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FAIR
post
March 4, 2016

US Contribution to Death of Honduran Activist Goes Unmentioned in US Coverage

Adam Johnson
Berta Caceres (image: Goldman Environmental Prize)
Berta Caceres (image: Goldman Environmental Prize)

This photo of Honduran environmental activist Berta Caceres accompanied The Nation‘s expose of the US role in her death. (image: Goldman Environmental Prize)

Honduran environmental activist Berta Cáceres was shot and killed in her home in La Esperanza, Intibuca, Wednesday. While the killers’ ID remains unknown, activists, media observers and the Cáceres family pointed to the increasingly reactionary and violent Honduran government, which has frequently clashed with Cáceres over her high-profile activism against land dispossession and mining, and her defense of indigenous rights.

There was widespread outcry and grief over her death, and the story was covered by major media in the United States. But there was a glaring problem with the coverage: Almost none of it mentioned that the brutal regime that likely killed Cáceres came to power in a 2009 coup d’etat supported by the United States, under President Barack Obama and then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

As Greg Grandin at The Nation explains:

Cáceres was a vocal and brave indigenous leader, an opponent of the 2009 Honduran coup that Hillary Clinton, as secretary of State, made possible. In The Nation, Dana Frank and I covered that coup as it unfolded. Later, as Clinton’s emails were released, others, such as Robert Naiman, Mark Weisbrot and Alex Main, revealed the central role she played in undercutting Manuel Zelaya, the deposed president, and undercutting the opposition movement demanding his restoration. In so doing, Clinton allied with the worst sectors of Honduran society.

The Honduran military abducted President Manuel Zelaya at gunpoint and flew him out of the country on June 28, 2009. While the coup unfolded before the international community, the United Nations, the EU and the Organization of American States rushed to condemn it. Fifteen House Democrats joined in, sending a letter to the Obama White House insisting that the State Department “fully acknowledge that a military coup has taken place and…follow through with the total suspension of non-humanitarian aid, as required by law.”

But Clinton’s State Department staunchly refused to do so, bucking the international community and implicitly recognizing the military takeover. Emails revealed last year by the State Department show that Clinton knew very well there was a military coup, but rejected cries by the international community to condemn it. As The Intercept’s Lee Fang reported, Clinton attempted to use her lobbyist friend Lanny Davis to open up back channels with Roberto Micheletti, the illegitimate interim ruler installed after the coup, effectively endorsing the new right-wing government that would go on to crack down on Cáceres and others activists.

In her memoirs, Clinton herself discloses she had no intention on restoring the elected President Zelaya to power. “In the subsequent days [after the coup] I spoke with my counterparts around the hemisphere, including Secretary Espinosa in Mexico. We strategized on a plan to restore order in Honduras,” Clinton wrote, “and ensure that free and fair elections could be held quickly and legitimately, which would render the question of Zelaya moot.”

On September 28, State Department officials blocked the OAS from adopting a resolution that would have refused to recognize Honduran elections carried out under the dictatorship—giving the US’s final seal of approval to the military coup that began three months prior.

One wouldn’t know any of this reading US reports of  Cáceres’ death. The coup, and its subsequent purging of environmental, LGBT and indigenous activists, is treated as an entirely local matter, reduced to the “cycle of violence” cliche often employed with destructive governments the United States helped usher into power.

New York Times: Berta Cáceres, Indigenous Activist, Is Killed in Honduras

The New York Times mentioned that the Honduran coup put activists like Caceres in danger–but didn’t mention that the US had backed the coup.

The Washington Post,  Guardian, NBC, CNN and NPR didn’t mention the 2009 coup that brought to power Cáceres’ likely murderers, let alone the US’s tacit involvement in the coup. The New York Times did briefly mention it, but omitted US responsibility:

Since a 2009 coup in Honduras, journalists, judges, labor leaders, human rights defenders and environmental activists have been assassinated in targeted killings, with their murders often going unsolved. Twelve environmental defenders were killed in Honduras in 2014, according to research by Global Witness, which makes it the most dangerous country in the world, relative to its size, for activists protecting forests and rivers.

