El Departamento de Estado de Estados Unidos presentó este lunes un informe sobre las prácticas de derechos humanos en Honduras durante el año 2022, en que resaltó que la corrupción y la falta de transparencia fueron dos problemas graves en el primer año del Gobierno de la presidenta Xiomara Castro, del partido Libertad y Refundación (Libre, de izquierda).
El informe resalta, principalmente, que el 2 de febrero de 2022 el Congreso Nacional de Honduras aprobó una ley de amnistía política denominada "Ley para la reconstrucción del Estado constitucional de derecho y para que los hechos no se repitan".
La misma incluye, entre otras, la absolución de delitos penales, tales como abuso de autoridad, violación de los deberes de los funcionarios y malversación de caudales públicos.
En ese sentido, el Departamento de Estado rescató que la ley de amnistía absolvió de algunos de esos delitos a funcionarios que trabajaron durante el gobierno de Manuel Zelaya (2006-2009), quien fue derrocado por un golpe de Estado el 28 de junio de 2009 por promover un proyecto de constituyente a través de una consulta popular denominada "Cuarta Urna".
Zelaya, más conocido como "Mel", es esposo y asesor presidencial de la actual presidenta de Honduras, Xiomara Castro. Además de ser el coordinador general del Partido Libre.
Entre los funcionarios beneficiados se encuentran el exministro de la Presidencia, Enrique Flores Lanza y el exgerente de Hondutel, Marcelo Chimirri.
Se conoce que más de medio centenar de solicitudes de extinción de responsabilidad penal fueron presentadas ante los entes competentes, en tanto que dirigentes de Libre aseguran que siete mil campesinos procesados por delitos que no existen podrían resultar favorecidos.
Hasta octubre, al menos 24 acusados utilizaron la ley para que se desestimaran los casos de corrupción.
Département d'Etat: Rapport sur la Situation des Droits Humains en République...Stanleylucas
Ce rapport de 35 pages du Département d'Etat présente la situation des droits humains en république Dominicaine en 2016. Les violations des droits des Dominicains d'origines Haïtiennes et des Haïtiens sont présentes dans ce rapport.
Rapport de 2020 du Département d'état sur la situation des droits de l'homme ...Stanleylucas
Rapport de 2020 de 30 pages du Département d'état sur la situation des droits de l'homme en république Dominicaine. Les violations des droits des Haïtiens et des apatrides Dominicains sont mentionnes sur dix pages.
Argentina is a federal constitutional republic led by President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. The document summarizes key human rights issues in Argentina, including occasional police use of excessive force resulting in deaths, actions that may impair press freedom, and infringements on indigenous peoples' rights. It also notes poor prison conditions, arbitrary arrest and detention, prolonged pretrial detention, concerns about judicial efficiency and independence, official corruption, and other issues. While authorities prosecuted some officials for abuses, others acted with impunity.
RAPPORT 2013 DU DEPARTEMENT D'ETAT SUR LA SITUATION DE DROITS HUMAINS EN HAITIStanleylucas
Chaque année le Département d'Etat des Etats Unis publie en Février son rapport annuel sur la situation des droits humains dans chaque pays sur la planète. Cette année, Février 2014, Haiti fait partie de ce rapport comme a l'accoutume. Le rapport note les progrès enregistres dans le domaine des droits humains en Haiti et mentionne les cas de violations individuels de droits humains. Le rapport identifie les déficiences des institutions étatiques et fait des recommandations specifiques sur ce qu'il faut améliorer.
Rapport de 2020 du Département d'état sur la situation des droits de l'homme ...Stanleylucas
The document summarizes the 2020 Human Rights Report for Haiti. It describes the country's political system and elections. It notes political gridlock led the president to rule by decree as of January 2020 as parliamentary elections did not occur. The report discusses security forces and significant human rights issues including unlawful killings by gangs allegedly supported by officials, excessive police force, harsh prison conditions, arbitrary detention, corruption in the judiciary, attacks on journalists, corruption and impunity, and child labor. It provides details on reported killings, prison overcrowding, and allegations of torture by police.
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016 Burma-Bureau of Democracy,...MYO AUNG Myanmar
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/#wrapper
2016 Human Rights Reports – Secretary’s Preface
https://www.forbes.com/profile/rex-tillerson/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rex_Tillerson
http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265324
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
Burma has a quasi-parliamentary system of government in which the national parliament selects the president, and constitutional provisions grant one-quarter of national, regional, and state parliamentary seats to active duty military appointees; all other seats are open to elections. The military also has the authority to appoint the ministers of defense, home affairs, and border affairs and assume power indefinitely over all branches of the government should the president declare a national state of emergency. In November 2015 the country held nationwide parliamentary elections that the public widely accepted as a credible reflection of the will of the people. The then opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), chaired by Aung San Suu Kyi, won 390 of 491 contested seats in the bicameral parliament. Parliament elected NLD member U Htin Kyaw as president in March and created the position of State Counsellor for Aung San Suu Kyi in April, cementing her position as the country’s de facto leader.
Civilian authorities did not maintain effective control over the security forces.
http://burmese.voanews.com/a/myanmar-army-still-involving-strong-under-new-nld-government-/3752110.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာလူ႕အခြင့္အေရးအဓိကျပႆ နာ ၃ ရပ္ ၂၀၁၆ ကန္အစီရင္ခံစာေထာက္ျပ
Rapport Droits Humains 2018 Département d'Etat Américain sur HaitiStanleylucas
The document summarizes the 2018 human rights report on Haiti. It notes that while elections were considered free and fair, human rights issues persisted including extrajudicial killings by police, excessive use of force, arbitrary detention, harsh prison conditions, attacks on journalists, corruption and impunity. Prison conditions were life-threatening and detainees faced overcrowding, lack of basic services and malnutrition. Police faced allegations of abuse but rarely faced criminal prosecution, despite some administrative sanctions.
Département d'Etat: Rapport sur la Situation des Droits Humains en République...Stanleylucas
Ce rapport de 35 pages du Département d'Etat présente la situation des droits humains en république Dominicaine en 2016. Les violations des droits des Dominicains d'origines Haïtiennes et des Haïtiens sont présentes dans ce rapport.
Rapport de 2020 du Département d'état sur la situation des droits de l'homme ...Stanleylucas
Rapport de 2020 de 30 pages du Département d'état sur la situation des droits de l'homme en république Dominicaine. Les violations des droits des Haïtiens et des apatrides Dominicains sont mentionnes sur dix pages.
Argentina is a federal constitutional republic led by President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. The document summarizes key human rights issues in Argentina, including occasional police use of excessive force resulting in deaths, actions that may impair press freedom, and infringements on indigenous peoples' rights. It also notes poor prison conditions, arbitrary arrest and detention, prolonged pretrial detention, concerns about judicial efficiency and independence, official corruption, and other issues. While authorities prosecuted some officials for abuses, others acted with impunity.
RAPPORT 2013 DU DEPARTEMENT D'ETAT SUR LA SITUATION DE DROITS HUMAINS EN HAITIStanleylucas
Chaque année le Département d'Etat des Etats Unis publie en Février son rapport annuel sur la situation des droits humains dans chaque pays sur la planète. Cette année, Février 2014, Haiti fait partie de ce rapport comme a l'accoutume. Le rapport note les progrès enregistres dans le domaine des droits humains en Haiti et mentionne les cas de violations individuels de droits humains. Le rapport identifie les déficiences des institutions étatiques et fait des recommandations specifiques sur ce qu'il faut améliorer.
Rapport de 2020 du Département d'état sur la situation des droits de l'homme ...Stanleylucas
The document summarizes the 2020 Human Rights Report for Haiti. It describes the country's political system and elections. It notes political gridlock led the president to rule by decree as of January 2020 as parliamentary elections did not occur. The report discusses security forces and significant human rights issues including unlawful killings by gangs allegedly supported by officials, excessive police force, harsh prison conditions, arbitrary detention, corruption in the judiciary, attacks on journalists, corruption and impunity, and child labor. It provides details on reported killings, prison overcrowding, and allegations of torture by police.
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016 Burma-Bureau of Democracy,...MYO AUNG Myanmar
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/#wrapper
2016 Human Rights Reports – Secretary’s Preface
https://www.forbes.com/profile/rex-tillerson/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rex_Tillerson
http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265324
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016
Burma
Burma has a quasi-parliamentary system of government in which the national parliament selects the president, and constitutional provisions grant one-quarter of national, regional, and state parliamentary seats to active duty military appointees; all other seats are open to elections. The military also has the authority to appoint the ministers of defense, home affairs, and border affairs and assume power indefinitely over all branches of the government should the president declare a national state of emergency. In November 2015 the country held nationwide parliamentary elections that the public widely accepted as a credible reflection of the will of the people. The then opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), chaired by Aung San Suu Kyi, won 390 of 491 contested seats in the bicameral parliament. Parliament elected NLD member U Htin Kyaw as president in March and created the position of State Counsellor for Aung San Suu Kyi in April, cementing her position as the country’s de facto leader.
Civilian authorities did not maintain effective control over the security forces.
http://burmese.voanews.com/a/myanmar-army-still-involving-strong-under-new-nld-government-/3752110.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာလူ႕အခြင့္အေရးအဓိကျပႆ နာ ၃ ရပ္ ၂၀၁၆ ကန္အစီရင္ခံစာေထာက္ျပ
Rapport Droits Humains 2018 Département d'Etat Américain sur HaitiStanleylucas
The document summarizes the 2018 human rights report on Haiti. It notes that while elections were considered free and fair, human rights issues persisted including extrajudicial killings by police, excessive use of force, arbitrary detention, harsh prison conditions, attacks on journalists, corruption and impunity. Prison conditions were life-threatening and detainees faced overcrowding, lack of basic services and malnutrition. Police faced allegations of abuse but rarely faced criminal prosecution, despite some administrative sanctions.
The Kyrgyz Republic held parliamentary elections in October 2020 that were marred by accusations of corruption. This led to protests, the resignation of President Jeenbekov, and the interim appointment of Sadyr Japarov as acting president. A new presidential election was then scheduled for January 2021. The report documents several human rights issues in the country including torture by law enforcement, poor prison conditions, restrictions on free expression and media, and impunity for violence against women. While some officials were prosecuted for corruption, widespread impunity remained a problem.
The document summarizes Lithuania's 2014 human rights report. Some key issues included overcrowding and poor conditions in some prisons, discrimination against Roma and LGBT populations, and allegations of excessive force by police during arrests. While Lithuania is a parliamentary democracy, issues remained such as interference with privacy, limitations on free expression, and inadequate facilities for persons with disabilities. The government took steps to address issues like prosecuting officials for abuses and improving prison conditions and oversight.
265706 Relation between Sandro Suzart, SUZART, GOOGLE INC, United State...Sandro Santana
Sandro Suzart, SUZART, GOOGLE INC and United States on relationship among Demonstrations, 2013. IMPEACHMENTS of 22 governments, Relation, Sandro Suzart, SUZART, GOOGLE INC, United States, Demonstrations countries IMPEACHMENT, GOOGLE INC, the torture suffered by Sandro Suzart, Genocide in Egypt and Lybia.
265706 Relation Sandro Suzart SUZART GOOGLE INC United States on Demon...Sandro Suzart
The document summarizes the 2016 human rights report on Egypt. It notes that while elections were administered professionally according to the country's laws, freedoms of expression, assembly, and association were constrained. The main human rights issues were excessive use of force by security forces, due process deficiencies, and suppression of civil liberties including restrictions on media and protests. Impunity for security forces was also a problem. Terrorist attacks caused unlawful killings while the military's operations in Sinai led to civilian casualties and property destruction. Forced disappearances increased with hundreds detained without charge.
Human Rights Practices for 2015 UkraineАндрій Пізнюк
1) Separatists in eastern Ukraine committed widespread human rights abuses such as abductions, torture, unlawful detention and restricted humanitarian aid. The conflict has resulted in over 9,000 deaths and more than two million people have fled the region.
2) In Crimea, Russian occupation authorities committed human rights abuses targeting Crimean Tatars and others opposing the occupation. More than 20,000 Crimeans have been displaced.
3) Ukraine suffers from corruption, deficiencies in justice, and a climate of impunity as authorities generally fail to prosecute officials who commit abuses. Investigations into human rights crimes remain incomplete.
This document summarizes the human rights situation in Colombia based on a United Nations report from July 2008. It finds that serious and systematic human rights violations by state forces and paramilitary groups continue, including extrajudicial killings, torture, arbitrary detentions and forced displacement. The government denies the existence of an internal armed conflict despite the facts on the ground. It pursues a "democratic security" policy that prioritizes military force over human rights and fails to dismantle paramilitary groups or their links to state forces. Peace negotiations with guerrilla groups are also blocked in favor of a military solution.
