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Honduras Is Combating Its Homicide Epidemic With Militarization

Some 7,000 people among the 8 million inhabitants of Honduras can expect to be murdered.
Photo by Getty

In March of 2013, images captured on a public security camera in a busy area of the capital city of Tegucigalpa shocked Honduras.

The footage shows a group of highly trained and militarized hooded kidnappers, over the course of just a few minutes, surround two young people, force them to lie flat on the ground, and viciously execute them with a spray of bullets — calmly retreating afterward in several different vehicles.

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This brutal felony has yet to be solved — and is just one of the tens of thousands of murders that have gone completely unpunished in the last years. According to official data from the Public Ministry of Honduras, only 20 of every 100 murder cases are ever investigated, and of those only a few go to trial or reach a verdict.

“In this country there is total impunity, and the judicial system works well only for the perpetrators… while it works completely against the victims,” said Felix Molina, a journalist and director of the Tegucigalpa Resistance Radio Program.

Molina, who is an authority on regional violence and an expert on Honduran human rights violations, told VICE News that the system was especially kind to “those behind the 2009 attack against president Manuel Zelaya,” who was forced into exile in Costa Rica in what the Honduras Truth Commission subsequently determined was an illegal coup d’état.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) and other international human rights organizations operating in the country denounced the overthrow of Zelaya then and have reported that their current initiatives have been repressed by state security operatives.

According to the Violence Observatory at the National Autonomous University of Honduras, in the past year Honduras registered a slight decrease in its homicide rate, dropping from 85.5 murders per 100,000 inhabitants in 2012 to 83 in 2013.

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Even so, Honduras is again positioned as the country with the highest homicide rate in the world. Its rate remains more than 12 times the international average of 6.9 per 100,000. Some 7,000 people among the 8 million inhabitants of Honduras can expect to be murdered.

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The country is officially enduring a severe homicide epidemic — quantified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a murder rate that exceeds 10 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.

“The level of violence and impunity in Honduran society is directly related to the degree of corruption and level of infiltration by members of organized crime, and to the amount of involvement of institutions and state agencies (including those which are entrusted with public security) in the drug trade,” the ex-Director of Internal Affairs for the National Police, Commissioner Maria Luisa Borjas, assured VICE News.

Faced with this situation, President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who was inaugurated in January 2014, is opting to militarize public security and promote the creation of a “military police” and a new elite corps.

This strategy would further increase the Honduran military budget, which has already seen increases that are among the largest in the entire Latin American region. The 18 percent jump during 2013 was especially remarkable, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS).

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Ex-commissioner Borjas, though, doubts whether the danger can be combated solely with more weaponry and repression. It could be handled, she believes, with a “true purge of the state security forces” and by ensuring that preventative social policies become integral parts of the problem’s solution.

“We must improve the quality of civilian life, satisfy the basic needs of the people, and create opportunities. When the quality of life improves for the people, the delinquency index decreases,” Borjas insisted.

Historically, Honduras has been dependent on United States economic support, but Hernandez may be overestimating current US enthusiasm for pumping money into a demonstrably corrupt environment.

The United States’ economic support has significantly facilitated Honduras’ process of militarization, and US political figures are growing concerned. The Pentagon’s contract spending in Honduras tripled during the past decade, and a huge jump in Fiscal Year 2011 lifted the spending to $53.8 million — up 71 percent from the previous year’s budget. Several American politicians vigorously criticized this massive increase.

In 2011, a US congressional representative, Howard L. Berman, writing to then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, called on “governments that assist the Honduran police…as well as US taxpayers, to evaluate immediately United States assistance to ensure that we are not, in fact, feeding a beast.”

Similar concerns were voiced in 2012, when US representative Jan Schakowsky, a Democrat from Illinois, rallied 94 congressmen to urge Secretary of State Clinton “to suspend US assistance to the military and police [of Honduras], due to the lack of mechanisms in place to ensure security forces are held accountable for abuses.”

The amount of US foreign aid that Honduras receives greatly affects its ability to implement new social defense strategies. Without it President Hernandez’s plan to militarize public security might falter.