After
more than a decade of violent repression and undemocratic rule that
emerged after the 2009 ouster of Manuel Zelaya, a new leader takes
the reins of the Central American nation.
“I am overwhelmed with joy; I just cannot
believe it,” says Dr. Oriel María Siu speaking
to me from the city of
San Pedro Sula the day after Hondurans like herself voted in
presidential elections. Siu was ecstatic to learn that Xiomara Castro
de Zelaya had an insurmountable lead over Nasry
Asfura, the candidate
representing the incumbent conservative party. Castro,
the wife of ousted former president Manuel Zelaya, is a democratic
socialist and will become the first woman president of Honduras. She
triumphantly told
her supporters, “Today
the people have made justice. We have reversed authoritarianism.”
Castro
was referring to the 12 years of repressive rule by the National
Party, which took power after Zelaya was ousted in a 2009
military coup that, as
per Siu, “the United States orchestrated.” Years after
the coup, Hillary Clinton, who was the U.S. state secretary at the
time of the coup, justified Zelaya’s removal, saying in a 2016
interview,
“I didn’t like the way it looked or the way they did it
but they had a very strong argument that they had followed the
constitution and the legal precedence.” The Intercept later
exposed
how U.S. military officers at the Center for Hemispheric Defense
Studies assisted Honduran coup leaders in their efforts.
National
Party leader Juan Orlando Hernández claimed electoral
victory in 2013 against Castro
and then again in
2017 against Salvador Nasralla
in the face of credible accusations of massive fraud. The man who has
been deeply
implicated in
narco-trafficking in the U.S. (his brother was convicted in a New
York court of smuggling in hundreds of tons of cocaine) used the
Honduran
security forces as his
personal militia during his tenure.
Terror
and violence reigned across Honduras, and among the many victims of
the post-coup era was prominent environmental activist Berta
Cáceres, who led
the resistance to a hydroelectric dam and was killed in 2016. Another
victim was a 26-year-old nursing student named Keyla
Martínez, who died
in police custody in February 2021 after being arrested for violating
a curfew. Her death prompted fresh protests.
Over
the years, relentless state violence and corruption swept thousands
of Honduran migrants northward
who preferred the callousness of the U.S. immigration system to the
barbarity of Hernández’s security forces. Conservatives
in the U.S. refused to acknowledge the push factor of post-coup
violence as a reason for
Central American migration.
Still,
resistance continued inside Honduras, and, according to Amnesty
International, “the
wave of anti-government demonstrations has been a constant in the
country” in the face of massive repression.
Castro’s
win may finally end this dark chapter, and it’s no wonder that
Hondurans like Siu are celebrating. “People were expecting the
narco-dictatorship to again steal these elections,” she says.
Castro,
according to Siu, rose to prominence after her husband’s ouster
and “was at the forefront of letting people know, nationally
and internationally, what was going on” in Honduras. Castro
campaigned on a socialist platform and brought together a coalition
of what Siu described as “local youth, Indigenous, Black,
Garifuna movements” that, after the 2009 coup, “became a
very strong social movement attempting to fight against the
criminality of [the] corruption, militarism, police presence in the
streets and extrajudicial killings” that occurred under
Hernández.
Although
Castro is the wife of ousted President Manuel Zelaya, Siu insists
that President-elect Castro “has a brain of her own and has a
platform that is beautiful.”
Suyapa
Portillo Villeda, a Honduran American and associate professor of
Chicano/a-Latino/a transnational studies at Pitzer College, says that
Castro won on a proposal of promising “participatory democracy”
and that “she is trying to establish a new kind of pact with
the people in calling for a national assembly to rewrite the
constitution.”
It’s
a bold position considering that former President Manuel Zelaya
was on the verge of holding a referendum on the constitution when he
was deposed in a military coup. “This is the demand that has
been there since 2009 that people have been organizing around, to
have a new constitution that would get rid of the Cold War
anti-communist constitution that was written during the Reagan era,”
says Portillo Villeda.
While
the conservative backlash to a new constitution ushered in
Hernández’s violent tenure, in many ways, Honduras’
democracy may have emerged stronger as a result. A system that
Portillo Villeda describes as consisting of two “oligarchic”
ruling parties is now a multi-party system, and Castro has managed to
build a formidable coalition among several of them. “This was a
very Honduran type of win,” says Portillo Villeda, referring to
the grassroots organizing around Castro’s candidacy that
included a lot of young Hondurans.
Castro’s
win also represents a potential end to more than a decade of
repression that includes violent misogyny. “Women here die
every day and rapes go without any form of justice,” said Siu,
who says she doesn’t dare to walk on the streets after sundown.
Honduras has been referred
to as “one of the most dangerous places on Earth to be a
woman.”
Since
1985, Honduras has also maintained one of the most
Draconian abortion bans
in the world, and under Hernández’s rule, Congress
strengthened the ban. Pregnant people are not allowed abortions under
any circumstances, including rape or incest. Castro has promised
to ease the ban.
The
coalition that brought Castro to power includes a nascent feminist
movement as well as a new queer and transgender movement working
alongside traditional activist groups like unions, as well as Black
and Indigenous communities. That is a big reason why Hondurans like
Siu are hopeful, saying, “she has the support of historically
marginalized communities all throughout the nation.”
Taking
her broad mandate from a population eager for change and translating
that to legitimate power in a nation whose governmental
machinery has been decimated
will be Castro’s most serious challenge. “Of course, it’s
going to be difficult,” says Portillo Villeda, of the task
ahead of Castro. “She’s inheriting a broken country,
legal system and Supreme Court and is coming into an empty house that
has been robbed.”
This
article was produced by Economy
for All,
a
project of the Independent Media Institute.
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