Racial profiling has been studied extensively in New York City, where researchers have found evidence that it does occur. Studies have shown that police activity disproportionately targets minority groups, which some attribute to the "Broken Windows Theory" of policing minor crimes. However, the facts also show that police focus extends beyond just disorderly individuals in certain areas. A police chief's email condoning racial profiling has raised concerns and could lead to his firing if found to be legitimate. Debate continues over racial discrimination and unequal treatment in law enforcement.
Psychological Issues Within Law EnforcementDoug Aaron
This document discusses police misconduct and related issues. It begins with an overview of the powers given to law enforcement and defines police misconduct. It then discusses several high-profile cases of police misconduct in the US and their outcomes. It also summarizes research on predictors of police misconduct, such as personality traits and stress. The document examines efforts to address misconduct through training, supervision, and accountability. It concludes by noting challenges in preventing misconduct among experienced officers.
Seri Webinar: Memahami dan Mengurai Impunitas di Indonesia
Memahami Impunitas di Indonesia: Suatu Pengantar
Impunitas – secara singkat didefinisikan sebagai 'pembebasan dari hukuman' - mewabah di Indonesia. Artinya, pelanggaran hak asasi manusia pada umumnya dibiarkan begitu saja dan tidak berusaha dibenahi oleh negara dan institusi-institusi hukumnya. Di Indonesia, situasi ini telah ada selama beberapa dekade, dengan konsekuensi bencana bagi supremasi hukum dan masyarakat pada umumnya.
Banyak individu maupun organisasi yang terlibat aktif dalam upaya penguatan rule of law di Indonesia melihat fenomena ini sebagai masalah yang mendesak dan kompleks. Dengan latar belakang ini, Sekolah Tinggi Hukum Indonesia Jentera, Amnesty International Indonesia, Kelompok Kerja Indonesia-Belanda untuk Keadilan dan Pembangunan, dan Institut Van Vollenhoven dari Leiden Law School berinisiatif untuk menyelenggarakan lima seri webinar berjudul: Memahami dan Mengurai Impunitas di Indonesia.
Untuk mendiskusikan hal tersebut, mari bergabung dalam seri webinar pertama bertajuk “Memahami Impunitas di Indonesia: Suatu Pengantar”. Pada agenda ini, para pemateri akan berdiskusi secara interaktif perihal bagaimana akademisi hukum dan aktivis HAM mendefinisikan apa itu impunitas, serta menjelaskan bagaimana konteks sosial, politik, dan sejarah berkelindan di dalamnya.
Pembicara
Adriaan Bedner - Head of Department of the Van Vollenhoven Institute for Law, Leiden University
Usman Hamid - Direktur Eksekutif Amnesty International Indonesia dan Pengajar STH Indonesia Jentera
Moderator
Dian Rositawati - Peneliti Lembaga Kajian dan Advokasi untuk Independensi Peradilan dan Pengajar STH Indonesia Jentera
Acara diselenggarakan pada:
Kamis, 27 Januari 2022
Pukul 16.00-18.00 WIB
This document discusses police misconduct, the powers given to law enforcement, and laws related to police misconduct. It describes various forms of misconduct like excessive force and discrimination. It outlines federal laws that address both criminal and civil aspects of misconduct. The document also provides examples of historical cases of misconduct, like those involving the Rampart CRASH unit in LA and the beating of Rodney King. It discusses stress and mental health issues among police and rates of alcohol abuse and suicide.
Report on the human rights situation in Ukraine 15 June 2014DonbassFullAccess
The present report is based on findings of the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU) covering the period of 7 May – 7 June 2014. It follows two reports on the human rights situation in Ukraine released by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on 15 April and 16 May 2014.
Background on mass shootings observations and findings by alejandro montanoCyrellys Geibhendach
1. The document discusses observations about the increasing prevalence of mass shootings since the 1980s and their connection to the rise of the police state and loss of civil liberties.
2. It notes that mass shootings have common characteristics like the use of high-capacity weapons and occurrence in public places, but that investigations are often obstructed while the events are used to promote gun control and increased surveillance.
3. The document suggests that some mass shootings may have been planned or influenced by government mind control programs, and aims to condition the public to accept increased authoritarian control through fear of violence and instability.
2014 Human Rights Reports Middle East and North AfricaVeronica Baker
This document provides information about Algeria, including its government system and human rights issues. It discusses that Algeria is a multi-party republic led by a president elected for five-year terms, with President Abdelaziz Bouteflika having been in office since 1999. Key human rights problems include restrictions on freedom of assembly and association, lack of judicial independence, overuse of pretrial detention, and abuse by security forces including torture. Terrorist groups also remain active in the country carrying out attacks.
US STATE DEPARTMENT RELEASE 2018 BURMA HUMAN RIGHT REPORT ON 13-3-2019 MYO AUNG Myanmar
US STATE DEPARTMENT RELEASE 2018 BURMA HUMAN RIGHT REPORT ON 13-3-2019
https://burmese.voanews.com/a/us-state-department-human-rights-report-2019/4827968.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာ့ လူ႔အခြင့္အေရး စိုးရိမ္မကင္းျဖစ္မႈ ကန္အစီရင္ခံစာ ေထာက္ျပ
https://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2019/03/290295.htm
https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/289277.pdf
Basic report for the day of the endangered lawyer 2015JLMB
Three key points from the document:
1) Lawyers and judges in the Philippines continue to face threats, attacks, and killings due to their work, with 41 lawyers and 18 judges killed since 2001. Perpetrators are rarely arrested or prosecuted.
2) In the past two years, 9 lawyers have been killed and many others threatened or surveilled. The killings are often linked to the lawyers' work on human rights cases.
3) The Philippine government is criticized for failing to protect lawyers and bring perpetrators to justice, demonstrating a pattern of impunity for those who target members of the legal profession.
The title of this week’s session is taken from the famous study of ‘mugging’ by Stuart Hall et al. in the 1970s in which the authors note the racialised nature of the crime of mugging and the instigation of a public ‘moral panic’ in the association of young black men and violent street crime. Taking this as a starting point, we shall look at the way in which racialised people have been seen as having a natural propensity to crime and deviance that justifies the use of ‘special measures’ against them. We shall pay particularly close attention to the cases of disproportionate incarceration, the ‘prison industrial complex’ and of the suspension of law in the case of the ‘Northern Territory Intervention’.
The document provides a global update on key human rights events and issues from January to May 2010. It summarizes developments in different regions of the world, including progress and setbacks in accountability, threats to civilian protection from conflicts and natural disasters, concerns over the death penalty, and restrictions on civil and political rights in several countries.
Western sahara 2012 human rights reportwikitehouna
This document summarizes the human rights situation in Western Sahara in 2012. It describes Morocco's control over most of the territory and its ongoing dispute with the Polisario Front, which seeks independence. Key human rights issues include Morocco restricting pro-independence views and associations. Credible reports indicate security forces engaged in torture, beatings and mistreatment of detainees, especially Sahrawi independence advocates. Twenty-four Sahrawis arrested in 2010 remained in detention without clear charges as of the end of 2012.
MYANMAR: ANNUAL REPORT COUNTRY ENTRY 2016 By Amnesty International, ENGLISH V...MYO AUNG Myanmar
https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/asa16/3511/2016/my/
ENGLISH VERSION-
MYANMAR: ANNUAL REPORT COUNTRY ENTRY 2016
By Amnesty International, 24 February 2016, Index number: ASA 16/3511/2016
Authorities failed to address rising religious intolerance and incitement to discrimination and violence against
Muslims, allowing hardline Buddhist nationalist groups to grow in power and influence ahead of the November
general elections. The situation of the persecuted Rohingya deteriorated still further. The government
intensified a clampdown on freedoms of expression, association and peaceful assembly. Reports of abuses of
international human rights and humanitarian law in areas of internal armed conflict persisted. Security forces
suspected of human rights violations continued to enjoy near-total impunity.
The document discusses the evolution of the US Criminal Justice System from the mid-1940s to present day. Key events that shaped the system include the civil rights movement, Vietnam War protests, rising crime rates, and 9/11 terrorist attacks. These events eroded public confidence in law enforcement and led to reforms aimed at restoring order while balancing civil liberties and safety. Federal programs in the 1960s and 70s provided funds to improve policing and courts but also imposed standards around issues like racism and use of force. While reforms helped reduce crime, new threats like terrorism continue to test the balance of safety and individual freedom.
La Unión Europea ha acordado un paquete de sanciones contra Rusia por su invasión de Ucrania. Las sanciones incluyen restricciones a las importaciones de productos rusos clave como el acero y la madera, así como medidas contra bancos y funcionarios rusos. Los líderes de la UE esperan que las sanciones aumenten la presión económica sobre Rusia y la disuadan de continuar su agresión contra Ucrania.
Un informe de la Unidad de Vigilancia de la Secretaría de Salud de Honduras detalló que el país centroamericano contabiliza 41,848 casos de VIH desde 1985 hasta septiembre de 2023, de los cuales 26,257 casos avanzaron a Sida.
De acuerdo a la información proporcionada, del total de los casos, 23,635 son en hombres y 18,223 en mujeres. Entre 2021 y 2023 las autoridades detectaron 2,853 contagios de VIH, de ellos, 2,114 se registraron en hombres y 739 en mujeres.
Del total de los casos, 1,914 se detectaron como asintomáticos y 939 con la enfermedad ya avanzada. Según el registro, la principal vía de transmisión sigue siendo la sexual (94.9%).
De los casos nuevos diagnosticados de enero a septiembre del 2023, las personas que se auto definen como heterosexual es el 54.25%, mientras que la autodefinición homosexual y bisexual es de 29.03 y 14.08 % respectivamente, para el mismo periodo se reportó que el 0.29 % de los casos notificados se autodefinieron como mujeres trans.
En los últimos 6 años, el promedio de casos notificados a nivel nacional es de 1,070 casos y 8 departamentos acumulan el 84.31 % de los casos notificados, siendo estos: Cortes, Francisco Morazán, Atlántida, Colon, Yoro, Choluteca, El Paraíso e Islas de la Bahía.
Mientras que las ciudades con mayor carga de VIH entre 2021 y 2023 son: San Pedro Sula (Cortés) con 6,595 contagios; Tegucigalpa (Francisco Morazán) con 5,136 casos; La Ceiba (Atlántida), 1,210;, El Progreso (Yoro), 927; Choloma (Cortés), 738; Choluteca (Choluteca), 685; Tela (Atlántida), 657 y Puerto Cortés, con 6631.
La mayoría de casos de VIH en Honduras de 2021 a 2023 se registran en personas entre los 25 y 29 años de edad (8,193), seguidos de los que se encuentran entre los 30 y 34 años (7,238) y los comprendidos entre los 20 y 24 años (6,722).
Asimismo, hay 1,840 casos de niños entre los 0 y 9 años de edad, y 2,329 contagios en menores de entre 10 y 19 años.
El 86.9 % de los casos corresponde a la raza mestiza, el 4.6 % a garífuna, seguido de los misquitos con un 4.3 %, el grupo más afectado sigue siendo la población económicamente activa 56.1%, el 56.5 corresponde al sexo masculino y 43.5% al sexo femenino.
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The Kyrgyz Republic held parliamentary elections in October 2020 that were marred by accusations of corruption. This led to protests, the resignation of President Jeenbekov, and the interim appointment of Sadyr Japarov as acting president. A new presidential election was then scheduled for January 2021. The report documents several human rights issues in the country including torture by law enforcement, poor prison conditions, restrictions on free expression and media, and impunity for violence against women. While some officials were prosecuted for corruption, widespread impunity remained a problem.
The document summarizes Lithuania's 2014 human rights report. Some key issues included overcrowding and poor conditions in some prisons, discrimination against Roma and LGBT populations, and allegations of excessive force by police during arrests. While Lithuania is a parliamentary democracy, issues remained such as interference with privacy, limitations on free expression, and inadequate facilities for persons with disabilities. The government took steps to address issues like prosecuting officials for abuses and improving prison conditions and oversight.
265706 Relation between Sandro Suzart, SUZART, GOOGLE INC, United State...Sandro Santana
Sandro Suzart, SUZART, GOOGLE INC and United States on relationship among Demonstrations, 2013. IMPEACHMENTS of 22 governments, Relation, Sandro Suzart, SUZART, GOOGLE INC, United States, Demonstrations countries IMPEACHMENT, GOOGLE INC, the torture suffered by Sandro Suzart, Genocide in Egypt and Lybia.
265706 Relation Sandro Suzart SUZART GOOGLE INC United States on Demon...Sandro Suzart
The document summarizes the 2016 human rights report on Egypt. It notes that while elections were administered professionally according to the country's laws, freedoms of expression, assembly, and association were constrained. The main human rights issues were excessive use of force by security forces, due process deficiencies, and suppression of civil liberties including restrictions on media and protests. Impunity for security forces was also a problem. Terrorist attacks caused unlawful killings while the military's operations in Sinai led to civilian casualties and property destruction. Forced disappearances increased with hundreds detained without charge.
