Honduran Human Rights Defenders Receive Human Rights Award
The Honduran Platform on Human Rights was October 13 awarded the Institute for Policy Studies’ Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award. RCT is supporting the platform and its work.
Bertha Oliva de Nativi, the director of the Committee of Family
Members of Detained and Disappeared people in Honduras (COFADEH),
accepted the award on behalf of the Platform, along with Juan
Almendares Bonilla, the director of the Center of Prevention,
Treatment and Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture (C.T.P.R.T), a
RCT partner organization.
"We've come from a country with institutions broken by impunity,
corruption and violence; threatening the lives and freedom of all,"
Oliva said.
"We are profoundly honored to receive this prestigious recognition
in the name of two exemplary human beings, Orlando Letelier and
Ronni Karpen Moffit and we extend our warmest thanks to the
organizers of this event and reaffirm our permanent struggle, as
the Human Rights Platform of Honduras, in defense of human rights,"
Almendares said.
About the award
The award honors the memory of two Institute for Policy
Studies staffers - the former Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier and
Ronni Karpen Moffitt - who were murdered in Washington, D.C. on
September 21, 1976 as they drove to work in what, at the time, was
considered one of the worst acts of foreign terrorism on U.S.
soil.
US political background
The award ceremony took place as Congressman Sam Farr is
circulating a Dear Colleague letter signed by 20 members of
Congress that calls on the Obama administration to advance justice
by curtailing assistance to the Lobo administration until it
protects the rights of all Hondurans, not just political
supporters. The letter closes COB this Friday.
The Obama administration's embrace of the Honduran government of
Porfirio Lobo has been at odds with Latin American countries, led
by Brazil, that see the Lobo regime as illegitimate, and are
concerned by ongoing murders and repression of anti-coup activists
in Honduras.
Platform supported by RCT
The Honduras Human Rights Platform (Plataforma de
Derechos Humanos de Honduras) is composed of six prominent human
rights organizations in the country. It is supported by RCT through
the Center of Prevention, Treatment and Rehabilitation of Victims
of Torture (C.T.P.R.T). The platform has strived since the June 28,
2009 military coup to provide the Honduran people with accurate
information about their government. It continues to vigorously call
on the newly imposed government to investigate the increasing
number of murdered journalists and activists, while many community,
civil and rights groups in the country continue to receive
threats.
The Platform received international attention this year for its
creation of an independent Truth Commission to investigate human
rights violations in connection with last year's coup, separate
from the official truth commission set up by the Honduran
government which does not include any Honduran members not
associated with Lobo's party, and which has no mandate to
investigate human rights abuses. Information provided by the
Platform is used by international organizations including Human
Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights in researching Honduras' human rights
situation.