At the time of the coup the Honduran president claimed the U.S. "opposed" the  
coup, but it became   quickly obvious that that was wishful thinking on his 
part. And the U.S. has since then supported the military dictatorship in many 
ways. The AFL-CIO release is accurate, as is my preceding sentence. "The U.S." 
is a rather general term: it should be replaced by "The Obama Administration."

Carrol

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert Naiman
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2015 12:47 PM
To: Progressive Economics
Subject: [Pen-l] AFL-CIO Report: U.S. Policy in Honduras causes migration


Showing the overlap between destructive U.S. trade policies and other 
destructive U.S. policies. 

"What we witnessed," reported Tefere Gebre, AFL-CIO Executive Vice President, 
"was the intersection of our corporate-dominated trade policies with our broken 
immigration system, contributing to a state that fails workers and their 
families and forces them to live in fear."




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David Bacon Fotografias y Historias 
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AFL-CIO REPORT: U.S. POLICY IN HONDURAS CAUSES MIGRATION By David Bacon Equal 
Times, 2/10/15 
http://www.equaltimes.org/unions-call-for-a-new-chapter-in#.VNos1hZloTA 
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<https://gallery.mailchimp.com/fc67a76dbb9c31aaee896aff7/images/35298934-9770-4854-8da7-9a07a09051a8.jpg>
 
 
In a waiting area for port truck drivers and their families in Puerto Cort?s, 
Honduras, a driver sleeps in a hammock by his truck.
 
 
OAKLAND, CA - In the wake of the political crisis in the United States last 
year, caused by the migration of large numbers of children from Central America 
to the U.S./Mexico border, the AFL-CIO in November sent a delegation to 
Honduras, the country that sent the greatest number of unaccompanied minors.  
"What we witnessed," reported Tefere Gebre AFL-CIO Executive Vice President, 
"was the intersection ?of our corporate-dominated trade policies with our 
broken immigration system, contributing to a state that fails workers and their 
families and forces them to live in fear."
 
The delegation issued a report, "Trade, Violence and Migration: The Broken 
Promises to Honduran Workers."  It is unusually critical of U.S. foreign and 
immigration policies, and marked a return, in some ways, to the way voices in 
U.S. labor condemned the government's intervention policies during the civil 
wars in Central America. 
 
The report, in fact, contains a frank assessment of the history of U.S. foreign 
policy in Honduras, and draws out the disastrous consequences it has created in 
that country today.  "The fate of Honduras long has been tied to ?that of the 
United States," it charges. "Throughout the 20th century, Honduras was key to 
maintaining U.S. military and economic interests on the isthmus. The U.S. 
military intervened in Honduran politics throughout the early 20th century to 
protect the foreign investments of large U.S. corporations like the United 
Fruit Co. Later, Honduras served as a base of operations during the 
U.S.-supported 1954 coup in Guatemala, as well as the 1961 Bay of Pigs 
invasion, and during the years of civil war and Cold War proxy wars in Central 
America in the 1970s and '80s, the government provided support for the 'Contra' 
counter-revolutionary war against the Sandinista government in Nicaragua."
 
More recently the U.S. raised only pro-forma objections to the 2009 coup that 
overthrew Honduras' elected president Manuel Zelaya, and then quickly restarted 
military aid to the junta that seized power.  "Under the left-leaning Zelaya 
administration, the minimum wage was raised by 80%, direct assistance was 
provided to the poorest Hondurans, and poverty and inequality declined," the 
report says.  After the coup, however, "numerous trade unionists and community 
activists who participated in resistance were killed, beaten, threatened and 
jailed," it declares. 
 
 
 
<https://gallery.mailchimp.com/fc67a76dbb9c31aaee896aff7/images/b75a4d6c-db31-42b4-b8a9-91398365eac1.jpg>
 
 
Francisco Palencia Espinoza shows the bald tire on the truck he drives from 
Honduras to the Salvadoran Port of Acajutla.
 
 
Based on extensive interviews with unionists, it details current abuses of 
labor and human rights.  The government has built an apparatus to put down 
dissent, while the Secretariat of Labor and Social Security has passed laws to 
reduce permanent work, protections and freedom of association.  Teachers face 
news laws limiting their right to strike.  Farm worker unionists face an 
increase in violent attacks and threats against their lives in the sugar cane 
fields.  Five union executive councils have been fired by the partnership of 
the Kyungshin Corp. of South Korea and the Lear Corp. of Michigan. 
 
According to Larry Cohen, president of the Communications Workers of America 
and a participant in the delegation, Honduran unions "confirmed constant 
violations of organizing rights in direct violation of CAFTA. These included 
everything from the murder of leaders to the collapse of bargaining rights 
where they once existed."
 
In the port of Puerto Cortez, the delegation reports deteriorating conditions 
due to the privatization of docks, with over 1000 workers fired.  The head of 
the dockers' union, Victor Crespo, was forced to flee Honduras after his father 
was killed and mother injured, and he himself received threats to his life.  A 
support campaign by the U.S. International Longshore and Warehouse Union helped 
save his life, and eventually won guarantees that allowed his safe return to 
Honduras.
 
