and desperate. Two-thirds of its people now
live below
the national poverty level and Honduras’s soaring homicide
rate
leads the world at nearly one per thousand people each
year. These conditions, in turn, fueled a
horrifying surge in child migration to the United States.
Seeking to reform conditions in Honduras, Zelaya’s
wife ran for president in 2013 on a social democratic platform, but
the ruling National Party allegedly stopped her campaign with the
help of tens of millions of dollars embezzled from the Honduran
Social Security Institute, the national health fund.
“It is widely assumed that Hernández owes his
electoral victory in part to these stolen funds,”
said Frank. (President Hernández denied knowing the
source of the ill-gotten funds and said they amounted to a mere $1.5
million. The prosecutor assigned to the case had to flee the country
in the face of death threats.)
Hernández also came under fire for staging the
removal of Supreme Court justices to ram through a law creating
autonomous investor zones, independent of normal
governance, and overseen by foreign libertarians such as Grover
Norquist and Ronald Reagan’s son Michael.
The good news is that the grassroots protests in
Honduras are having some effect on the Hernández government. It
accepted an outside mediator, appointed by the Organization of
American States, to bring together rival parties, along with members
of the oposición indignada, to find common ground on a
national program of reform.
On Aug. 14, the mediator heard from 50 civil
society organizations which identified corruption and political
impunity as the major challenges facing the Honduran state and its
democratic aspirations. The OAS mediator, who
praised the initial round of dialogue, plans to meet next
with representatives of the country’s political parties.
Talk is cheap, to be sure. But the official
involvement of the OAS, along with
increasing interest in Congress in using U.S. aid to
support justice in Honduras, offer hope that the demands of the
Honduran people will be heard. It may be
too soon to declare a Central American Spring, but that
traumatized region at least has reason for hope.
Jonathan
Marshall is an independent researcher living in San Anselmo,
California. Some of his previous articles for Consortiumnews were “Risky
Blowback from Russian Sanctions”; “Neocons
Want Regime Change in Iran”; “The
Saudis’ Hurt Feelings”; “Saudi
Arabia’s Nuclear Bluster”; “The
US Hand in the Syrian Mess”;
“Hidden
Origins of Syria’s Civil War”; and “Escalating
the Anti-Iran Propaganda.”]