Human Rights Practices for 2015 UkraineАндрій Пізнюк
1) Separatists in eastern Ukraine committed widespread human rights abuses such as abductions, torture, unlawful detention and restricted humanitarian aid. The conflict has resulted in over 9,000 deaths and more than two million people have fled the region.
2) In Crimea, Russian occupation authorities committed human rights abuses targeting Crimean Tatars and others opposing the occupation. More than 20,000 Crimeans have been displaced.
3) Ukraine suffers from corruption, deficiencies in justice, and a climate of impunity as authorities generally fail to prosecute officials who commit abuses. Investigations into human rights crimes remain incomplete.
This document summarizes the human rights situation in Colombia based on a United Nations report from July 2008. It finds that serious and systematic human rights violations by state forces and paramilitary groups continue, including extrajudicial killings, torture, arbitrary detentions and forced displacement. The government denies the existence of an internal armed conflict despite the facts on the ground. It pursues a "democratic security" policy that prioritizes military force over human rights and fails to dismantle paramilitary groups or their links to state forces. Peace negotiations with guerrilla groups are also blocked in favor of a military solution.
Racial profiling has been studied extensively in New York City, where researchers have found evidence that it does occur. Studies have shown that police activity disproportionately targets minority groups, which some attribute to the "Broken Windows Theory" of policing minor crimes. However, the facts also show that police focus extends beyond just disorderly individuals in certain areas. A police chief's email condoning racial profiling has raised concerns and could lead to his firing if found to be legitimate. Debate continues over racial discrimination and unequal treatment in law enforcement.
Psychological Issues Within Law EnforcementDoug Aaron
This document discusses police misconduct and related issues. It begins with an overview of the powers given to law enforcement and defines police misconduct. It then discusses several high-profile cases of police misconduct in the US and their outcomes. It also summarizes research on predictors of police misconduct, such as personality traits and stress. The document examines efforts to address misconduct through training, supervision, and accountability. It concludes by noting challenges in preventing misconduct among experienced officers.
Seri Webinar: Memahami dan Mengurai Impunitas di Indonesia
Memahami Impunitas di Indonesia: Suatu Pengantar
Impunitas – secara singkat didefinisikan sebagai 'pembebasan dari hukuman' - mewabah di Indonesia. Artinya, pelanggaran hak asasi manusia pada umumnya dibiarkan begitu saja dan tidak berusaha dibenahi oleh negara dan institusi-institusi hukumnya. Di Indonesia, situasi ini telah ada selama beberapa dekade, dengan konsekuensi bencana bagi supremasi hukum dan masyarakat pada umumnya.
Banyak individu maupun organisasi yang terlibat aktif dalam upaya penguatan rule of law di Indonesia melihat fenomena ini sebagai masalah yang mendesak dan kompleks. Dengan latar belakang ini, Sekolah Tinggi Hukum Indonesia Jentera, Amnesty International Indonesia, Kelompok Kerja Indonesia-Belanda untuk Keadilan dan Pembangunan, dan Institut Van Vollenhoven dari Leiden Law School berinisiatif untuk menyelenggarakan lima seri webinar berjudul: Memahami dan Mengurai Impunitas di Indonesia.
Untuk mendiskusikan hal tersebut, mari bergabung dalam seri webinar pertama bertajuk “Memahami Impunitas di Indonesia: Suatu Pengantar”. Pada agenda ini, para pemateri akan berdiskusi secara interaktif perihal bagaimana akademisi hukum dan aktivis HAM mendefinisikan apa itu impunitas, serta menjelaskan bagaimana konteks sosial, politik, dan sejarah berkelindan di dalamnya.
Pembicara
Adriaan Bedner - Head of Department of the Van Vollenhoven Institute for Law, Leiden University
Usman Hamid - Direktur Eksekutif Amnesty International Indonesia dan Pengajar STH Indonesia Jentera
Moderator
Dian Rositawati - Peneliti Lembaga Kajian dan Advokasi untuk Independensi Peradilan dan Pengajar STH Indonesia Jentera
Acara diselenggarakan pada:
Kamis, 27 Januari 2022
Pukul 16.00-18.00 WIB
This document discusses police misconduct, the powers given to law enforcement, and laws related to police misconduct. It describes various forms of misconduct like excessive force and discrimination. It outlines federal laws that address both criminal and civil aspects of misconduct. The document also provides examples of historical cases of misconduct, like those involving the Rampart CRASH unit in LA and the beating of Rodney King. It discusses stress and mental health issues among police and rates of alcohol abuse and suicide.
Report on the human rights situation in Ukraine 15 June 2014DonbassFullAccess
The present report is based on findings of the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU) covering the period of 7 May – 7 June 2014. It follows two reports on the human rights situation in Ukraine released by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on 15 April and 16 May 2014.
Background on mass shootings observations and findings by alejandro montanoCyrellys Geibhendach
1. The document discusses observations about the increasing prevalence of mass shootings since the 1980s and their connection to the rise of the police state and loss of civil liberties.
2. It notes that mass shootings have common characteristics like the use of high-capacity weapons and occurrence in public places, but that investigations are often obstructed while the events are used to promote gun control and increased surveillance.
3. The document suggests that some mass shootings may have been planned or influenced by government mind control programs, and aims to condition the public to accept increased authoritarian control through fear of violence and instability.
2014 Human Rights Reports Middle East and North AfricaVeronica Baker
This document provides information about Algeria, including its government system and human rights issues. It discusses that Algeria is a multi-party republic led by a president elected for five-year terms, with President Abdelaziz Bouteflika having been in office since 1999. Key human rights problems include restrictions on freedom of assembly and association, lack of judicial independence, overuse of pretrial detention, and abuse by security forces including torture. Terrorist groups also remain active in the country carrying out attacks.
US STATE DEPARTMENT RELEASE 2018 BURMA HUMAN RIGHT REPORT ON 13-3-2019 MYO AUNG Myanmar
US STATE DEPARTMENT RELEASE 2018 BURMA HUMAN RIGHT REPORT ON 13-3-2019
https://burmese.voanews.com/a/us-state-department-human-rights-report-2019/4827968.html?ltflags=mailer
ျမန္မာ့ လူ႔အခြင့္အေရး စိုးရိမ္မကင္းျဖစ္မႈ ကန္အစီရင္ခံစာ ေထာက္ျပ
https://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2019/03/290295.htm
https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/289277.pdf
Basic report for the day of the endangered lawyer 2015JLMB
Three key points from the document:
1) Lawyers and judges in the Philippines continue to face threats, attacks, and killings due to their work, with 41 lawyers and 18 judges killed since 2001. Perpetrators are rarely arrested or prosecuted.
2) In the past two years, 9 lawyers have been killed and many others threatened or surveilled. The killings are often linked to the lawyers' work on human rights cases.
3) The Philippine government is criticized for failing to protect lawyers and bring perpetrators to justice, demonstrating a pattern of impunity for those who target members of the legal profession.
The title of this week’s session is taken from the famous study of ‘mugging’ by Stuart Hall et al. in the 1970s in which the authors note the racialised nature of the crime of mugging and the instigation of a public ‘moral panic’ in the association of young black men and violent street crime. Taking this as a starting point, we shall look at the way in which racialised people have been seen as having a natural propensity to crime and deviance that justifies the use of ‘special measures’ against them. We shall pay particularly close attention to the cases of disproportionate incarceration, the ‘prison industrial complex’ and of the suspension of law in the case of the ‘Northern Territory Intervention’.
The document provides a global update on key human rights events and issues from January to May 2010. It summarizes developments in different regions of the world, including progress and setbacks in accountability, threats to civilian protection from conflicts and natural disasters, concerns over the death penalty, and restrictions on civil and political rights in several countries.
Western sahara 2012 human rights reportwikitehouna
This document summarizes the human rights situation in Western Sahara in 2012. It describes Morocco's control over most of the territory and its ongoing dispute with the Polisario Front, which seeks independence. Key human rights issues include Morocco restricting pro-independence views and associations. Credible reports indicate security forces engaged in torture, beatings and mistreatment of detainees, especially Sahrawi independence advocates. Twenty-four Sahrawis arrested in 2010 remained in detention without clear charges as of the end of 2012.
MYANMAR: ANNUAL REPORT COUNTRY ENTRY 2016 By Amnesty International, ENGLISH V...MYO AUNG Myanmar
https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/asa16/3511/2016/my/
ENGLISH VERSION-
MYANMAR: ANNUAL REPORT COUNTRY ENTRY 2016
By Amnesty International, 24 February 2016, Index number: ASA 16/3511/2016
Authorities failed to address rising religious intolerance and incitement to discrimination and violence against
Muslims, allowing hardline Buddhist nationalist groups to grow in power and influence ahead of the November
general elections. The situation of the persecuted Rohingya deteriorated still further. The government
intensified a clampdown on freedoms of expression, association and peaceful assembly. Reports of abuses of
international human rights and humanitarian law in areas of internal armed conflict persisted. Security forces
suspected of human rights violations continued to enjoy near-total impunity.
The document discusses the evolution of the US Criminal Justice System from the mid-1940s to present day. Key events that shaped the system include the civil rights movement, Vietnam War protests, rising crime rates, and 9/11 terrorist attacks. These events eroded public confidence in law enforcement and led to reforms aimed at restoring order while balancing civil liberties and safety. Federal programs in the 1960s and 70s provided funds to improve policing and courts but also imposed standards around issues like racism and use of force. While reforms helped reduce crime, new threats like terrorism continue to test the balance of safety and individual freedom.
Similar to 415610_HONDURAS-2022-HUMAN-RIGHTS-REPORT.pdf (20)
La Unión Europea ha acordado un paquete de sanciones contra Rusia por su invasión de Ucrania. Las sanciones incluyen restricciones a las importaciones de productos rusos clave como el acero y la madera, así como medidas contra bancos y funcionarios rusos. Los líderes de la UE esperan que las sanciones aumenten la presión económica sobre Rusia y la disuadan de continuar su agresión contra Ucrania.
Un informe de la Unidad de Vigilancia de la Secretaría de Salud de Honduras detalló que el país centroamericano contabiliza 41,848 casos de VIH desde 1985 hasta septiembre de 2023, de los cuales 26,257 casos avanzaron a Sida.
De acuerdo a la información proporcionada, del total de los casos, 23,635 son en hombres y 18,223 en mujeres. Entre 2021 y 2023 las autoridades detectaron 2,853 contagios de VIH, de ellos, 2,114 se registraron en hombres y 739 en mujeres.
Del total de los casos, 1,914 se detectaron como asintomáticos y 939 con la enfermedad ya avanzada. Según el registro, la principal vía de transmisión sigue siendo la sexual (94.9%).
De los casos nuevos diagnosticados de enero a septiembre del 2023, las personas que se auto definen como heterosexual es el 54.25%, mientras que la autodefinición homosexual y bisexual es de 29.03 y 14.08 % respectivamente, para el mismo periodo se reportó que el 0.29 % de los casos notificados se autodefinieron como mujeres trans.
En los últimos 6 años, el promedio de casos notificados a nivel nacional es de 1,070 casos y 8 departamentos acumulan el 84.31 % de los casos notificados, siendo estos: Cortes, Francisco Morazán, Atlántida, Colon, Yoro, Choluteca, El Paraíso e Islas de la Bahía.
Mientras que las ciudades con mayor carga de VIH entre 2021 y 2023 son: San Pedro Sula (Cortés) con 6,595 contagios; Tegucigalpa (Francisco Morazán) con 5,136 casos; La Ceiba (Atlántida), 1,210;, El Progreso (Yoro), 927; Choloma (Cortés), 738; Choluteca (Choluteca), 685; Tela (Atlántida), 657 y Puerto Cortés, con 6631.
La mayoría de casos de VIH en Honduras de 2021 a 2023 se registran en personas entre los 25 y 29 años de edad (8,193), seguidos de los que se encuentran entre los 30 y 34 años (7,238) y los comprendidos entre los 20 y 24 años (6,722).
Asimismo, hay 1,840 casos de niños entre los 0 y 9 años de edad, y 2,329 contagios en menores de entre 10 y 19 años.
El 86.9 % de los casos corresponde a la raza mestiza, el 4.6 % a garífuna, seguido de los misquitos con un 4.3 %, el grupo más afectado sigue siendo la población económicamente activa 56.1%, el 56.5 corresponde al sexo masculino y 43.5% al sexo femenino.
Los riesgos y violencias hacia los periodistas en América persisten, de acuerdo con el Índice Chapultepec de Libertad de Expresión y Prensa presentado este viernes por la Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa (SIP) en su asamblea general anual, que se celebra estos días en la Ciudad de México.
