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Shouldn’t the government at least ask before they kick you off your land?

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Shouldn’t the government at least ask before they kick you out of your home? Berta Cáceres and her colleagues in Honduras think so. They believe that people have a right to their homes. They are facing serious legal harassment – including jail time for Berta – for standing up for that right.

Berta Cáceres has been sentenced to serve time in prison and her colleagues’ freedom of movement has been curtailed. And why? Because they stood up for a local community, the Lenca people, who were not consulted about the construction of a hydroelectric project on their lands. We firmly believe that Berta Cáceres’s life is in danger if she is sent to prison.

Help Friends of the Earth International stand up for them by asking their government to play fair!

Berta and her colleagues have been working with the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH) to protest a planned hydroelectric project, a joint operation involving the Honduran government and a national company called Desarrollos Energéticos S.A. (DESA), in the Rio Blanco territory of the country. The population of Rio Blanco has strongly objected to the project since its inception. International human rights instruments, such as ILO Convention 169,  compel the Honduran state to meaningfully consult with the local population and protect indigenous lands.

The local Lenca people, working with COPINH, have been protesting against the continued efforts by the government and DESA to push ahead with the project. The government has used the ongoing protests as a pretext to militarize the area.

DESA, a Honduran company, working with a large team of lawyers, has been engaged in legal harassment of the COPINH leaders for months. The activists have faced a variety of spurious charges, including, most recently, coercion, theft and damages against the company. On September 20, Judge Knight Lisseth Lissien handed down a jail sentence to Berta Caceres,  and punitive measures for her colleagues – including ordering them to stay away from Rio Blanco and report every 15 days  to court.

We demand an end to the judicial harassment of the COPINH leaders, immediate suspension of the arrest warrant for Berta Caceres, an end to the  criminalization of social movements in Honduras, and respect for the right of Peoples to be consulted on projects affecting their territories.

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In Solidarity,

Friends of the Earth International

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