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Dan Kovalik

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US DEA Kills Innocent Civilians in Honduras -- US Media Silent

Posted: 05/16/2012 1:38 pm

According to the Honduran newspaper, Tiempo, as well as the Honduran human rights group, COFADEH, the agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), dressed in military uniforms, killed at least four and possibly six civilians in a raid which took place on Friday, May 11. The victims included two pregnant women and two children. The newspaper Tiempo did not pull any punches, writing that those killed "were humble and honest citizens." Apparently, the DEA agents fired from helicopter gunships upon a boat carrying civilians on the Patuca back to their community of Ahuas which itself is located in the Mosquito coast of Honduras. According to Tiempo, the DEA mistakenly fired upon the civilian boat because it was well-lit while the intended target -- a boat carrying drug traffickers -- was floating down the river without its lights on.

According to Tiempo, the mayor of Ahuas decried the killings, saying that "[t]hese operations were performed irresponsibly" and that the people in his community live in fear "because they now have the threat of operations because they kill poor people... "

COFADEH, the Committee of the Families of the Disappeared of Honduras, has been very pointed in its condemnation of the role the U.S. played in these killings. COFADEH was founded in 1982 in response to the disappearance of 69 persons that year. As COFADEH explains on its website , it believes that the disappearances which took place in the 1980's (a total of 184 between 1980 and 1989), was the direct result of the National Security Doctrine which the U.S. imposed on Honduras. This doctrine, according to COFADEH, "included a systematic and selective form of human rights violations. The most emblematic violations were torture, murders and enforced disappearances" of the type which the U.S. had sponsored in the Southern Cone of South America in the 1970s.

COFADEH has taken on renewed importance in Honduras after the 2009 military coup against President Manual Zelaya which was at least tacitly supported by the United States. Since that time, the types of killings and disappearances which led to COFADEH's creation have started again, and are entirely the responsibility of the U.S.-supported coup government. Thus, according to a wonderful February, 2012 piece in the New York Times by Dana Frank, who relies heavily on COFADEH's figures, "at least 34 members of the opposition have disappeared or been killed, and more than 300 people have been killed by state security forces since the coup," including at least 13 journalists. Sadly, in researching this article, I discovered that a kind and brave woman, Vanessa Zepeda, who I had the honor of meeting on a School of Americas Watch delegation to Honduras shortly after the coup, has since been killed as a direct consequence of this coup. See, list of victims of the coup.

In response to the DEA killings, COFADEH put out a statement entitled, "Effects of the Military Occupation," which blames the U.S.'s decades-long policies in Latin America for the continued violence in countries like Honduras. As COFADEH stated:

... a foreign army [i.e., the U.S. army] protected under the new hegemonic concept of the "war on drugs," legalized with reforms to the 1953 Military Treaty, violates our territorial sovereignty and kills civilians as if it was in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya or Syria.

Two pregnant women, two children and two adult males were killed by shots fired from helicopter gunships piloted by U.S. soldiers on a boat on River Patuca returning to their community. They were workers in the local lobster and shellfish diving industry.

... [T]he "failed state" of Honduras gave way to the foreign military occupation under the script of the "war against the drug cartels," similar to what has happened in the past eight years in Mexico, Colombia and Guatemala.

And this reality, from the perspective of a human rights organization, is unacceptable and reprehensible.



As COFADEH recognizes in this statement, the U.S. is very much at war in Latin America, from Mexico through Central America and to Colombia, leaving a wake of violence and bodies in its path. A recent article by Tom Burghardt describes in detail how the U.S. is indeed the prime source of the grisly violence plaguing this region. Thus, the U.S., in fighting the so-called "war on drugs," is fueling the conflict with guns and advanced weaponry -- weaponry which helps to prop up repressive governments such as those in Mexico, Honduras and Colombia; which in any case ends up in the hands of the very drug cartels the U.S. is claiming to fight (e.g., through the Fast & Furious program); and which is killing massive numbers of civilians (50,000 in Mexico and 250,000 in Colombia). No wonder then that the entire region was united against the U.S. and Canada in calling at the Summit of the Americas for the end to this war and to the de-criminalization of drugs.

Yet, due to the media blackout on such issues, the vast majority of Americans do not even know that the U.S. is at war just south of our borders and do not understand why our Southern neighbors are crying out for a change in this senseless policy. The media's failure in this regard is inexcusable.

 

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According to the Honduran newspaper, Tiempo, as well as the Honduran human rights group, COFADEH, the agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), dressed in military uniforms, killed at least fo...
According to the Honduran newspaper, Tiempo, as well as the Honduran human rights group, COFADEH, the agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), dressed in military uniforms, killed at least fo...
 
 
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OneTop
Uh, is that a beer hall?
06:22 PM on 06/03/2012
The WOD has been a catastrophe on Latin American societies, while, America and other Western nations' elites have reaped untold $trillions.

