Remembering Bertha Caceres - “Why did she not get out?”

Submitted bytortilla onJue, 03/03/2016 - 14:05

Stephen Sefton, Tortilla con Sal, March 3rd 2016
http://www.telesurtv.net/english/opinion/Remembering-Berta-Caceres-Why-…
 

Today we learned of the savage murder of Bertha Caceres, the outstanding indigenous people's leader from the west of Honduras. The first words I heard in response to the news were from another revolutionary woman here in Nicaragua “Esa mujer....por qué no salió de allí?” Why did she not get out of there? Well, the answer to that is clear. Bertha Caceres would never run away from a just struggle, whatever the risks. For us then, trying to assimilate this dreadful news, we remembered the words of another beloved revolutionary woman leader of the Honduran popular movement, Margarita Murillo, murdered in August 2014. Margarita told us, “If Juan Orlando Hernandez becomes president he will wipe out all the revolutionary leaders in Honduras”. Prophetic words.

 

The radical Honduran “Los Necios” news briefing reported that a representative of the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH) communicated Bertha's murder in the town of La Esperanza, in the Honduran department of Intibucá at 1.00am this morning. The COPINH spokesperson reported that Bertha had received repeated death threats as well as constant judicial and administrative harrassment ever since the 2009 military coup in Honduras. Bertha was an internationally recognized leader of the regional drive for indigenous people's rights and human rights in general, as well as a key leader in the complex and volatile Honduran popular movement.
 


Foto: Boletín Los Necios

Here in Nicaragua we got to know Bertha in the months following the 2009 military coup, so cynically supported by the US government, including both current President Barack Obama and current potential presidential candidate, then Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton. There is no doubt at all that the Honduran authorities are the ultimate authors of Bertha's murder.

The government of Juan Orlando Hernandez has acted consistently to destroy any semblance of State legitimacy, placing the country's security forces and its judicial and administrative authorities firmly at the service of the country's national business interests and international corporate interests. In this Honduras very much resembles Haiti under the maladministration of the government of President Martelly.

Bertha Caceres fought against that local and international corporate tyranny to the last.

We first got to know Bertha in July 2009 at the time when President Manuel Zelaya was trying to re-enter Honduras from Nicaragua at the Las Manos frontier crossing. With her COPINH comrades Bertha had trekked across the hill country of the southern Honduran department of El Paraíso to reach Las Manos, braving attempts by the Honduran police and army, including snipers posted along the border area who murdered several Honduran citizens at that time. As part of the solidarity effort organized by the Nicaraguan government and local people around the Northern town of Ocotal in those days we were able to help Bertha and her COPINH comrades with food and accommodation.

What was so striking about Bertha was that despite all the tremendous difficulties she was always highly resourceful in finding ways around otherwise apparently intractable problems. Another thing that was so impressive about her was the great affection and respect with which she was held both by her comrades in COPINH and all the other people we met in the days and weeks following the 2009 coup. Subsequent to the events in Las Manos that year, we hosted Bertha on one of her visits to Nicaragua when COPINH and other organizations were trying to coordinate solidarity work in the region to help the radical Honduran resistance sustain its positions within the complex situation developing in Honduras. We were short of food around then and could only offer Bertha a 5.00am breakfast of porridge oats and coffee, which she and her comrades graciously accepted despite our embarrassment. People like that, people who don't stand on ceremony and drive directly to what needs to be done, people like that are truly exceptional, truly revolutioanry.

So today people in Honduras wake up to a tremendous loss, but Bertha herself would say not an irreplaceable loss, a terribly bitter loss indeed, but above all an inspirational loss, despite everything. Whie collar crime bosses like President Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton and their local proxies like Juan Orlando Hernandez, or, in Haiti, Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly, will never defeat the inspirational examples of popular leaders like Bertha Caceres or Margarita Murillo in Honduras or, in Haiti, murdered human rights activists Daniel Dorsinvil and his wife Girldy Lareche or murdered journalist and activist Jacques Roche. Margarita Murillo used to quote the Bible from James 5, 1.4.6, “Now listen, you rich people, weep and wail because of the misery that is coming on you. Look! The wages you failed to pay the workers who mowed your fields are crying out against you. The cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord Almighty. You have condemned and murdered the innocent one, who was not opposing you.” Nothing could be more true than in the case of Bertha Caceres who, like Margarita Murillo, never ceased to demand justice for victims of injustice both in Honduras and elsewhere.

For Honduras now, the question is how long this dark nightmare of repression, of wholesale murder of vulnerable people claiming basic rights, and the deliberately targeted campaign of selective murder of revolutionary leaders will go on. More especially, how long will this war on women leaders devoted to promoting true democracy in Central America continue. Bertha Caceres and Margarita Murillo were courageous women who devoted their whole lives to advancing the cause of rural workers and their families, indigenous peoples and all people ground down by the odious, murderous Honduran oligarchy supported by the government of the United States and its European Union allies. But more especially they advocated the true democracy that can only come with the genuine emancipation of women from all forms of cultural, social, economic and political  repression. North American and European governments regularly spew out declarations in favor of the rights of women, the rights of indgenous peoples and democracy and freedom in general. What foul, cynical hypocrites they are can never be emphasized or repeated enough.

They ratified the phoney, hopelessly flawed elections of the coup regime in Honduras in 2009 and then again in 2013. They have promoted the ridiculous farce of bogus elections in Haiti, time after time since the coup in 2004. Nothing could be clearer. The US government and the European Union governments support coup regimes in Latin America and the Caribbean. They consistently attack democratically elected governments in Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Venezuela.They will certainly emit ceremonial condemnations of the murder of Bertha Caceres. But what their governments do in practice betrays what their mealy mouthed spokespersons say. In the end only the rural and urban working families of the region organized in their respctive popular movements  will achieve their real liberation because only they are really going to defend their true interests.

All praise and honor to Bertha Caceres and Margarita Murillo, true and steadfast women liberators of Latin America and the Caribbean!