The AFL-CIO report condemns a plan to "reduce the wage bill" in the public 
sector by cutting jobs and privatizing public services, especially in 
electricity.  It points out that this reflects the policies of the 
International Monetary Fund called for cutting the public sector from 7.5% of 
GDP to 2% in four years.  The resulting job loss has a clear impact on 
increasing poverty, forcing many Hondurans to migrate in search of survival.
 
 
 
<https://gallery.mailchimp.com/fc67a76dbb9c31aaee896aff7/images/64bf7489-782b-4bfb-8b73-7930db3f116e.jpg>
 
 
A family of port workers in a neighborhood outside Puerto Cortez.
 
 
The report makes the case that poverty in Honduras has been deepened by the 
impact of the Central American Free Trade Agreement: "Today, Honduras is the 
most unequal country in Latin America."  Poverty rose from 60 to 64.5% from 
2006 to 2013.  By emphasizing a policy that deregulated business and used low 
wages as an incentive to attract foreign investment, "CAFTA only exacerbated 
the desperation and instability ?in Honduras," it charges.  "Honduran workers 
identified the 2009 Honduran coup d'état and the subsequent militarization of 
Honduran society, and the implementation of CAFTA and its impact on decent work 
and labor rights, as two essential elements to understanding the current 
crisis."
 
Cohen urged, "We need to look at our own immigration policy, concentrating 
enormous resources on deportation and nothing on resettlement.  We need to look 
at the trade deals, in this case, CAFTA, that accelerated free market 
devastation."
 
Backing up the increasing militarization of Honduran society is U.S. military 
aid, which reached $27 million in 2012.  The report notes that both Assistant 
Secretary of State William Brownfield and Commander John Kelly of the United 
States Southern Command praised Honduran "advances in security."  In the U.S. 
media, General Kelly has demonized migration from Central America, calling the 
movement of families and children a national security threat and a 
"crime-terror convergence."
 
That migration, described in the AFL-CIO report, has grown sharply.  More than 
18,000 unaccompanied Honduran children arrived in the United States in 2014 
alone.  "In 1990, there were approximately 109,000 Honduran migrants in the 
world. In 2010, that number grew close to 523,000, with the vast majority 
living in the United States," it says. "Today, migration is seen by many 
families as a means to escape violence or seek employment opportunity or 
reunite with family, while the government has embraced the remittances from 
migrants as a major economic resource."
 
 
 
<https://gallery.mailchimp.com/fc67a76dbb9c31aaee896aff7/images/f4777544-5e87-4449-b2c2-822cde06b65b.jpg>
 
 
Marvin Mejia, a port truck driver, his sister Wendy and his mother Isabel, in 
one of the two rooms of their rented house in Puerto Cortez.
 
 
Josie Camacho, executive secretary of the Alameda Central Labor Council in 
California, was a member of the delegation.  "As a mother, I couldn't imagine 
why a Honduran mother would ask her child to walk 1700 miles to the border, 
alone, and put her in the hands of unscrupulous people," she relates.  "I got a 
real education about the consequences of our military policy, and now I see 
people have no choice.  We should embrace and protect them - it's part of what 
being a union really means."
 
Three quarters of those migrants, arriving in the U.S. after the immigration 
amnesty of 1986, have been undocumented.  As a result, Hondurans, even 
children, have felt the impact of the U.S. policy of mass deportations - about 
400,000 per year for six years.  In 2013 alone, the U.S. deported 37,049 
Hondurans.
 
AFL-CIO President Rich Trumka last year called on the U.S. president to suspend 
deportations:  "Continuation of the deportation crisis is incompatible with our 
values as a country."  He urged "an end to a deportation machine that 
criminalizes hardworking immigrants while deporting hundreds and hundreds of 
people a day without even an appearance before a judge."
 
The report, however, pointedly differs with the immigration reform policies 
proposed by the U.S. administration and the Democratic Party in Congress, which 
call for vast expansions in temporary, guest worker programs, in which workers 
labor for low wages and have few labor or civil rights.  "Temporary visa 
programs are not a safe alternative to undocumented migration," it declares, 
noting the history of rights violations in the U.S., and abuses in recruitment, 
including extortion, fraud and the confiscation of documents.  
 
 
 
<https://gallery.mailchimp.com/fc67a76dbb9c31aaee896aff7/images/e9458e4a-7b21-410a-9281-b5f2d36ef3fb.jpg>
 
 
Erasmo Flores, president of the Honduran union for port truckers, talks with 
drivers about the impact CAFTA will have on them.
 
 
The report ends with a series of recommendations for both the U.S. and Honduran 
governments.  It demands that the U.S. extend refugee status to people, 
especially children, fleeing violence and persecution, and end the mass 
detention of migrants.  Instead of CAFTA, it calls for "trade policies that 
lead to the creation? of decent work," and instead of support for repression, 
"ending all aid to the military." 
 
"The Honduran government must turn away from militarization," it asserts. It 
recommends longer-term sustainable development policies and investment in 
public services. The report even urges the Honduran government to refuse to 
accept deportees from the U.S. unless they are given due process before 
deportation. 
 
Ultimately, the AFL-CIO concludes, the U.S. government must move away from 
policies that "criminalize migrant children and their families, while pursuing 
trade deals that simultaneously displace subsistence farmers and lower wages 
and standards across other sectors, and eliminate good jobs, intensifying the 
economic conditions that drive migration."
  
________________________________








         
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