Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04TEGUCIGALPA1581
2004-07-16 22:03:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Tegucigalpa
Cable title:  

March For Life Focused on Forests Reenergizes

Tags:  PGOV SENV KCRM KJUS PHUM SNAR SOCI HO 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 TEGUCIGALPA 001581 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR OES, EB, WHA AND WHA/CEN
STATE PASS AID FOR LAC/CEN

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV SENV KCRM KJUS PHUM SNAR SOCI HO
SUBJECT: March For Life Focused on Forests Reenergizes
Honduran Environmental Movement

REF: 03 Tegucigalpa 1812

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 TEGUCIGALPA 001581

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR OES, EB, WHA AND WHA/CEN
STATE PASS AID FOR LAC/CEN

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV SENV KCRM KJUS PHUM SNAR SOCI HO
SUBJECT: March For Life Focused on Forests Reenergizes
Honduran Environmental Movement

REF: 03 Tegucigalpa 1812


1. (U) SUMMARY: The March for Life (Marcha por la Vida)
appears to have successfully launched a new committed
environmental protection movement in the country. It
remains to be seen if the movement can sustain its momentum
and maintain political pressure on the government and
Congress, and whether the Government of Honduras (GOH) will
respond to the demands of the movement. Negotiations appear
to be at a standstill with leaders of the March for Life,
who have stayed in Tegucigalpa to press their agenda,
demanding an immediate halt to all logging until better
standards are put in place. END SUMMARY.


2. (U) The March for Life began on June 24, from four
cardinal points across the country (Olancho, Siguatepeque,
Danli, and Choluteca) converging on June 30 in front of the
Presidential Palace in Tegucigalpa. Father Andres Tamayo is
a Salvadorian priest who resides in Olancho and heads the
Olancho Environmentalist Movement (MAO). According to
Tamayo, the March for Life is a collective complaint and
call for a united front against politicians who benefit from
the projects of transnational companies that allegedly
deforest and exploit the country's natural resources. He
called on the government, transnational companies, and
Honduran citizens alike to share in the responsibility to
remedy the situation. Roughly 3,000 people participated in
the march, less than the 10,000 that organizers expected.


3. (SBU) Among the marchers in front of the Presidential
Palace were several members from a Center for International
Policy (CIP) delegation led by former U.S. Ambassador to El
Salvador Bob White. In an e-mail to White prior to the
march, Minister of the Presidency Luis Cosenza Jimenez tried
to discourage CIP members from attending the march. Cosenza
cited as a reason the June 21 declaration by Catholic Bishop
of Copan, Luis Alfonso Santos, that he would not participate
in nor support the march because it allegedly would seek to
undermine the government and ask for the President's

resignation. He feared the possibility of violence and
indicated that the marchers could be in danger. Other
groups, including the left-wing Democratic Union (UD) Party
and the Catholic church itself, minimized their
participation. Finally, in a last ditch effort to derail
the march, President Ricardo Maduro himself invited the
leaders of the march to dialogue with him rather than march.
He even offered full press coverage, so that all of Honduras
would bear witness to the dialogue on this critical issue.


4. (U) The government went to great lengths to exploit its
efforts to combat the problem of illegal logging and
deforestation. A year ago, the President ordered operatives
to control illegal logging in Olancho, Cosenza said. As a
consequence, more than 100,000 board feet of wood were
seized, several people were arrested, and vehicles and arms
were decommissioned. Recently the operation was repeated
with a similar outcome. However, these isolated actions do
not properly address or resolve the illegal logging problem
in the long term. Moreover, Cosenza stated, President
Maduro has submitted new legislation to Congress (which
returned from its recess July 6) to adopt stronger
enforcement measures.


5. (U) These new measures include reforming the Mining Law,
prohibiting the transport of wood between 6:00pm and 6:00am,
and establishing a motor vehicle registry. Additionally, it
would prohibit the auction of national forest lands, except
for those agreed to by the inhabitants of the local
municipality. The GOH also urged municipalities to
establish commissions to assure compliance with
environmental requisites, such as compliance with the law
requiring the submission of management plans to the Honduran
Corporation for Forestry Development (Corporacion Hondurena
de Desarrollo Forestal or COHDEFOR) authorities. President
Maduro stated that he would name a commission to intervene
in COHDEFOR operations and (starting July 2),investigate
the actions of COHDEFOR and its proposed reforms. Beginning
in 2005, the GOH also plans to have COHDEFOR become a
centrally funded institution and eliminate its partial
dependency on the auction of national timber and fees from
private timber sales. During the past two years, COHDEFOR
has been reduced from over 1,000 employees to fewer than 500
- an issue that has also reduced COHDEFOR's ability to
monitor the implementation of forest land management plans.
Finally, Maduro proposed to revise and strengthen the new
Forestry law. (Note: Tamayo stated at the initiation of the
March on June 24, that despite government promises such as
the intervention at COHDEFOR, the reality is that the
sacking of the forests continues and thus the march would
proceed. He is calling for a total ban on any logging until
stronger, more effective enforcement measures can be put in
place. See below. End Note.) See septel for more
information on COHDEFOR.


6. (U) In a letter to President Maduro, Tamayo along with
other march organizers (Roger Escober, Bertha Oliva de
Nativi, Jorge Varela, P. Osmin Flores, Walter E. Ulloa,
Angel Amilcar Colon, and Rufino Rodriguez) outlined the
march's objectives and demands. Immediate demands of the
marchers included the investigation and capture of "those
who put a price on the lives of the participants in the
march and in the fight for the environment;" an end to
police and judicial impunity; and sentencing for the
murderers of Jeannette Kawas and Carlos Escaleras (, the
1998 killing of environmental activist and Catacamas town
councilman Carlos Antonio Luna Lopez, and the June 2001
killing of community leader and environmental activist
Carlos Roberto Flores in Olancho. Post does not know the
dates or locations of the Kawas and Escaleras murders.
(Note: In June of last year, the first National March for
Life began from Juticalpa led by Father Tamayo as well as
Carlos Arturo "Oscar" Reyes. Reyes (23) was the leader of
the campaign to stop the deforestation of Olancho. Shortly
after the march, armed men gunned down Reyes outside of his
home in Olancho on July 18, 2003 (reftel). There are
allegations that timber magnates, frightened by Reyes'
organizational capabilities, offered a reward of USD 40,000
to anyone who killed the environmentalist. Tamayo himself
has received death threats in the past. End Note.)


7. (U) (Note: In May and July 2002, police arrested Jose
Angel Rosa and Jorge Adolfo Chavez Hernandez, a former
member of Battalion 3-16, for the 1998 killing of Carlos
Luna Lopez. An appeals court later freed Rosa; however, in
May 2002 police arrested him for the attempted killing of
Sylvia Esperanza Gonzales, which is related to the killing
of Luna Lopez. Rosa is still in prison on unrelated
environmental charges. In May 2003, the Supreme Court ruled
against a motion to dismiss the charges against Chavez, and
he is also in prison. Former security official Jose Marcos
Hernandez Hernandez and two other suspects remained at
large. In December 2002, a court sentenced Oscar Aurelio
"Machetillo" Rodriguez Molina, to 20 years' imprisonment for
the murder of Luna Lopez and seven years' imprisonment for
grave injury to Gonzales. In January, two NGOs brought the
case to the IACHR. Three suspects are in jail and three
remain at large in the June 2001 killing of Carlos Flores.
Post has no further information on the Kawas and Escaleras
murders. End Note.)


8. (U) Other specific demands that the environmental
movement is making on the government are fourfold. First,
an immediate halt to both legal and clandestine logging, as
well as declaring a state of emergency in the forests by
legislative decree and an immediate stop to logging for 90
days. Second, an investigation into all private property
titles to determine their legality. Third, an immediate
review of all forestry programs and projects to better align
them with the policy of poverty reduction. According to
march leaders, this last demand should also include greater
community participation in the management and utilization of
local natural resources. Fourth, a government audit on
forestry resources to be conducted by a qualified
international firm, which would involve the participation of
the community and non-governmental organizations who are
involved in the proper management of natural resources.
Additional demands include the use of social audits where
citizens can supervise the behavior of forestry industries
and functionaries by means of regional forestry tribunals
and the creation of an inter-institutional commission to
supervise and control the wood industry.


9. (U) March organizers are not completely against the
harvesting of wood. One of their recommendations consists
of making the communities responsible for managing and
harvesting the forest areas in their vicinities. March
organizers also called for the abolishment of the Mining Law
which was approved in the wake of Hurricane Mitch because,
according to march organizers, it allows excessive
exploitation of mining resources by unscrupulous
transnational companies that make pacts with corrupt local
functionaries. The marchers argue this should include
closing the Office of Mining Development (Direccion de
Fomento de la Mineria) and replacing it with another
organism that would attend to national interests before
those of the international businesses. Father Tamayo's
group is opposed to the new Forestry Law for several
reasons, including that it is designed to permit the private
concession of forestry resources to national and
international companies. The group also is seeking a
separate law just for protected areas. They urge the
government to conduct a technical and administrative purging
of the regional COHDEFOR offices.


10. (U) Tamayo had consistently stated that the march would
not "end where it ends, it begins where it ends." Now that
the march is over, members of the national commission of the
March for Life have said they will stay in the capital.
They have said they are ready to organize the necessary
political forces to bring about the completion of their
demands at the executive and congressional levels. Tamayo
stated that they say they are finished with unconstructive
dialogue. The group demands that the president act now to
address these issues in order to save what is left of the
country's natural resources.


11. (U) According to march organizers, the initial response
of the government was to send an unmarked and unsigned two-
page letter to them on June 30. According to Tamayo, the
letter purported to respond to each one of the specific
demands made on the GOH, in a "we are already doing this" or
"we already did this" tone and not addressing or referring
to several points. Nevertheless, Tamayo stated that they
accept the president's invitation to continue the discussion
of their stance.


12. (SBU) Comment: Two of the leading presidential
candidates, the Nationalist Party member and President of
Congress, Pepe Lobo, and leading Liberal Party candidate Mel
Zelaya, are from Olancho. During a prior administration,
from 1990-1992, Lobo was head of COHDEFOR. In addition,
Zelaya owned a sawmill and has been president of the
sawmiller's association in Honduras. Neither is pre-
disposed to support the march organizer's goals. The group
protest was peaceful and demonstrated a cohesiveness that
has put the Maduro government on the defensive. If the
marchers continue to press their agenda, however, they could
run into violent opposition by the powerful economic
interests who stand to lose the most by greater
environmental protection enforcement and any changes/reform
to the current system. End Comment.

PALMER