The Times noted how much more oppressive and difficult life is under the new regime, but made no mention of who helped bring that regime about. Cáceres, of course, wasn’t killed in a vacuum. Her death is in part the result of a deliberate strategy by the United States to prop up a regressive, pro-development, pro-corporate government. That US-based media, reporting on the death of a foreign activist, wouldn’t mention their own government’s role is a glaring omission—and one that follows a distinct pattern of global reporting.

Chaos in other countries is seen as something organic, a product of failed cultures doomed to perpetual violence. It’s usually more complicated than that—especially in a region with a history of US intervention going back more than a century.

The documentation of Washington’s role in the 2009 coup is thorough and unequivocal. Combined with the fact that one of the principal parties responsible for Honduras’ regime change is currently running for president, the international context for the assassination of an environmental activist could hardly be more relevant.


Adam Johnson is an associate editor at AlterNet and writes frequently for FAIR.org. Follow him on Twitter at @adamjohnsonnyc.

Related Posts

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  • Berta Caceres & COPINH members (photo: Goldman Environmental Prize)
    Omitting the US Role in Honduran Activist’s Death
  • Election Coverage of Election Coverage
  • Death Panels--Again?

Filed under: Election 2016, Latin America

Adam Johnson

Adam Johnson

Adam Johnson is a contributing analyst for FAIR.org.

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Comments

  1. AvatarDoug Latimer

    March 4, 2016 at 1:27 pm

    Another neocolonial calamity the corpress eschews affixing a “country of origin” label to

  2. Avatarsteve

    March 4, 2016 at 3:43 pm

    One wonders how Obama and the Clintons, et.al., are able to keep on functioning as they leave so many such evil and venal deeds in the wake of their careers; if it were me, I’d need a lot of couch time with a good analyst or a patient confessor. Press agents and a surrounding group of toadies may not be sufficient to permanently maintain the fiction.

    When, in a 2004 press conference, George W. Bush couldn’t think of a single mistake that he might have made, most just smiled at this news reported by Helen Thomas. Does anyone honestly think that these people are any less delusional or sociopathic?

  3. AvatarAlan MacDonald

    March 4, 2016 at 3:58 pm

    A short step from this to a President Trump yelling “get them out”, in reference to what he would likely call “eco terrorists” — based on the brutal tactics he already directs upon any unwelcome and peaceful protesters at Il Donald’s campaign events”.

    Seems like a lesson being taught by the Disguised Global Capitalist Empire (HQed in and ‘posing’ as America) from the periphery of the Empire to those non-violent environmental protesters nearer the metropole.

    As Hannah Arendt warned the German and all people about all Empires:

    “Empire abroad entails tyranny at home”

  4. AvatarEric

    March 4, 2016 at 5:58 pm

    Canada’s Harper regime also welcomed the coup, and I don’t recall the now-governing Liberals saying much while in opposition.

    And what about Bernie? He fallaciously and slanderously dismissed Hugo Chavez as a “dead Communist dictator” — but he could hardly have said that about Manuel Zalaya. (Or could he?)

  5. Avatardoug

    March 5, 2016 at 8:07 am

    You bitch about this but when the Government of Costa Rica let drug smugglers murder the kid that was protecting the turtles! When they make it legal to take Shark Finns in exchange for money from China you dont say a word and Ocean Mysteries with Jeff Corwin comes to Costa Rica and talks about how eco great it is!!!

  6. AvatarLauren Ayers

    March 5, 2016 at 1:30 pm

    So sad a loss to a nation and a family! I am a citizen of an Evil Empire and usually feel so helpless. But this year one candidate gives me hope. I feel the Bern!

  7. AvatarRichard Weil

    March 5, 2016 at 6:39 pm

    Hillary recently talked about her “good friend” Henry Kissinger. I think that says it all.

  8. Avatarpiteously

    May 3, 2016 at 8:17 am

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts on prince. Regards

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