Los países de América Latina descendieron a su nivel más bajo en el promedio de libertad global de libertad de prensa, detalló este día en la Ciudad de México la SIP, organismo que centra su 79 asamblea en la seguridad de los periodistas y el aumento de ataques a instalaciones de medios y sus trabajadores.
El informe, que mide los grados de libertad de prensa y expresión en 22 países de las Américas, así como los informes de cada nación, arrojó que Cuba, Venezuela y Nicaragua se encuentran en el estatus "sin libertad de expresión".
Honduras, El Salvador, Bolivia y Guatemala figuran en la lista de países con alta restricción a la libertad de prensa -solamente Guatemala figuraba antes-.
El Índice Chapultepec hace un llamamiento de alerta en cuanto a la percepción que se tiene en 22 países de las Américas sobre las políticas comunicacionales, leyes y comportamientos judiciales que, en su conjunto, afectan los derechos comunicacionales y garantías a la prensa, "pilares fundamentales de todo sistema democrático".
Contiene una medición de 100 variables de las libertades de prensa y expresión.
Durante el lapso comprendido entre el 2 de agosto de 2022 y el 1 de agosto de 2023 se recogieron datos que revelan que Colombia se encuentra en la categoría de "restricción de libertad de expresión" con 52,3 puntos.
A Colombia le siguen Paraguay (51,63), Argentina (51,34), Perú (50,69), Brasil (48,41) y México (41,82).
Durante la presentación del Índice, el presidente de la Comisión de Libertad de Prensa de Información de la SIP, Carlos Hugo Jornet, dijo que América padece una "auténtica tragedia autoritaria"
"Es cada vez más difícil hablar de democracias plenas y el impacto sobre el ejercicio periodismo es directo y esto lo refleja claramente la nueva edición del indice", estableció.
Señaló que, ante el declive democrático, es imprescindible promover "más y mejor democracia" y que lejos de bajar los brazos hay que redoblar la lucha por la libertar, los reclamos país por país y la búsqueda de alianzas con organismos internacionales y otras organizaciones que defienden la libertad de expresión.
En América Latina, los riesgos y las violencias dirigidas hacia los periodistas continúan siendo una preocupación significativa, según reveló este viernes el Índice Chapultepec de Libertad de Expresión y Prensa, presentado por la Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa (SIP) en su asamblea general anual en la Ciudad de México.
Este índice, que mide las libertades de prensa y expresión en 22 países de las Américas, señala que la región ha descendido a su nivel más bajo en el promedio de libertad global de prensa.
Cuba, Venezuela y Nicaragua son clasificados como países "sin libertad de expresión", mientras que Honduras, El Salvador, Bolivia y Guatemala figuran entre aquellos con alta "restricción" a la libertad de prensa.
El informe, del periodo del 2 de agosto de 2022 al 1 de agosto del 2023, comprende el segundo año de gobierno de la presidenta Xiomara Castro, señala que Honduras llegó a los 36.50 puntos, inferior al índice global de 47.84 puntos, "una notable disminución en la calificación y una libertad de expresión que se limita por ideología política y de pensamiento", según la SIP.
Además, se evidencia que en los últimos años se ha venido deteriorando la libertad de expresión, pues cayó cerca de 10.00 puntos con respecto a los datos del anterior Índice Chapultepec.
"El papel de las redes sociales que le ha dado el Gobierno Honduras ha sido muy importante, ya que la actual administración la ha utilizado para resaltar sus logros,
promocionar figuras de la familia Zelaya Castro y atacar a los opositores", mencionó la SIP.
La valoración de la acción institucional de la "Ciudadanía informada y libre de expresarse" está en 4.67 puntos de 23 puntos posibles. La percepción se deriva a que en Honduras existe un alto grado de polarización que se ha incrementado desde el golpe de Estado ocurrido en el 2009 contra el expresidente Manuel Zelaya, "esta división de la sociedad generó crisis política, económica y hasta familiar entre ricos y pobres, excluidos, marginados y beneficiados del sistema", dice el informe.
La valoración respecto a las situaciones desfavorables a la libertad de expresión, específicamente en el ejercicio del periodismo, es de 4.44 puntos de 10.00 puntos posibles.
En ese sentido, la SIP realta que "las condiciones de los periodistas y comunicadores sociales para ejercer un periodismo objetivo e imparcial son cada vez más complejas, ya que el Gobierno de Castro tiene una abierta campaña de confrontación con todos los sectores, inclusive la prensa y los medios de comunicación, ya que cuando se les señala algunos errores, falta de transparencia, abusos en el ejercicio del poder, sus principales voceros salen con violencia, con ataques de tipo personal en contra de quienes los adversan".
La situación actual de Honduras respecto a la violencia e impunidad al gremio periodístico es de 14.84 de 43 puntos posibles. El ejercicio del periodismo sigue siendo una actividad profesional que representa peligro, y aunque en el último año no s
Informe Situacional por Frente Frio del 02-11-2023 al 09-11-2023 Hora 2200.pdfTu Nota
El documento proporciona un informe de afectaciones debido a un evento entre el 02-11-2023 y el 09-11-2023. Se reportan 50,904 personas afectadas, 5,541 damnificadas y 2,835 evacuadas en varios departamentos de Honduras. Se detallan las afectaciones en diferentes municipios, incluyendo inundaciones, deslaves, árboles caídos y otros daños.
Implementación_del_Estándar_de_Intercambio_de_Información_Previa.pdfTu Nota
Honduras podría ser declarada como una "guarida fiscal", alertó este jueves el titular del Servicio de Administración de Rentas (SAR), Marlon Ochoa, luego de recibir una comunicación de la Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económico (OCDE) que urgió por la pronta aprobación de la Ley de Justicia Tributaria que se impulsa en el Congreso Nacional.
Actualmente, Honduras se encuentra en una evaluación del Foro Global sobre Transparencia e Intercambio de Información con fines Fiscales de la OCDE, donde una calificación "no conforme" implicaría mayores dificultades para acceder a préstamos y donaciones para el desarrollo del país y sanciones ecónomicas para exportarción de productos.
En la comunición de la OCDE se manifiesta que la evaluación preliminar del marco jurídico del estándar sobre transparencia e intercambio de información previa solicitud (EOIR) en Honduras, identificó numerosas deficiencias que, si no se abordan, es probable que tengan un impacto significativo en el resultado de la revisión donde Honduras podría no alcanzar una calificación satisfactoria para junio de 2024.
"Es importante que Honduras haya promulgado la Ley de Justicia Tributaria y otras reformas necesarias hasta tal fecha, pues, en caso haya algún retraso, la revisión de Honduras puede ser afectada de forma negativa", resalta el documento.
La OCDE resaltó que el Foro Global asistió a Honduras para mejorar las áreas relacionadas con el EOIR de la propuesta de Ley de Justicia Tributaria, incluyendo las secciones relacionadas con la creación de un Registro de Beneficiarios Finales, con los poderes del SAR, para acceder a la información, en particular a la información bancaria y la abolición de las acciones al portador.
El organismo internacional señaló que en Honduras la información sobre la titularidad jurídica no está totalmente disponible ni en las propias entidades, ni en el Registro Mercantil, ni en la autoridad tributaria, donde hay entidades que pueden tener personalidad jurídica aunque no estén inscritas en el Registro Mercantil.
También resaltan que la información no se verifica ni se actualiza periódicamente y no existe ningún requisito legal e mantenimiento de registros. Tampoco hay supervisión ni cumplimiento de las obligaciones, por lo que existe el riesgo de que la información sobre la propiedad legal no esté disponible para esta categoría de entidades.
Honduras... y el pasado que no se va...11102023_JCastellanos (1).pdfTu Nota
La socióloga hondureaña Julieta Castellanos se refiere al proceso de elección del fiscal general y fiscal general adjunto del Ministerio Público para el período 2023-2028.
La Oficina del Alto Comisionado de las Naciones Unidas para los Derechos Humanos (Oacnudh) manifestó su preocupación por la participación de fuerzas de seguridad, tanto civiles como militares, que violentan sus derechos humanos en zonas fronterizas consideradas como rutas migratorias.
En su informe de enero a agosto de 2023, denominado "La securitización y la aplicación de medidas restrictivas de gobernanza migratoria en las fronteras", la Oacnudh indicó que se recibieron múltiples denuncias de abusos en las fronteras, sobre todo desde el inicio de las caravanas de migrantes iniciadas en 2018 en Honduras y desde la aplicación de medidas de restricción de movilidad en el contexto de la pandemia del covid-19 en 2020.
"Para prevenir la migración irregular y contener los flujos migratorios, algunos países en la región han implementado medidas y políticas restrictivas de migración y gobernanza de fronteras con fines de seguridad, como la militarización, que afectan las opciones de muchas personas migrantes para viajar de forma segura y regular, y en muchos casos tiene efectos perjudiciales para sus derechos humanos", destacó la Oacnudh.
El organizmo indicó que, aunque la colaboración de fuerzas de seguridad con autoridades migratorias en las fronteras de algunos países ha contribuido a rescatar y salvar vidas de personas migrantes en situación de vulnerabilidad, por ejemplo en la selva del Darién, Panamá, en otros países estas medidas han sido un factor de riesgo para los derechos humanos de las personas migrantes.
Según cifras, por el Darién han pasado ya más de 350,000 personas -sobre todo venezolanos- con rumbo a México y Estados Unidos.
Los_clientes_corruptos_de_Maribel_Espinoza_.pdfTu Nota
La abogada y actual diputada del Congreso Nacional, Maribel Espinoza, denunció que el Gobierno del partido Libertad y Refundación (Libre, de izquierda) está instrumentalizando el Servicio de Administración de Rentas (SAR) para divulgar su información financiera que debería ser confidencial.
En comunicación con Tunota.com, Maribel Espinoza, diputada por el Partido Salvador de Honduras (PSH), indicó que en los últimos días se ha divulgado información sobre sus ingresos relacionados a supuestos casos que ha defendido como abogada, de los cuales descartó estar relacionada.
"Hace dos días sacaron un libelo con medias verdades y medidas mentiras en el cual se centra la acusación en mis ingresos. He sido una profesional del derecho independiente, nunca he trabajado con el gobierno y nunca he sido funcionaria", manifestó.
De acuerdo al documento publicado, Espinoza tiene supuestos vínculos con grandes empresarios hondureños a los que supuestamente ha defendido y ha obtenido, a raíz de la defensa, cifras millonarias por su trabajo.
Entre los empresarios figuran Jonathan Samuel Schacher Kafati, David Chávez Madison, Nasry Asfura, la transnacional colombiana Empresa Energía Honduras (EEH) y el narcotraficante hondureño Geovanny Fuentes Ramirez. Espinoza desconoció esos vínculos.
De acuerdo al informe de la Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (Cepal), hasta junio de 2023, Honduras registró una tasa de inflación menor a la del cierre de 2022, representando una reducción de más de 4 puntos porcentuales.
Se prevé que el gasto primario registre un crecimiento lento en América Latina, inferior a la expansión esperada del Producto Interno Bruto (PIB), siendo Panamá (5.1 %), Costa Rica (3.8 %) Honduras y Guatemala, ambos con una expansión del 3.4 %, los que más crecimiento representan en el área centroamericana.
El organismo de Naciones Unidas en su informe "Estudio Económico de América Latina y el Caribe, 2023. El financiamiento de una transición sostenible: inversión para crecer y enfrentar el cambio climático", elevó su proyección de crecimiento del PIB regional para 2023, del 1.2 %, estimado el pasado abril, a un 1.7 % a agosto.
De acuerdo con las proyecciones fiscales presentadas por los países de América Latina, el gasto
total caería como consecuencia de la contracción prevista del gasto corriente primario y pasaría de
representar un 21.6% del PIB en 2022 a representar un 21.4% de este en 2023.
El bajo crecimiento de 2023 y 2024 redundará en una desaceleración del empleo, que crecerá solo un 1.9 % en 2023 y en 1..1 % en 2024, de acuerdo al documento.
En Honduras, la Cepañ destaca los mayores egresos debidos al Bono Tecnológico Productivo y la continuación del subsidio de energía eléctrica por parte del Gobierno, que entró en vigor en febrero de 2022.
Agrega que el aumento observado en los gastos de capital se debe en gran medida a la baja base de comparación del año anterior, cuando esos gastos se subejecutaron debido a la reforma de la estructura del sector público y los retrasos en la aprobación de proyectos.
Cabe mencionar que el alza que se registró en los otros gastos de capital en Honduras se debe en parte al
traspaso de recursos de la Administración Central al Banco Nacional de Desarrollo Agrícola (Banadesa), equivalente al 0.2% del PIB y que tenía por objeto fomentar la oferta de crédito en condiciones
favorables a las pymes del sector agrícola.
El sector también contribuye mucho a la actividad económica y supera el 10 % del PIB en Honduras. La agricultura es, además, un importante generador de divisas, y las exportaciones de alimentos y bebidas equivalen a más del 25 % de las exportaciones totales del país centroamericano.
Honduras registra 47 muertes por la covid-19, mientras que los contagios suman 5.235 en 2023, informó este martes el jefe de la Unidad de Vigilancia de la Secretaría de Salud, Lorenzo Pavón, quien señaló que las nuevas variantes XBB.116, XBB 1.15 y XBB 1.13 ya circulan en el país.
En la primera semana de agosto fueron confirmados tres nuevos decesos, con los que la cifra global se elevó a 47 desde enero pasado, indicó Pavón.
Se trata de dos hombres y una mujer, todos de 31 años, que residían en los departamentos de Choluteca y Comayagua, sur y centro de Honduras, y Tegucigalpa, la capital, añadió.
Las autoridades sanitarias diagnosticaron durante la última semana 236 nuevos contagios positivos luego de procesar 1.509 pruebas, para dejar la estadística en 5.235 en más de siete meses de 2023.
Según la Secretaría de Salud, el país registra 18 hondureños hospitalizados a causa de la covid-19, de los que 13 presentan una condición estable, uno está grave y cuatro en unidades de cuidados intensivos.
Pavón aseguró además que las variantes del SARS-CoV-2 XBB.116, XBB 1.15 y XBB 1.13 ya circulan en el país centroamericano, por lo que hizo un llamamiento a la población que aún no se ha vacunado, a que lo haga lo antes posible.
Honduras, con 9,5 millones de habitantes, ha aplicado un poco más de 17 millones de inoculaciones, según cifras oficiales.
Del total de vacunados, 6,5 millones han recibido la primera dosis, 5,7 millones las dos y más de 4,7 millones las de refuerzo.
Honduras se encuentra inmersa en un contexto económico global desafiante, caracterizado por una desaceleración en el crecimiento mundial proyectado por el Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI). Se espera que la economía mundial crezca un 3.0 % en 2023 y 2024, una reducción respecto al 3.5 % registrado en 2022. Aunque se prevé una disminución en la inflación global, aún existen incertidumbres debido a eventos inesperados como conflictos o desastres naturales que podrían afectarla.
En junio de 2023, Honduras registró una inflación del 5.6 %, mostrando una disminución significativa en comparación con el 10.22 % registrado en junio de 2022. El rubro de alimentos también experimentó una reducción, pasando de un crecimiento interanual del 15.57 % en 2022 al 10.83 % en 2023. Este comportamiento se debe a la estabilización de los precios de materias primas a nivel internacional, especialmente en combustibles, energía y alimentos.
Aunque la economía hondureña experimentó una reactivación en 2021, al primer trimestre de 2023, el consumo privado mostró una desaceleración del 0.7 %. Esta tendencia se evidencia en una disminución del gasto en bienes no duraderos y servicios, lo cual puede atribuirse a diversos factores.
La inflación, aunque ha disminuido en general, mantiene altos los precios de los alimentos, llevando a las personas a reducir su consumo en bienes y servicios no esenciales. Además, el Índice de Confianza del Consumidor 2022 de la UNAH y COHEP refleja una moderada inseguridad sobre la economía y el empleo, lo que limita el dinero asignado al consumo. Estos factores, junto con las condiciones globales y las políticas gubernamentales, influyen en la dinámica económica del país, restringiendo el crecimiento y acentuando problemas como el empleo y la pobreza.
Presentación del Proyecto de Ley de Equidad Tributaria - Partido Liberal de ...Tu Nota
El Partido Liberal dio a conocer el miércoles el borrador del anteproyecto de la Ley de Equidad Tributaria, una alternativa a la Ley de Justicia Tributaria presentada por el Poder Ejecutivo al Congreso Nacional en abril pasado.
La presentación del anteproyecto se efectuó desde el Consejo Central Ejecutivo del Partido Liberal (CCEPL).
Miembros del CCEPL y diputados del Partido Liberal destacó que uno de los objetivos principales del proyecto es alcanzar un pacto fiscal en el que participen todos los sectores obreros, empresarios y partidos políticos, con el fin de lograr un acuerdo que garantice el crecimiento económico, la inversión y la creación de empleo.
HORARIOS AGUA POTABLE-16-31julio 2023 rgcc.pdfTu Nota
Este documento presenta el horario de abastecimiento de agua potable para diferentes sectores de Tegucigalpa durante el periodo del 16 al 31 de julio de 2023. Incluye los números de contacto para reportar tuberías rotas, desperdicio de agua u obstrucciones. Divide la ciudad en diferentes sectores y especifica los días y horarios en que cada sector tendrá acceso al agua.
Analisis_PersonasDesaparecidas_HN_2022-1.pdfTu Nota
Entre 2012 y 2022, la Policía Nacional de Honduras contabiliza a 9,838 personas reportadas como desaparecidas, de las que 6,100 son hombres (62 %) y 3,738 mujeres (38 %).
El Distrito Central con 44 % (4,329 desapariciones) y San Pedro Sula con 11 % (1,082), las dos principales ciudades de Honduras, son las que más desapariciones reportan.
Les siguen El Progreso, Yoro (5 %), Danlí, El Paraíso (5 %), Comayagua, Comayagua (4 %) y La Esperanza, Intibucá; Villanueva, Cortés; Tocoa, Colón; La Ceiba, Atlántida y Juticalpa, Olancho, con 1 % cada uno.
Estos 10 municipios de Honduras concentran el 76 % (7,477) de las desapariciones.
Según los rgistros, el 30 % de las personas desaparecias (2,951) son menores de 18 años, y 72 % (7,083) son personas menores de 41 años de edad.
El 39 % (3,837) desaparecieron en su ámbito privado (casa de habitación), un 33 % (3,247) de los hondureños desaparecieron en la vía pública, un 17 % (1,672) en lugares desconocidos y 6 % (590) en autobancos.
Asimismo, los locales comerciales, escuelas, hospitales y otros representaron el 1 %, respectivamente.
Evolución de desapariciones
El 2019 fue el año en el que más victimas se reportaron con 1,356, seguido de 2018 con 1,165 y el 2021 con 1,120.
En el 2012 el número de desapariciones fue de 545; en 2013 fue de 622; 2014 reportó 725; 689 fueron en 2015; 893 en 2016 y en 2017 el número ascendió a 923.
496 desaparecidos menos se registraron en 2020 (860), en comparación con el 2019, y en 2022 (940) fueron 180 menos en comparación al 2021.
En 2022, se reportaron unas 78 desapariciones por mes y el 31 % (291) se registraron en el segundo trimestre de ese año.
HORARIOS AGUA POTABLE 1 al 15 de julio 2023 rgcc.pdfTu Nota
El horario establecido es de apertura en el tanque y la llegada de agua en cada uno de los hogares dependerá del punto de ubicación (los cuales podrán adelantarse 1 dia de acuerdo a la disponibilidad de producción en las plantas de tratamiento).
Reporte semestral de la Ejecución del Presupuesto General de la República 202...Tu Nota
El resumen del reporte semestral de ejecución presupuestaria del gobierno hondureño es:
1) Los ingresos totales fueron de L150,103 millones, un 1.7% más que en 2022, mientras que los gastos fueron de L130,031 millones.
2) La inversión pública ejecutada fue solo del 20.4% de lo presupuestado, concentrándose principalmente en el sector energético.
3) Existe una brecha de L23,369 millones entre compromisos de pago y recursos disponibles, lo que
Horario de distribución de agua potable en TegucigalpaTu Nota
La Unidad Municipal de Agua Potable y Saneamiento (UMAPS), comunicó a través de sus redes sociales el horario de distribución de agua potable para Tegucigalpa para la semana del lunes 26 y hasta el viernes 30 de junio.
Cabe señalar que el horario publicado corresponde solamente a las regiones y colonias de la capital que se abastecen por la planta de tratamiento de Los Laureles.
Convocatoria-Publica-a-ocupar-cargo-del-Rector-UNAH-2023.pdfTu Nota
La Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras (UNAH) convocó este lunes al concurso público para las postulaciones a ocupar el cargo de rector de la máxima casa de estudios.
A través de sus redes sociales, la UNAH difundió el boletín sobre la convocatoria pública y los requisitos que necesitarán cumplir los postulantes para ocuoar el cargo de rector, actualmente ocupado por Francisco Herrera Alvarado.
La UNAH recordó que Herrera Alvarado culmina sus funciones en el presente año, por lo que se debe buscar un nuevo rector para los próximos cuatro años, es decir, para el periodo 2024-2028.
Para aplicar al puesto, la UNAH estableció algunos parametros que deben cumplir en sus perfiles los postulantes, así como una serie de requisios para participar en el concurso público.
An astonishing, first-of-its-kind, report by the NYT assessing damage in Ukraine. Even if the war ends tomorrow, in many places there will be nothing to go back to.
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
Acolyte Episodes review (TV series) The Acolyte. Learn about the influence of the program on the Star Wars world, as well as new characters and story twists.
El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
Essential Tools for Modern PR Business .pptxPragencyuk
Discover the essential tools and strategies for modern PR business success. Learn how to craft compelling news releases, leverage press release sites and news wires, stay updated with PR news, and integrate effective PR practices to enhance your brand's visibility and credibility. Elevate your PR efforts with our comprehensive guide.
04062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
1. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2022
United States Department of State • Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor
HONDURAS 2022 HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Honduras is a constitutional, multiparty republic. The most recent national and
local elections were held in November 2021. Voters elected Xiomara Castro of the
LIBRE Party as president for a four-year term beginning in January. International
observers generally recognized the elections as free and fair.
The Honduran National Police maintain internal security and report to the
Secretariat of Security. The armed forces, which report to the Secretariat of
Defense, are responsible for external security but also exercise some domestic
security responsibilities in support of the national police and other civilian
authorities. Some larger cities have police forces that operate independently of the
national police and report to municipal authorities. The Military Police of Public
Order report to military authorities but conduct operations sanctioned by civilian
security officials as well as by military leaders. The National Interinstitutional
Security Force coordinates the overlapping responsibilities of the National Police,
Military Police of Public Order, National Intelligence Directorate, and Public
Ministry during interagency operations. Civilian authorities maintained effective
control over security forces. There were reports that members of the security
forces committed some abuses.
Significant human rights issues included credible reports of: unlawful or arbitrary
killings, including extrajudicial killings; torture and cases of cruel, inhuman, or
degrading treatment or punishment by government agents; harsh and life-
threatening prison conditions; arbitrary arrest or detention; serious restrictions on
freedom of expression and media, including threats to media members by criminal
elements; serious government corruption; lack of investigation of and
accountability for gender-based violence; and crimes involving violence or threats
of violence against Indigenous and Afro-descendant communities, and against
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex persons.
The government prosecuted some officials who committed human rights abuses or
engaged in corruption, but a weak judicial system and corruption were major
2. obstacles to obtaining convictions.
Criminal groups, including local and transnational gangs and narcotics traffickers,
were significant perpetrators of violent crimes and committed acts of homicide,
torture, kidnapping, extortion, human trafficking, intimidation, and other threats
and violence directed against human rights defenders, judicial authorities, lawyers,
business community members, journalists, bloggers, women, and other vulnerable
populations. The government investigated and prosecuted some of these crimes,
but impunity was widespread.
Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person
a. Arbitrary Deprivation of Life and Other Unlawful or Politically
Motivated Killings
There were several reports that the government or its agents committed arbitrary or
unlawful killings. The reported killings took place during law enforcement
operations or were linked to criminal activity by government agents. The Ministry
of Security’s Directorate of Disciplinary Police Affairs investigated members of
the Honduran National Police accused of human rights abuses. The Office of the
Inspector General of the Armed Forces and the Humanitarian Law Directorate
investigated and arrested members of the military accused of human rights abuses.
The National Human Rights Commission (CONADEH) reported two arbitrary or
unlawful killings by security forces as of August.
On May 31, members of the National Anti-Gang Unit shot and killed Wilson Ariel
Pérez Hernández in San Pedro Sula, Cortés Department. He was allegedly killed
while antigang unit officials tried to arrest him for assaulting a police officer at a
soccer match on May 29. On October 17, the Public Ministry charged four unit
officials for their involvement in Pérez’s killing.
The murder trial of police officer Jarol Rolando Perdomo Sarmiento concluded on
October 17. Perdomo was charged with the February 2021 murder of Keyla
Martínez in La Esperanza, Intibucá Department. The final verdict was pending a
constitutional appeal.
