From Rights Action <[email protected]>
Subject Historical transitions & challenges in Honduras, Colombia, Haiti
Date October 5, 2022 2:11 PM
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Historical transitions & challenges in Honduras & Colombia, On-going interventionism in Haiti. A "No Alibis" interview on KCSB / EcoJustice podcast

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October 5, 2022

Historical transitions & challenges in Honduras & Colombia
On-going foreign interventionism in Haiti

A "No Alibis" interview on KCSB / EcoJustice podcast
[link removed]
This recent episode of the EcoJustice Radio podcast covers political transitions in Honduras, Colombia, and Haiti. In the first 20 minutes, commentator Jack Eidt focuses on the huge challenges the new government of Honduras faces, after 12 years of U.S and Canadian backed military narco-regimes, and on the particular challenges the Garifuna people face with the current mega-tourism development project on their lands.

Below we include the full text of the News Review.
Listen to Podcast Here ([link removed])
The Garifuna connection to the sea is vital to their cultural survival, which is threatened from mega-tourism development. Photo of Chachuate, Honduras by Jessica Aldridge.
News Review on Historical and Political Transitions in Central America and the Caribbean
By Jack Eidt
[link removed]

Two countries in Latin America have had elections where after decades of US-influenced, multinational corporation dominant governments have lost to insurgent leftist candidates, Xiomara Castro in Honduras, and Gustavo Petro in Colombia.

One other country in the Caribbean, Haiti, has faced the same sort of right-wing neoliberal interventionist governments, a recent example ending up with an assassination of President Jovenel Moise in 2021. Right now massive protests have gotten to the point of anarchy over fuel hikes and US-UN intervention on behalf of corporations and their wealthy Haitian overlords. How did we get here and where do we go from here?

On this show, we feature excerpts from the UCSB radio program No Alibis Third World News Review ([link removed]) with host Elizabeth Robinson, Jack Eidt, EcoJustice Radio Executive Producer, and commentators Gerard Pigeon, Katia McClain, and Hector Javkin.


** Political Transitions in Honduras and Colombia
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Jack Eidt discusses new government transitions in Honduras and Colombia.

Honduras. The 2009 military coup that ousted Xiomara Castro’s husband, democratically elected president Manuel Zelaya ([link removed]) , plunged Honduras into chaos. The resulting death, destruction, and suffering caused by this far-right regime is incalculable, sustained by military force, financed and trained by the US ([link removed]) , and advanced by brazen electoral fraud.

The dictatorship led to the transformation of Trujillo ([link removed]) once a sleepy coastal town with multiple Garifuna ([link removed]) villages into a bustling destination for Canadian sun worshipers ([link removed]) and cruise ships. And La Moskitia ([link removed]) , inhabited by the Miskitu, Pech, Tawahka, and Garifuna, has been transformed into a drug transshipment zone, like a free trade zone for traffickers.

We also discuss the inequality and repression committed against the Afro-Indigenous Garifuna ([link removed]) communities, traditional inhabitants of the Cayos Cochinos area of the Bay Islands off the Carriage North Coast of Honduras, have been prohibited from fishing in favor of privatization of the multiple cays in the area for ecotourism and specifically the Spanish reality show “Superviventes” or their version of Survivor.

Colombia. Gustavo Petro is Colombia’s first ever left-wing president. He is a former revolutionary with the socialist armed movement M-19, which signed a peace treaty and demilitarized. Petro subsequently established himself as a lawmaker and became mayor of the capital Bogotá. His vice president is Francia Marquez, according to her own description, the first “black, Afro-descendant, native of the most impoverished regions” of Colombia to become VP.

A recent report from the North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA) ([link removed]) told how the new government calls for negotiations with armed groups and new approaches to the war on drugs that includes affected communities. He also plans to open dialogue around three main issues: protection for the Amazon rainforest; ending the war on drugs; and moving the Colombian economy away from extractive projects such as fossil fuels.

Unfortunately, the Biden Administration has doubled down on pressure on oil and gas drilling the region of Arauca in eastern Colombia on the border of Venezuela. Previous administrations have designated about 80 percent of the department as an oil concession, which has resulted in massive destruction

By taking advantage of institutional weakness and bribing local officials, transnational corporations like Occidental Petroleum have been able to ignore environmental regulations, dumping tens of thousands of barrels of contaminated water into the flood zones of Caño Limón and the Arauca River, destroying the vegetation and biological resources in the headwaters of the Cinaruco and Capanaparo rivers.

The Petro and Marquez Administration, and the people of Colombia, have lots of work to do to restore democracy and protections to communities and ecosystems.


** Historic Foreign Intervention and Injustice in Haiti
------------------------------------------------------------

Professor Gerard Pigeon covers the history of Haiti, and why we have seen this international-interventionist mess before. Unless many nations work together to support a Haitian-led solution, where the business and corporate interests and their US and UN military power step back, nothing will improve there.

We also included a commentary by Prof. Katia McClain, calling for a peaceful solution to the war in Ukraine.

Podcast Website: [link removed]
Podcast Blog: [link removed]
Support the Podcast: [link removed]
Since 1998, Rights Action has supported the work of OFRANEH (Fraternal organization of Black peoples of Honduras), the leading community defense organization struggling in defense of land, the environment, indigenous rights and a fair and just “development” model for the Garifuna communities.

To learn more: [link removed]
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