""Western banks 'reaping billions from Colombian cocaine trade'

While cocaine production ravages countries in Central America, consumers in the US and Europe are helping developed economies grow rich from the profits, a study claims""
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jun/02/western-banks-colombian-cocaine-trade
01:14 PM on 06/02/2012
Sure - shoot at the well-lighted boat. It's an easier target
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jbkorn02
08:18 PM on 05/28/2012
It seems that most of us hear nothing coming from South America. I haven't heard of the cartels in weeks but I don't think that they have slowed down. Also when Obama was at the summit in South America a month ago he said that he admitted we need to do things differntly because what is happening now is not working. Many of the countries in the region wanted to legalize or at least discuss it. Obama said he would be up for a chang but legalization is totally off of the table. So not only do they stop they're best to get us to not do drugs our government is interfereing just as much if not more in South America. And the worst thing about it is we don't hear about it. Canada also want's to legalize marijuana but there are no stories in the news about that either.
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king soloman
I'Am the cats Pajamas! ! ! !
06:18 PM on 05/21/2012
all on obama. The less news that comes from latin america the better chance of him getting elected. Im sorry but we need to fix our southern border and fix it fast.
10:22 AM on 05/20/2012
Imagine if the recent 49 beheaded bodies were placed in the US, it would be the biggest story of the year... but since it was in Mexico no one here seems to care. Way to go USA. Screw the war on drugs, waste our money somewhere else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PatrickforO
America needs a Labor Party
02:44 AM on 05/20/2012
Three things that bug me about this:

1. There are only 55 comments on this story and I've not heard it reported in any of the national US media

2. The drug war was lost the moment we declared it. We waste nearly $40 billion a year at federal, state and local levels on this prohibition, and history has proven that prohibitions have never, do not now, and will never, work. The only reason drugs haven't been decriminalized and marijuana legalized is that entrenched interests such as the DEA, the cartels, international banks and private corrections firms are making money. They want things left just as they are. Did you know the US has the highest incarceration rate of any nation in the world (743 per 100,000), has 2.4 million people in prison or jail, and has more prisoners convicted on drug charges than Western Europe has prisoners?

3. There's no real accountability for those DEA operations, is there? They can do some 'no knock' deal and blow an innocent person away; they can float over in a gunship and kill pregnant women; and they can actually take away all your property and other assets under the current forfeiture laws, which put the buden of proof on you not the state - you have to prove your property was NOT used in crime.

The war on drugs has given this nation NOTHING BUT PAIN. Legalize marijuana NOW.
10:19 AM on 05/20/2012
thank you... just... thank you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
suddenfun
Subvert the dominant paradigm
12:12 PM on 05/19/2012
Why does anyone wonder why we are hated world wide. Our number one export is hegemony.
04:04 PM on 05/18/2012
I just saw this story on the Washington Post today, with the drug war in Mexico becoming and all out cartel war. Which mean anybody caught in the middle of the the fighting gangsters is dead meat, I kind of think its hard of even the mainstream media to continue to buy the governments line. Peace
12:39 PM on 05/18/2012
Not that the US wouldn't be above killing innocent people, but what proof do they have that the US was involved in these particular deaths, or is mob mentality at work here? One statement says soldiers, another says DEA .. DEA aren't soldiers. I point this out not as a matter of semantics, but as an example of no definitive identification, ...to me it seems that The Big Bad American Government is the scapegoat here, unless actual proof is given, and not just hearsay.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AliceEatPeyote
05:55 PM on 05/18/2012
Read this story some ware else. Not on huff po. You will be better informed of what really happened. Huff po just says stuff like "soldiers" to minipulate people's thinking.
10:21 AM on 05/20/2012
if you're going to tell someone to read a different article to find out the "facts" at least learn how to spell
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jbkorn02
08:38 PM on 05/28/2012
I usually read most stories on both sites since I've found this one and I seem to find more fact that are true here. I haven't been visiting long but I like having somewhere to go when I know CNN is just lying or refusing to cover major issues.
10:37 AM on 07/09/2012
Well, DEA agents and Honduran soldiers
11:40 AM on 05/18/2012
The U.N. has also killed farmers in honduras in the name of protecting a bio fuel reserve. Now this killing in the name of the war on drugs. War on terrorism, drugs, and enviromental protection is the big goverments justification for killing other people and stealing land and resources. Without having to worry about borders, jurisdiction. soveriegnty, or human rights.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GuyCybershy
11:25 AM on 05/18/2012
Central America is slowly returning to the bad old days of death squads and covert warfare. I suppose the Obama administration views this as one of his foreign policy triumphs.
12:41 AM on 05/21/2012
I wonder if you mean to contrast Obama to Republicans. I hope not, because Central American policy is not a shiny area for Republicans.
10:16 AM on 05/18/2012
The failing war on drugs needs to end as the only winners are the lawyers and cartells .It has been proven that all it has accomplished is more deaths and unrest than the drugs themselves!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Crazyknightz
Henry A. Wallace, The Last Real Lib Betrayed by De
12:48 AM on 05/18/2012
we live in a bubble is all thats what they did in the movie 1984 the goverment would look through news clippings and change the stories before they came out to suit there endless war so they could keep there totalitarian society afloat.
11:54 PM on 05/17/2012
Because of John Wayne and Walt Disney you can't believe that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency kills innocent as well as guilty people in other countries. What rock have you been living under?
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flaconoire
Anartist
07:30 PM on 05/17/2012
Too many leeches profiting from the "war on drugs".
10:24 AM on 05/20/2012
there's also too many lives being lost and wayyy too much money being lost on this "cause"