Page 2
3. Criminal groups, such as drug traffickers and local and transnational gangs
including MS-13 and the 18th Street gang, committed killings, extortion,
kidnappings, human trafficking, and intimidation of police, prosecutors,
journalists, women, human rights defenders, and others. Major urban centers and
drug trafficking routes experienced the highest rates of violence.
On July 14, alleged members of the MS-13 gang wearing antigang unit uniforms
killed Said Lobo Bonilla, son of former President Porfirio Lobo, and three other
persons in a targeted attack in Tegucigalpa. On September 22, the court in a
preliminary hearing charged Eber Ezequiel Espinoza and Erick David Macías
Rodríguez with quadruple homicide. Authorities continued to search for the
individuals who ordered the homicide.
On January 9, unknown assailants killed Pablo Hernández in San Marcos de
Caiquín, Lempira Department. Hernández had worked to promote Indigenous
rights in a variety of roles including as president of the Network of Agroecologists
of the Cacique Lempira Biosphere, as a member of the Network of Human Rights
Defenders of the Department of Lempira, and as a radio host of the Lenca radio
program Radio Tenan. Authorities continued to investigate the incident.
The government continued to prosecute individuals allegedly involved in the 2016
killing of environmental and Indigenous activist Berta Cáceres. On June 20, the
National Tribunal Court sentenced Roberto David Castillo Mejía to more than 22
years in prison for his role as one of the alleged coauthors of her murder.
b. Disappearance
There were no credible reports of disappearances by or on behalf of government
authorities.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment, and Other Related Abuses
Although the law prohibits such practices, government officials received
complaints and investigated alleged abuses by members of the security forces on
the streets and in detention centers.
Page 3
4. CONADEH reported 31 cases of alleged torture or cruel and inhuman treatment by
security forces through August, while the Public Ministry received 10 such reports
through July. The quasi-governmental National Committee for the Prevention of
Torture, Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment (CONAPREV) received 28
complaints of the use of torture or cruel and inhuman treatment through
September.
On January 13, National Police officials in Trujillo, Colón Department, allegedly
detained and tortured Luis Alberto Gutiérrez and Leonard Brown, beating
Gutiérrez and Brown in the police station.
Corruption along with a lack of investigative resources and judicial delays led to
widespread impunity, including for members of security forces. The Directorate of
Disciplinary Police Affairs investigated abuses by police forces. The Office of the
Inspector General of the Armed Forces and the Humanitarian Law Directorate
investigated abuses by the military. CONADEH received complaints involving
human rights abuses and referred them to the Public Ministry for investigation.
Prison and Detention Center Conditions
Prison conditions were harsh and at times life threatening due to pervasive gang-
related violence and the government’s failure to control criminal activity within the
prisons. Prisoners suffered from gross overcrowding; insufficient access to food,
water, and medical supplies; violence; and alleged abuse by prison officials.
Abusive Physical Conditions: Prisoners suffered from severe overcrowding,
malnutrition, lack of adequate sanitation and medical care, and, in some prisons,
lack of adequate ventilation and lighting. The National Prison Institute reported
that as of October 13, the total prison population was 19,619 in 25 prisons and one
detention center. According to CONAPREV, the system was designed for
approximately 13,000 inmates. Long periods of pretrial detention remained
common, with many pretrial detainees held with convicted prisoners. Nearly 46
percent of incarcerated individuals were in pretrial detention.
Authorities did not generally segregate those with tuberculosis or other infectious
diseases from the general prison population. There was limited support for persons
with mental illnesses or disabilities. CONAPREV reported every prison had a
Page 4
5. functioning health clinic with at least one medical professional, but basic medical
supplies and medicines were in short supply throughout the system. In most
prisons, only inmates who purchased bottled water or had water filters in their cells
had access to potable water.
The government failed to control pervasive gang-related violence and criminal
activity within the prisons. Many prisons lacked sufficient security personnel.
Many prisoners had access to weapons and other contraband, inmates attacked
other inmates with impunity, and inmates and their associates outside prison
threatened prison officials and their families. These conditions contributed to an
unstable, dangerous environment in the penitentiary system. Media reported
violent confrontations and killings between gang members in prisons throughout
the year.
CONAPREV reported 17 violent deaths in prisons as of September. On July 4,
alleged members of the 18th Street gang killed six fellow gang members at the El
Pozo maximum security prison in Ilama, Santa Bárbara Department.
As of September, CONAPREV reported the country’s detention center for high-
profile suspects and those in need of additional security, including police and
military officials, held 29 individuals. The center, administered by the National
Prison Institute, was on a military installation and received some support services
from the military.
Administration: The judicial system is legally responsible for monitoring prison
conditions and providing for the rights of prisoners. The government tasks
CONAPREV with visiting prisons and making recommendations for protecting the
rights of prisoners. Prisoners can submit complaints through a lawyer that may
emerge from an NGO before the Public Ministry.
Media noted that family members often faced long delays or were unable to visit
detainees.
Independent Monitoring: The government generally permitted prison visits by
independent local and international human rights observers, including the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
Page 5
6. Improvements: On March 10, the armed forces officially transferred control of
the National Prison Institute to the National Police as part of a government
initiative to demilitarize prisons. Following the transfer, the National Prison
Institute reported progress on visitation rights, food nutrition and quality, and
potable water access.
d. Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The law prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention and provides for the right of any
person to challenge the lawfulness of his or her arrest or detention in court. The
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights reported that authorities at times
failed to enforce these requirements effectively.
Arrest Procedures and Treatment of Detainees
By law, police may make arrests only with a warrant unless they make the arrest
during the commission of a crime, there is strong suspicion that a person has
committed a crime and might otherwise evade criminal prosecution, or they
encounter a person in possession of evidence related to a crime. The law requires
police to inform persons of the grounds for their arrest and bring detainees before a
competent judicial authority within 24 hours. It stipulates that a prosecutor has 24
additional hours to decide if there is probable cause for indictment, whereupon a
judge has 24 more hours to decide whether to issue a temporary detention order.
Such an order may be effective for up to six days, after which the judge must hold
a pretrial hearing to examine whether there is probable cause to continue pretrial
detention. The law allows bail for persons charged with some felonies and gives
prisoners the right of prompt access to family members. The law allows the
release of other suspects pending formal charges, on the condition that they
periodically report to authorities, although management of this reporting
mechanism was often weak. The government generally respected these provisions.
Persons suspected of any of 21 specific felonies must remain in custody, pending
the conclusion of judicial proceedings against them. Some judges, however, ruled
that such suspects may be released on the condition that they continue to report
periodically to authorities. The law grants prisoners the right to prompt access to a
lawyer of their choice and, if indigent, to government-provided counsel, although
Page 6
7. the public defender mechanism was weak, and authorities did not always abide by
these requirements.
Arbitrary Arrest: CONADEH reported 33 cases of arbitrary arrest through
August. The Public Ministry reported 11 cases of alleged illegal detention or
arbitrary arrest as of September.
On January 19, alleged security force members detained Indigenous community
leader Nicolás Rodriguez in Azacualpa, Copán Department, for more than 24 hours
before he was released.
Pretrial Detention: Judicial inefficiency, corruption, and insufficient resources
delayed proceedings in the criminal justice system, and lengthy pretrial detention
was a serious problem. For crimes with minimum sentences of six years’
imprisonment, the law authorizes pretrial detention of up to two years. The
prosecution may request an additional six-month extension, but many detainees
remained in pretrial detention much longer, including for more time than the
maximum period of incarceration for their alleged crime. The law does not
authorize pretrial detention for crimes with a maximum sentence of five years or
less.
The law mandates that authorities release detainees whose cases have not yet come
to trial and whose time in pretrial detention already exceeds the maximum prison
sentence for their alleged crime. Nonetheless, many prisoners remained in custody
after completing their full sentences, and sometimes even after an acquittal,
because officials failed to process their releases expeditiously.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The law provides for an independent judiciary, but the justice system was poorly
staffed, inadequately equipped, often ineffective, and subject to intimidation,
corruption, politicization, and patronage. Low salaries and a lack of internal
controls rendered judicial officials susceptible to bribery. Powerful special
interests, including criminal groups, exercised influence on the outcomes of some
court proceedings.
Page 7
8. Trial Procedures
The law provides for the right to a fair and public trial; however, the judiciary did
not always enforce these rights.
Credible observers noted problems in trial procedures, such as a lack of admissible
evidence (i.e., prosecution failed to submit sufficient evidence of guilt), judicial
corruption, witness intimidation, and an ineffective witness protection program.
Political Prisoners and Detainees
There were no reports of political prisoners or detainees.
Civil Judicial Procedures and Remedies
The law establishes an independent and impartial judiciary in civil matters,
including access to a court to seek damages for human rights violations. Litigants
may sue a criminal defendant for damages if authorized by a criminal court.
Individuals and organizations may appeal adverse domestic decisions to the Inter-
American Human Rights system.
f. Arbitrary or Unlawful Interference with Privacy, Family, Home,
or Correspondence
Although the law generally prohibits such actions, a legal exception allows
government authorities to enter a private residence to prevent a crime or in case of
another emergency. There were credible complaints that police occasionally failed
to obtain the required authorization before entering private homes. As of August,
CONADEH had received 35 complaints.
On May 26, National Police officers allegedly entered the home of human rights
defender Deninson Escalante in El Palenque, Choluteca Department, without a
warrant, searched the house, and beat Escalante’s parents, brother, and nephew.
Section 2. Respect for Civil Liberties
a. Freedom of Expression, Including for Members of the Press and
Page 8
9. Other Media
The law provides for freedom of expression, including for members of the press
and other media, with some restrictions, and the government generally respected
this right. Although many press outlets were politically aligned, the press and
prevailing democratic norms combined to promote freedom of expression,
including for members of the media.
The government allocated a budget of 20 million lempiras ($796,000) to operate a
protection mechanism for journalists, human rights defenders, and judicial sector
operators. As of August, it provided protection to 11 journalists and 16 social
media communicators, among other types of activists and human rights defenders.
Some nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) expressed concern regarding weak
implementation of the law, limited resources available to operate the government’s
protection mechanism, and insufficient training for new personnel after significant
personnel turnover during the year. Civil society organizations criticized the
government’s failure to investigate threats adequately.
The Honduran National Police’s Special Victim’s Investigations Unit, formerly
known as the Violent Crimes Task Force, investigated crimes against high-profile
and particularly vulnerable victims, including journalists as well as judges,
lawyers, and members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and
intersex (LGBTQI+) community.
Violence and Harassment: On May 26, unknown assailants shot and killed
Metro TV journalist Ricardo Ávila in Marcovia, Choluteca Department.
Authorities continued to investigate the incident. Journalists and other members of
civil society reported they were self-censoring due to fear of criticism, harassment,
and retribution by the government and its supporters. Others reported direct acts of
intimidation or threats of violence from government officials or supporters for
publicly being critical of the government.
Censorship or Content Restrictions for Members of the Press and Other
Media, Including Online Media: Media members and NGOs stated the press
self-censored due to fear of retaliation from criminal groups, drug trafficking
organizations, or corrupt government officials. The media also engaged in self-
Page 9
10. censorship to avoid losing lucrative advertising contracts with the government. On
September 16, the cabinet approved an executive decree to create a General
Directorate of Information and Press under the Ministry of Strategic Planning. The
government noted the decree was to better organize its own public relations efforts
and was not intended to monitor or control content.
Libel/Slander Laws: Citizens, including public officials, may initiate criminal
proceedings for libel and slander. No cases were reported during the year.
Nongovernmental Impact: Some journalists and other members of civil society
reported threats from members of criminal groups. It was unclear how many of
these threats were related to the victims’ professions or activism. Several
anonymous social media sites, possibly linked to political parties, criticized
journalists (as well as activists and civil society organizations) who were critical of
the government or of opposition party policies.
Internet Freedom
The government did not restrict or disrupt access to the internet or censor online
content, and there were no credible reports that the government monitored private
online communications without appropriate legal authority.
b. Freedoms of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The constitution provides for the freedoms of peaceful assembly and association,
and the government generally respected these rights.
c. Freedom of Religion
See the Department of State’s International Religious Freedom Report at
https://www.state.gov/religiousfreedomreport/.
d. Freedom of Movement and the Right to Leave the Country
The law provides for freedom of internal movement, foreign travel, emigration,
and repatriation, and the government generally respected these related rights.
In-country Movement: There were areas where authorities could not assure
Page 10
11. freedom of movement because of criminal activity and a lack of significant
government presence.
e. Protection of Refugees
The government cooperated with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees and other humanitarian organizations in providing protection and
assistance to refugees, returning refugees, and asylum seekers, as well as other
persons of concern.
Access to Asylum: The law provides for granting asylum or refugee status. The
government had a nascent system to provide legal protection to refugees. Its
operations to receive and process cases relied on substantial support from UNHCR.
Its support focused on providing training to officers of the National Institute for
Migration, ensuring support to deal with the backlog of asylum claims submitted
during the COVID-19 lockdown, and supporting the improvement of reception
conditions for asylum seekers.
Abuse of Migrants and Refugees: Transiting migrants, forcibly displaced
populations, and asylum seekers with pending cases were vulnerable to abuse and
sexual exploitation by criminal organizations. Women, children, and LGBTQI+
individuals were especially vulnerable to abuse. Transiting migrants, refugees, and
other vulnerable populations continued to face acute security risks in border zones.
f. Status and Treatment of Internally Displaced Persons
The Internal Displacement Monitoring Center estimated there were approximately
247,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) due to violence in the country as of
2021. Gang activity, including attacks on and exploitation of nonmembers, was
the primary contributor to violence-related internal displacement. In addition, the
monitoring center estimated approximately 937,000 individuals were forcibly
displaced by 2020 natural disasters. Official data on forced displacement,
especially displacement due to violence, was limited in part because gangs
controlled many of the neighborhoods where individuals were forced from their
homes and communities (see section 6, Displaced Children). NGOs reported IDPs
were at increased risk of victimization and exploitation by criminal groups.
Page 11
12. The government maintained the Interinstitutional Commission for the Protection of
Persons Displaced by Violence and created the Directorate for the Protection of
Persons Internally Displaced by Violence within the Secretariat of Human Rights.
Both the secretariat and the commission focused on developing policies to address
IDPs. Additionally, under the Comprehensive Regional Protection and Solutions
Framework, with significant support from UNHCR, the Secretariat of Human
Rights and Secretariat of External Relations and International Cooperation
continued to build capacity to provide services to vulnerable populations, including
IDPs, those at risk of forced displacement, refugees, and returned migrants.
Despite incremental progress, government capacities remained relatively nascent
and limited.
Section 3. Freedom to Participate in the Political Process
The law provides citizens the right to choose their government in free and fair
periodic elections held by secret ballot and based on nearly universal and equal
suffrage. The law does not permit active members of the military or civilian
security forces to vote. The constitution prohibits practicing clergy from running
for office or participating in political campaigns.
Elections and Political Participation
Recent Elections: In November 2021, Xiomara Castro of the LIBRE Party won a
four-year presidential term in elections that were generally considered free, fair,
and transparent. Some NGOs and political parties reported irregularities, including
late delivery of technology needed to transmit results, late opening of the polls,
poll workers with varying degrees of preparation and knowledge of the electoral
law and processes, and lack of transparency in campaign financing. International
observers acknowledged some of these irregularities but reported they were not
systematic and not widespread enough to affect the outcome of the presidential
election. Observers noted several significant improvements in transparency
procedures, including electoral reforms, an updated voter registry, new national
identification cards, and new technologies that included a biometric verification
system and a preliminary results transmission system.
Page 12
13. Participation of Women and Members of Minority Groups: No laws limit the
participation of women or members of minority groups in the political process, and
they did participate.
Section 4. Corruption and Lack of Transparency in
Government
The law provides for criminal penalties for corruption by officials, but authorities
did not implement the law effectively, and officials continued to engage in corrupt
practices with impunity. There were numerous reports of government corruption.
On February 2, the National Congress passed a retroactive amnesty law that
absolved public officials who worked during the Zelaya Administration (2006-09)
of crimes. As of October, at least 24 defendants used the law to have corruption
cases dismissed.
On March 1, the National Congress repealed the Law for the Classification of
Public Documents Related to National Security and Defense, better known as the
Secrets Law. Civil society had criticized the law for limiting transparency and
allowing officials to use the classification of documents to hide corruption.
Corruption: On June 10, Marco Bográn, former director of INVEST-H, the
government entity tasked with making COVID-19 pandemic relief contracts with
private firms, was found guilty of aggravated fraud and sentenced to more than 10
years in prison and ordered to pay a fine of 1.475 billion lempiras ($58.7 million).
The court acquitted him of charges of violating official duties and fraud, but the
Public Ministry appealed the ruling on July 25.
On September 6, the Public Ministry charged former Minister of National Risk and
Contingency Management Gabriel Rubí and two other government officials with
fraud and violation of official duties for the nearly six million lempira ($239,000)
purchase in 2020 of a mobile hospital and COVID-19 isolation unit that was only a
tent. A lower court provisionally dismissed Rubí’s fraud charge on September 20,
and the Public Ministry appealed the decision.
Former First Lady Rosa Elena Bonilla de Lobo was found guilty of fraud and
misappropriation of public funds during a retrial on March 17. On September 21,
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14. the court sentenced her to more than 14 years in prison and ordered her to pay a
fine of more than 13 million lempiras ($518,000).
Section 5. Governmental Posture Towards International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Abuses of Human
Rights
A wide variety of domestic and international human rights groups generally
operated without government restriction, investigating and publishing their
findings on human rights cases. Government officials were somewhat cooperative
and responsive to their views, but some human rights organizations criticized
government officials for lack of access and responsiveness.
Government Human Rights Bodies: A semiautonomous commissioner for
human rights, Blanca Izaguirre, served as ombudsperson and investigated
complaints of human rights abuses. NGOs and other civil society groups generally
considered the commissioner independent but at times ineffective. With offices
throughout the country, the ombudsperson received cases that otherwise might not
have risen to national attention.
The Secretariat of Human Rights served as an advocate for human rights within the
government. The Public Ministry’s Office of the Special Prosecutor for Human
Rights handled cases involving charges of human rights abuses by government
officials. The Public Ministry also has a Special Prosecutor’s Office for the
Protection of Human Rights Defenders, Journalists, Social Communicators, and
Justice Officials. There is also a Human Rights Committee in the National
Congress. The Ministries of Security and of Defense both have human rights
offices that coordinate human rights-related activities with the Secretariat of
Human Rights.
Section 6. Discrimination and Societal Abuses
Women
Rape and Domestic Violence: The law criminalizes all forms of rape, including
spousal rape. The government considers rape a crime of public concern, and the
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15. state prosecutes suspected rapists even if survivors do not press charges. The
penalties for rape range from nine to 13 years’ imprisonment. The law was not
effectively enforced, and weak public institutional structures contributed to the
inadequate enforcement.
The law does not criminalize domestic violence but provides penalties of up to 12
years in prison for violence against a family member, depending on the severity of
the assault and aggravating circumstances. If a victim’s physical injuries do not
reach the severity required to categorize the violence as a criminal act, the legal
penalty for a first offense is a sentence of one to three months of community
service. Survivors of domestic violence are entitled to certain protective measures,
such as removing the abuser from the home and prohibiting the abuser from
visiting the victim’s work or other frequently visited places. Abusers caught in the
act may be detained for up to 24 hours as a preventive measure. The law provides
a maximum sentence of three years in prison for disobeying a restraining order
connected with the crime of violence against a woman.
Civil society groups reported that women often did not report domestic violence or
withdrew charges because they feared, or were economically dependent on, the
aggressor. In addition, women experienced delays in accessing justice due to
police who failed to process complaints in a timely manner or judicial system
officials who deferred scheduling hearings. The government attempted to enhance
its response to domestic violence by elevating the National Women’s Institute to a
cabinet-level secretariat in March. Observers noted this effort was insufficient due
to inadequate budget allocations, limited or no services in rural areas, absence of or
inadequate training about and awareness of domestic violence among police and
other authorities, and male-dominant culture and norms.
The government operated six consolidated reporting and support centers in major
cities and one mobile unit for the departments of Yoro and Cortés where women
could report crimes, seek medical and psychological attention, and receive other
services. These reporting centers were in addition to the 298 government-operated
women’s offices – one in each municipality – that provided a wide array of
services, focusing on education, personal finance, health, social and political
participation, environmental stewardship, and prevention of gender-based violence.
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16. Sexual Harassment: The law criminalizes sexual harassment, including in
employment, and stipulates penalties of one to three years in prison and possible
suspension of the abusers’ professional licenses. The government did not
effectively enforce the law.
Reproductive Rights: There were no reports of coerced abortion or involuntary
sterilization on the part of government authorities.
Contraception supplies were limited, as were many other critical medicines, due to
the government’s dismantling of its public health procurement system in May. The
law prohibits the sale, distribution, and use of emergency contraception for any
reason, including by survivors of sexual violence. The government provided
survivors of sexual violence access to other health-care services, such as
psychological and social support as well as testing and treatment for sexually
transmitted diseases.
In 2019 (most recent data), 94 percent of births were attended by skilled health-
care personnel; however, NGOs reported significant gaps in obstetric care,
especially in rural areas. The United Nations reported the adolescent birth rate was
89 births per 1,000 girls ages 15 to 19. UN human rights experts stated the lack of
access to contraception, particularly in rural areas, together with the prohibition of
emergency contraception, contributed to a high rate of adolescent pregnancy.
Discrimination: Although the law accords women and men the same legal rights
and status, including property rights in divorce cases, many women did not fully
enjoy such rights due to barriers in access to justice and lack of information
regarding legal protections. Most women in the workforce engaged in lower-status
and lower-paying informal occupations, such as domestic service, without the
benefit of legal protections.
Systemic Racial or Ethnic Violence and Discrimination
The law criminalizes discrimination based on race and ethnicity and includes
crimes committed against individuals because of race or ethnicity as aggravating
circumstances to increase penalties for criminal offenses.
CONADEH received no reports of racial or ethnic discrimination as of August.
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17. Nevertheless, observers said social discrimination against racial and ethnic groups
persisted, as did physical violence.
On May 1, unknown assailants killed Alonso Salgado, a former member of the
neighborhood council of the Río Tinto Garífuna community and a member of the
Garífuna rights organization OFRANEH, in Tela, Atlántida Department.
Authorities continued to investigate the incident.
The government’s National Policy to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination
seeks to promote equality and combat discrimination related to the country’s two
Afro-descendent and seven Indigenous groups (see below), with a focus on social
and political participation; access to education, health care, justice, and
employment opportunities; and rights to ancestral lands and natural resources.
NGOs reported the government did not effectively combat discrimination or
promote equal access to government services and employment opportunities.
NGOs also reported the government did not make sufficient efforts to comply with
Inter-American Court of Human Rights rulings, specifically cases related to
territorial rights for Garífuna communities.
Indigenous Peoples
In the 2013 census (most recent data), approximately 8.5 percent of the population
identified themselves as members of Indigenous communities, but other estimates
were higher. Indigenous groups included the Miskito, Tawahka, Pech, Tolupán,
Lenca, Maya-Ch'ortí, and Nahua. They had limited representation in the national
government and consequently little direct input into decisions affecting their lands,
cultures, traditions, and the allocation of natural resources.
Indigenous communities continued to report threats and acts of violence against
them and against community and environmental activists. Violence was often
rooted in a broader context of conflict over land and natural resources, corruption,
lack of transparency and community consultation, other criminal activity, and
limited state ability to protect the rights of vulnerable communities.
Ethnic minority rights leaders, international NGOs, and farmworker organizations
claimed the government failed to redress actions taken by security forces,
government agencies, private individuals, and businesses to dislodge Indigenous
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18. persons from lands over which they claimed ownership based on land reform law
or ancestral land titles.
Persons from Indigenous and Afro-descendant communities continued to
experience discrimination in employment, education, housing, and health services.
A 2019 Inter-American Commission on Human Rights report noted there were
insufficient hospital beds and inadequate supplies at the only hospital that serviced
Gracias a Dios Department, home to most of the Miskito community.
Children
Birth Registration: Children derive citizenship by birth in the country, from the
citizenship of their parents, or by naturalization. Birth registration was provided
on a nondiscriminatory basis. Failure to register resulted in denial of public
services, including access to health services or school enrollment.
Child Abuse: The law establishes prison sentences of up to two and one-half
years for child abuse.
Child, Early, and Forced Marriage: The minimum legal age of marriage for
both boys and girls is 18.
Sexual Exploitation of Children: The commercial sexual exploitation of
children, especially in sex trafficking, remained a problem, and the government did
not effectively enforce the law. The country was a destination for child sex
tourism, particularly in the tourist area of the Bay Islands. The legal age of consent
is 18. The law prohibits the use of children younger than 18 for exhibitions or
performances of a sexual nature or in the production of pornography.
Displaced Children: Civil society organizations reported that common causes of
forced displacement for youth included death threats for failure to pay extortion,
attempted recruitment by gangs, witnessing criminal activity by gangs or criminal
groups, domestic violence, attempted kidnappings, family members’ involvement
in drug dealing, victimization by traffickers, rape (including commercial sexual
exploitation by gangs), discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender
identity, sexual harassment, and discrimination for having a chronic medical
condition.
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19. According to data (most recent available) from the government and UNHCR, more
than 247,000 persons were displaced by violence between 2014 and 2018, of
whom 43 percent were children and adolescents.
Antisemitism
The Jewish community numbered approximately 150 members. There were no
reports of antisemitic acts.
Trafficking in Persons
See the Department of State’s Trafficking in Persons Report at
https://www.state.gov/trafficking-in-persons-report/.
Acts of Violence, Criminalization, and Other Abuses Based on
Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity or Expression, or Sex
Characteristics
Criminalization: No laws exist to criminalize same-sex conduct.
Violence against LGBTQI+ Persons: NGOs reported police or other government
agents incited, perpetrated, condoned, or tolerated violence against LGBTQI+
individuals. Impunity for such crimes was high. The Public Ministry reported 17
violent deaths of LGBTQI+ persons as of September. NGOs reported 33 violent
deaths as of October and 17 hate crimes against LGBTQI+ persons as of August.
On January 10, unknown assailants shot and killed transgender activist Thalía
Rodríguez in her home in Tegucigalpa, Francisco Morazán Department.
Authorities charged two individuals with her murder, one of whom remained at
large. On December 2, the court found Aarón Jeriel Álvarez Pavón guilty of
Rodríguez’s murder. The sentencing hearing was scheduled for January 2023.
NGOs reported gangs engaged in “corrective rape” of lesbian or transgender
individuals.
Discrimination: The law criminalizes discrimination based on sexual orientation
and gender identity characteristics and includes crimes committed against
individuals because of their sexual orientation or gender identity as aggravating
circumstances to increase penalties for criminal offenses. Nevertheless,
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20. discrimination against LGBTQI+ persons throughout society persisted. As of
August, CONADEH received 25 reports of discrimination based on sexual
orientation. Same-sex couples and households headed by same-sex couples are not
eligible for the same legal protections available to opposite-sex married couples.
LGBTQI+ rights groups asserted that government agencies and private employers
engaged in discriminatory hiring practices. Transgender women were particularly
vulnerable to employment and education discrimination; many could find
employment only as sex workers, increasing their vulnerability to violence and
extortion.
Availability of Legal Gender Recognition: Transgender persons are prohibited
from changing their name and legal gender status.
Involuntary or Coercive Medical or Psychological Practices Specifically
Targeting LGBTQI+ Individuals: There were no reports of unnecessary
surgeries performed on intersex persons.
Restrictions of Freedom of Expression, Association, or Peaceful Assembly:
There were no restrictions of freedom of expression, association, or peaceful
assembly regarding LGBTQI+ matters or events.
Persons with Disabilities
The law requires that persons with disabilities have access to buildings, but few
buildings were accessible, and the government did not effectively implement laws
or programs to provide such access.
According to government estimates, children with disabilities attended school at a
lower rate than the general population. The Institute for National Statistics put net
enrollment for primary school at 77 percent in 2021, but the National Center for
Social Sector Information stated that in 2020, 43 percent of persons with
disabilities received no formal education.
The government has an Office for Persons with Disabilities located within the
Ministry of Development and Social Inclusion, but its ability to provide services to
persons with disabilities was limited. Mental-health professionals expressed
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21. concern regarding social stigma by families and communities against persons with
mental disabilities and a lack of access to mental-health care throughout the
country.
Other Societal Violence and Discrimination
Persons with HIV and AIDS continued to be targets of discrimination, and they
suffered disproportionately from gender-based violence.
Section 7. Worker Rights
a. Freedom of Association and the Right to Collective Bargaining
The law grants workers the right to form and join unions of their choice, bargain
collectively, and strike. It prohibits employer retribution against employees for
engaging in trade union activities. The law places restrictions on these rights, such
as requiring that a recognized trade union represent at least 30 workers, prohibiting
foreign nationals from holding union offices, and requiring that union officials
work in the same substantive area of the business as the workers they represent.
The law prohibits members of the armed forces and police, as well as certain other
public employees, from forming labor unions. The Secretariat of Labor and Social
Security also requires that union leaders be employed under permanent contracts,
limiting the ability of seasonal agricultural workers to exercise their right to
freedom of association.
The law requires an employer to begin collective bargaining once workers
establish a union, and it specifies that if more than one union exists at a company,
the employer must negotiate with the largest.
The law allows only local unions to call strikes, prohibits labor federations and
confederations from calling strikes, and requires that a two-thirds majority of both
union and nonunion employees at an enterprise approve a strike. The law prohibits
workers from legally striking until direct negotiations and government-
accompanied mediation and conciliation have failed. The Secretariat of Labor has
the power to declare a work stoppage illegal and grants employers the ability to
discipline employees consistent with their internal regulations, including by firing
strikers, if the secretariat rules that a work stoppage is illegal. In addition, the law
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22. limits strikes in a wide range of sectors that the government designates as essential
services or that it considers would affect the rights of individuals in the larger
community to security, health, education, and economic and social well-being.
The law permits workers in public health care, social security, staple food
production, and public utilities (municipal sanitation, water, electricity, and
telecommunications) to strike if they continue to provide basic services. The law
also requires that public-sector workers involved in the refining, transportation,
and distribution of petroleum products submit their grievances to the Secretariat of
Labor before striking. The law permits strikes by workers in export-processing
zones and free zones for companies that provide services to industrial parks, but it
requires that strikes not impede the operations of other factories in such parks.
The government did not effectively enforce the law. Employers frequently refused
to comply with Secretariat of Labor orders that required them to reinstate workers
who had been dismissed for participating in union activities. Both the Secretariat
of Labor and the courts may order a company to reinstate workers, but the
secretariat lacked the personnel and transportation resources to verify compliance.
By law, the secretariat may fine companies that violate the right to freedom of
association. The law permits fines, and the penalty is commensurate with those for
other laws involving denials of civil rights, such as discrimination. Penalties were
sometimes applied against violators, but the failure of the government to collect
fines facilitated continued violations.
Workers had difficulty exercising the rights to form and join unions and to engage
in collective bargaining. Public-sector trade unionists raised concerns regarding
government interference in trade union activities, including its ignoring or
suspending collective agreements and its dismissals of union members and leaders.
Some employers either refused to engage in collective bargaining or made it very
difficult to do so. Some companies also delayed appointing or failed to appoint
representatives for required Secretariat of Labor-led mediation, a practice that
prolonged the mediation process and impeded the right to strike. Unions also
raised concerns that employers used temporary contracts to prevent unionization
and to avoid providing full benefits.
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23. The government investigated violence and threats of violence against union
leaders. Impunity for such crimes remained high, as was the impunity rate for all
types of crime.
The trial on murder charges of Josué Exequiel Martínez, Siriaco Mejía Santos,
Francisco López Lazo, and Mario Aníbal López Velásquez began on November
25. The four were accused of the 2020 killing of Félix Vásquez, leader of the
Union of Field Workers, a member of the Lenca community, an environmental
activist, and a LIBRE Party candidate for Congress. The court found the accused
guilty of the murder of Vásquez; at year’s end a date for sentencing was pending.
Medical personnel held nationwide strikes and protests on March 30, April 20-30,
May 31, and in certain regions on October 24. The purpose of the labor stoppage
and demonstrations was to denounce the nonpayment of wages by the Secretariat
of Health and other issues.
b. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The law prohibits and criminalizes all forms of forced labor, but the government
did not effectively implement or enforce the law.
Forced labor occurred in street vending, domestic service, the transport of illegal
drugs and other illicit goods, other criminal activity, and the informal sector.
Victims were primarily impoverished individuals in both rural and urban areas (see
section 7.c.). Children, including from Indigenous and Afro-descendant
communities, particularly Miskito boys, were at risk for forced labor in the
agriculture, manufacturing, fishing, mining, construction, and hospitality
industries. The law requires prisoners to work at least five hours a day, six days a
week.
Also see the Department of State’s Trafficking in Persons Report at
https://www.state.gov/trafficking-in-persons-report/.
c. Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
See the Department of Labor’s Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor at
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ilab/resources/reports/child-labor/findings/.
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24. d. Discrimination with Respect to Employment and Occupation
The law prohibits employment discrimination based on gender, age, sexual
orientation, gender identity, political opinion or affiliation, marital status, race or
ethnicity, national origin, language, place of residence, religion, family or
economic situation, disability, or health, including HIV or AIDS status. The law
prohibits employers from requiring pregnancy tests as a prerequisite for
employment. The law states that a woman’s employment should be appropriate to
her physical state and capacity. There were no reports of this law being used to
limit women’s employment.
The government did not effectively enforce these laws and regulations. Although
penalties include prison sentences of up to two years and fines, they were not
sufficient to deter violations. They were, however, commensurate with penalties
for violating laws related to civil rights, such as election interference. Penalties
were sometimes applied against violators.
The law criminalizes sexual harassment, including in employment. Violators face
penalties of one to three years in prison and possible suspension of their
professional licenses, but the government did not effectively enforce the law.
Many employers discriminated against women. The Secretariat of Labor posted
job opportunity announcements that specified a gender requirement. Most women
in the workforce engaged in lower-status and lower-paying informal occupations,
such as domestic service, without the benefit of legal protections. Persons with
disabilities, Indigenous and Afro-descendant persons, LGBTQI+ persons, and
persons with HIV or AIDS also faced discrimination in employment and
occupation (also see section 6).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
Wage and Hour Laws: There are 45 categories of monthly minimum wage,
based on the industry and the size of a company’s workforce; minimum wages
were above the poverty line. The law does not cover domestic workers, the vast
majority of whom were women.
The law applies equally to citizens and foreigners, regardless of gender, and
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25. prescribes a maximum eight-hour shift per day for most workers, a 44-hour
workweek, and at least one 24-hour rest period for every six days of work. It also
provides for paid national holidays and annual leave. The law requires overtime
pay, bans excessive compulsory overtime, limits overtime to four hours a day for a
maximum workday of 12 hours, and prohibits the practice of requiring workers to
complete work quotas before leaving their place of employment. On April 28, the
National Congress repealed the 2014 hourly wage law, thus bringing all employees
under the national labor code and eliminating the previous differences in labor
benefits between hourly, temporary, and permanent employees. The repeal went
into effect on June 28.
In some industries, including agriculture, domestic service, and security, employers
did not respect maternity rights or pay minimum wage, overtime, or vacation. In
these sectors, employers frequently paid workers for the standard 44-hour
workweek irrespective of any additional hours they worked. In the security and
domestic service sectors, workers were frequently forced to work more than 60
hours per week but paid only for 44 hours. Employers frequently penalized
agricultural workers for taking legally authorized days off. Employers paid the
minimum wage inconsistently in other sectors.
Occupational Safety and Health: Occupational safety and health (OSH)
standards are appropriate for the main industries in the country, and OSH experts
actively identified unsafe conditions, including lack of personal protective
equipment against COVID-19, in addition to responding to workers’ OSH
complaints. There was no information available on any major industrial accidents.
By law, workers may remove themselves from situations that endanger their health
or safety without jeopardizing continued employment. Under the inspection law,
the Secretariat of Labor has the authority to temporarily shut down workplaces
where there is an imminent danger of fatalities.
Wage, Hour, and OSH Enforcement: The Secretariat of Labor is responsible for
enforcing wage, hour, and OSH laws, but it did so inconsistently and ineffectively.
Enforcement of OSH standards was particularly weak in the construction, garment
assembly, and agricultural sectors, as well as in the informal economy. Penalties
for violations of OSH law were commensurate with penalties for similar crimes but
rarely applied against violators and rarely collected.
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26. Civil society continued to raise problems with minimum wage violations,
highlighting agricultural companies in the south as frequent violators. The law
permits fines for wage and hour violations; these were commensurate with the
penalties for similar crimes, such as fraud. The government sometimes applied
penalties against violators, but failure to collect fines facilitated continued labor
code wage and hour violations. The Secretariat of Labor had an insufficient
number of inspectors to enforce the wage, hour, and OSH laws effectively. As of
August, inspectors conducted 14,221 total inspections, compared with 8,846 total
inspections for the same period in 2021. Inspectors have the authority to make
unannounced inspections and initiate sanctions.
While all formal workers are entitled to social security, there were reports that both
public- and private-sector employers failed to pay into the social security system.
The Secretariat of Labor may levy a fine against companies that fail to pay social
security obligations, but the amount was not sufficient to deter violations.
Informal Sector: Most workers were in the informal sector. According to 2021
Secretariat of Labor figures, approximately 75 percent of workers worked in the
informal economy, equivalent to approximately 2.7 million persons, while a 2020
UN Development Program report estimated that 82 percent of workers were part of
the informal economy. According to the report, informal workers played a large
role in nearly every industry, including agriculture and fishing; mining;
manufacturing; utilities; construction; wholesale, retail, hotels, and restaurants;
transport and storage; and personal services. These workers are not covered by the
contributory social security system and are not protected by the labor code.
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