Latin American Democracy Defense Organization
FaceBook Twitter Blog in Spanish
In association with CIEMPRE (Center for the Research and Monitoring of Printed and Electronic Media)
An NGO dedicated to the defense of Freedom and Democracy in Latin America.

Newsletters
 
Search Archives:          

News Article
Dina Meza: "In Honduras we have gone back 30 years regarding Human Rights"

Published in: Amnesty International - January 14, 2010

 

Dina Meza lives and talks human rights at every opportunity she is given. As a journalist, an activist and a member of COFADEH (Committee of Relatives of the Disappeared in Honduras), one of Honduras' oldest human rights organizations, she knows all too well what it means to work on an issue that is not always popular with the authorities.

The past five months have been particularly challenging for Dina and her colleagues at COFADEH. Its members have spent countless days and nights collecting testimonies of threats, harassment, police beatings, arbitrary arrests, ill treatment and killings across the country.
They then file habeas corpus and other legal remedies on behalf of those affected by the repression.

In one of the most serious incidents, on 23 September, police threw tear gas canisters inside their office in Tegucigalpa, while Dina and other colleagues were inside the building. The message was clear from those who had taken power: defending human rights was part of the problem, not the solution.

Dina believes the underlying problem in Honduras is a lack of justice prevailing since the 1980s, when hundreds of people were killed or disappeared at the hands of the country’s security forces.

“The generations who were repressed in the 80s - the men and women killed, disappeared, and whose relatives still haven’t received justice - all this accumulated impunity and the human rights abusers who are calmly walking the streets of Honduras, this all has to do with what’s happening now. It teaches us that when repression goes unpunished, it happens again,” Dina said.

“We have legal repression, police repression, military repression - so what does this mean? We have to reform and reconstitute all these institutions and start again, with a new procedure.”

Source:Amnesty International

 
Email This ArticleEmail This Article
Printer FriendlyPrinter Friendly
Increase Text SizeIncrease Text Size
Decrease Text SizeDecrease Text Size
Previous PagePrevious Page
CommentsComments
Disponible También en Español
Share
Hits: This article has been viewed 1851 times.
Previous News ArticleNews Article Anterior |Next News ArticleNext News Article
• Recent Articles

0 Comments by our visitors Post Comment Post Comment

Post Comment
All fields are required. Your email address will not be visible in the website.
 
Your Name:
Your Email:
Your Comment:
Please enter the verification code:
Rating: