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niyad

(113,306 posts)
Wed Jul 16, 2014, 09:50 PM Jul 2014

for those who believe there is NO war on women:

. . .
Honduras is the country currently sending the largest number of refugees – 50,000 children in the past several months alone. Why Honduras? In addition to the brutal suppression of civil, legal and human rights in that country (in fact, in all of Central America) supported and financed by a succession of US Governments – Democratic and Republican – Honduras can be identified as a failed state if consideration is given to the quality of life there.

In a report “Status of violence against women in Honduras” these observations are particularly alarming:
http://www.cipamericas.org/archives/12582

Governability is threatened by violence that results in murders, mainly those of young people, both men and women. With regards to human rights, the country has received poor evaluation scores in almost all governability indicators, such as social inclusion, social participation, peacemaking or coexistence, competitiveness, and respect for human rights, among others.

According to estimates of the Observatory on Violence of the National Autonomous University of Honduras (UNAH), a person was killed every 78 minutes in 2013. In the course of the year, a million firearms were in circulation in the country, of which scarcely 282 thousand were duly registered. The Weapons Possession Law authorizes each citizen to have in his or her power up to five commercial firearms; this provision, in conjunction with the high number of illegal arms circulating in the country, foments a death culture fueled by high levels of impunity. Different forms of violence are systematically affecting women, especially young women, in both public and private spaces. Rates are increasingly higher, as is impunity.

To be female in Honduras is to be at a level of risk that in itself will push women to take their children and try to find sanctuary – the US being the obvious choice.

In Honduras, 27% of all women report that they have suffered physical violence at one time or another in their lives. And although this figure alone is alarming, violence against women has many other manifestations. The Public Prosecutor’s Office recognizes 25 crimes against women, including injury, domestic violence, sexual violence, and homicide. In 2012, the Statistical Observatory of the Public Prosecutor’s Office reported more than 16 thousand accusations involving violence against women. The highest number of complaints, 74.6%, pertained to Domestic Violence and Intra-family Violence, followed by sex crimes, which accounted for almost 20% of the total.

The violence against women includes horrific injury and death.

In Honduras, 27% of all women report that they have suffered physical violence at one time or another in their lives. And although this figure alone is alarming, violence against women has many other manifestations. The Public Prosecutor’s Office recognizes 25 crimes against women, including injury, domestic violence, sexual violence, and homicide. In 2012, the Statistical Observatory of the Public Prosecutor’s Office reported more than 16 thousand accusations involving violence against women. The highest number of complaints, 74.6%, pertained to Domestic Violence and Intra-family Violence, followed by sex crimes, which accounted for almost 20% of the total.

The report further states, “ From 2005 to 2013, the number of violent deaths of women rose by 263.4%,10 which implied 636 women murdered in 2013, or one every 13.8 hours. This is reflected in the dramatic rise in the rate of violent deaths of Honduran women from 2.7 in 2005 to 14.6 in 2013 which is even greater than the total homicide rates in countries now officially engaged in a war or armed conflict. (emphasis added)

According to the report, the cases of women killed in Honduras are characterized by the following aspects:

.Most of the women live in urban areas. In 2012, 3 out of 5 violent deaths of women occurred in urban areas, and in 2013, 40% of all murders of women were concentrated in two cities: San Pedro Sula and the Central District.
.Young women make up 43 to 49 percent of all women killed annually, with the 20-24 year age range being the most highly affected.
.Firearms are utilized in more than 70% of all homicides of women.
.Men are the main suspects: In 70% of the cases one or more men have been identified as suspects, and in 1.6%, women; the sex of the remaining suspects is unknown.
.Disappearances are common. In 40.4% of the homicides of women that occurred in 2012, the place of the commission of the crime is unknown, which implied that the victims ––women, girls and adolescents–– were abducted from wherever they happened to be, retained against their will, probably subjected to sexual abuse and torture, and then killed and abandoned in public places.
.Impunity reigns. The average rate of impunity in the last 6 years is 93.5%, which has left at least 2,500 women without any justice whatsoever during this time period.
My emphasis on the area where 40% of the murders occurred is deliberate: That is the City and District to which President Obama ordered women and children returned in his first official act of “undocumented child” deportations. It was to these areas that the screaming, ugly Americans were demanding the US government return these confused and frightened mothers and children.

. . . .

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for those who believe there is NO war on women: (Original Post) niyad Jul 2014 OP
I can only hope that he is relying on the research littlemissmartypants Jul 2014 #1
exactly niyad Jul 2014 #2
…And how did Honduras get into such a mess? Jackpine Radical Jul 2014 #3
thank you for this information. depressing how few people know what our govt has been doing niyad Jul 2014 #4
you might find the following book interesting. niyad Jul 2014 #5
Thank you. It sounds like a fascinating read. Jackpine Radical Jul 2014 #6

littlemissmartypants

(22,656 posts)
1. I can only hope that he is relying on the research
Wed Jul 16, 2014, 09:58 PM
Jul 2014

Of others that are trying to sabotage him. His lack of knowledge is no excuse for sending them back to this travesty of a home. I'm trying not to be disappointed in him but...

Love, Peace and Shelter. Lmsp

Jackpine Radical

(45,274 posts)
3. …And how did Honduras get into such a mess?
Wed Jul 16, 2014, 10:09 PM
Jul 2014


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/nov/27/us-honduras-coup

Fruit corporations from the US turned Honduras, an impoverished tropical backwater, into a huge banana plantation at the start of the 20th century. They dominated its economy and politics, making it the original "banana republic".

The US intervened in numerous military coups to protect its commercial interests, embedding a conservative, Americanised elite. Contra guerrillas backed by President Ronald Reagan used Honduras as a base to attack Nicaragua's Sandinista government in the 1980s.

The current US president, Barack Obama, showed a desire to end the "gringo bully" image by condemning the June coup which ousted the leftist leader, Manuel Zelaya. But the White House backtracked when congressional Republicans supported the de facto government as a bulwark against Venezuela's Hugo Chávez.

A power-sharing deal between Zelaya and the de facto rulers unravelled when the US said it would recognise Sunday's vote, even if Zelaya was not first reinstated, allowing the president's foes to dig in their heels.

"I'm disgusted by how rapidly the Democrats crumbled," said Julia Sweig, author of Friendly Fire: Losing Friends and Making Enemies in the Anti-American Century. "The Republicans used Honduras to beat up the Obama administration. Latin Americans have gone from hating us to laughing at us."


And--

United States Involvement in the Coup in Honduras
by Karine Walsh / August 31st, 2009

After more than 60 days following the kidnapping of President Zelaya and the seizure of power by the usurper “government” of Roberto Micheletti, it became impossible for Washington to continue to deny its direct involvement in this reprehensible and internationally condemned act.

Arnold August, Montreal author and expert on Cuban democracy, was invited on August 24 by Sylvia Richardson of CJSF Radio to shed light on the June 28 events in Honduras and the revelations surrounding the case which are being exposed over time.

Mr. August noted, a now a known fact, that the aircraft that carried Zelaya the night of his abduction from his home landed at the U.S. military base in Soto Cano in Honduras, before continuing to its final destination of Costa Rica. “Even if one is not a military expert, how can a plane land and to take off again on a military base where you have 600 American soldiers and a lot of military equipment there, without the knowledge, expertise and support of the Americans at that base?” Mr. August asked.

Therefore, the study of the U.S. State Department’s official publications since June 28, which Mr. August has followed closely, show that the strategy of Washington since this military coup has not consisted solely in emphasizing the “mediation” by the President of Costa Rica Oscar Arias, a hoped-for dialogue between what Washington calls “the two parties.”


http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/08/united-states-involvement-in-the-coup-in-honduras/

niyad

(113,306 posts)
4. thank you for this information. depressing how few people know what our govt has been doing
Wed Jul 16, 2014, 10:11 PM
Jul 2014

down there.

niyad

(113,306 posts)
5. you might find the following book interesting.
Wed Jul 16, 2014, 10:24 PM
Jul 2014

Review
"Bananas, Beaches and Bases" is the most significant book in contemporary feminist international politics. In my view, it is the essential text not only for feminist international politics courses but for anyone interested in starting to understand just how International Politics really works." - Marysia Zalewski, author of Feminism After Postmodernism: Theorising Through Practice "A new edition of Bananas, Beaches and Bases is cause for cosmic good cheer. This trailblazing treatment of the gender politics of global market and military projects is a feminist classic. Always ahead of the curve, before globalization had achieved cache in academic circles, Enloe was there, cajoling Western feminists out of our political parochialism. There is no more creative, insightful, engaging feminist guide to international politics." - Judith Stacey, author of Brave New Families "Bananas, Beaches and Bases is both a 'Pandora's box' and a roadmap. As the 'magna carta' of Feminist International Relations, it has helped create a new generation of women and men in the world of international relations." - Katharine Moon,author of Sex Among Allies "With this volume, Cynthia Enloe single-handedly carved out a major new field. Combining contemporary political insight and historical sensitivity, Bananas, Beaches and Bases revealed the gendered workings of high politics, without which the entire machinery of war, diplomacy and governance would have long since collapsed. A pioneering tour-de-force." - Philippa Levine,author of Victorian Feminism, 1850-1900"
From the Inside Flap
"I have no hesitation in describing Bananas, Beaches and Bases as the most significant book in contemporary feminist International Politics. Each time I re-visit it, I am taken aback by its profound implications for both feminism and International Politics. The deceptively provocative question at its core—'where are the women?'—irrevocably transforms our views about what the central and important landscape of global politics is. In my view, it is the essential text not only for feminist International Politics courses but for anyone interested in starting to understand just how International Politics really works."—Marysia Zalewski, author of Feminism After Postmodernism: Theorising Through Practice

"A new edition of Bananas, Beaches, and Bases is cause for cosmic good cheer. This trailblazing treatment of the gender politics of global market and military projects is a feminist classic. Always ahead of the curve, before globalization had achieved cache in academic circles Enloe was there, cajoling Western feminists out of our political parochialism. There is no more creative, insightful, engaging feminist guide to international politics. Cynthia Enloe is an international feminist treasure, and Bananas, Beaches, and Bases her signature work."—Judith Stacey, author of Brave New Families

"Bananas, Beaches, and Bases is both a ‘Pandora's Box’ and a roadmap: It unleashes questions and insights that many conventional students of International Politics are accustomed to ignoring or overlooking about the dynamic between gender and international political life, and it guides us to see how both are mutually constitutive. As the "magna carta" of Feminist International Relations, it has helped create a new generation of women and men in the world of international relations."—Katharine Moon, author of Sex Among Allies

"Cynthia Enloe writes with passion, conviction, intelligence and verve as she makes such good feminist sense of international politics that the world never looks quite the same again. Innovative and a great read, Bananas, Beaches and Bases continues to be an outstanding example of the difference gender makes in social analysis. This is a book which provokes discussion with students, colleagues, friends and family. It is a book which has set the standard form much that followed. A classic."—Diane Bell, author of Ngarrindjeri Wurrurwarrin: A World That Is, Was, and Will Be

"With this volume, Cynthia Enloe single-handedly carved out a major new field. Combining contemporary political insight and historical sensitivity, Bananas, Beaches and Bases revealed the gendered workings of high politics, without which the entire machinery of war, diplomacy and governance would have long since collapsed. A pioneering tour-de-force."—Philippa Levine, author of Victorian Feminism, 1850-1900

http://www.amazon.com/Bananas-Beaches-Bases-Feminist-International/dp/0520229126

Jackpine Radical

(45,274 posts)
6. Thank you. It sounds like a fascinating read.
Wed Jul 16, 2014, 10:34 PM
Jul 2014

Someday I will have time to read everything I want to. Just probably not in this lifetime.

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