Honduras News Archives: mexico

President Lobo Speaks with Oppenheimer

The country that will receive the most attention during President Barack Obama’s ongoing visit to Latin America — other than Libya — will be Brazil, but the place where he will probably have the biggest, and most needed, impact will be Central America.

Fifteen years after the end of Central America’s civil wars, this region is once again becoming the world’s most violent place, and a major source of drug trafficking, organized crime and illegal immigration to the United States.

According to United Nations estimates, more than 15,000 people a year are dying in drug and human trafficking-related violence in Central America.

Honduras is already the world’s most violent country, with a homicide rate of 67 per 100,000 people a year, four times higher than Mexico’s, the weekly The Economist reported recently.

During a five-day visit to Honduras, Nicaragua and a stop in El Salvador, I was surprised to see a huge increase of private security guards on the streets — like nothing I had seen in recent years. You see private guards everywhere, much more than uniformed police or army troops.

According to U.N. figures, there are at least five times more private security guards than police forces in Honduras and Guatemala.

What is going on, I asked Honduran President Porfirio Lobo in an interview. Lobo, who was democratically elected after a constitutional crisis triggered by a 2009 civilian-military coup, told me that growing numbers of Mexican drug lords are moving south to Central America because of the Mexican government’s military crackdown on the cartels.

“The cartels are coming our way,” Lobo said. “The growing crime rates are affecting us a lot, in many ways. Among other things, they scare away investments.”

Continue Miami Herald Article here.

44 Percent of Mexican Migrants are Honduran

A total of 89 Central American migrants – four children, five women and 80 men – were detained by immigration agents in the past few days in central Mexico, the National Migration Institute, or INM, said.

The migrants were found around the railroad tracks in Irolo, a community in Hidalgo state, the INM said in a statement. Fifty-eight of the migrants are from Honduras, 16 are from Guatemala and 15 are from El Salvador. Immigration agents detained 50 of the Central Americans on Wednesday and the other 39 over the weekend. The migrants will be deported once their cases are examined, the INM said.

Authorities detained nearly 5,000 migrants last month across Mexico, the INM said in a report released earlier this month.

“A total of 4,612 foreigners were taken into custody by the National Migration Institute (INM) during the second month of this year,” the agency said.

An estimated 250,000 Central Americans cross Mexico each year on their way to the United States, but academic researchers contend that the figure has fallen markedly because of the kidnappings and attacks on migrants. Mexico recently launched the Unified Strategy for Preventing and Combating the Kidnapping of Migrants, a program aimed at dismantling the gangs that prey on migrants and forming alliances with other countries affected by this problem.

At least 11,333 migrants, the majority of them from Central America, were kidnapped in Mexico between April and September 2010, the National Human Rights Commission, or CNDH, said in a report released last month

“Government efforts to reduce the rate of kidnappings against the migrant population have not been sufficient,” CNDH president Raul Plascencia said during the presentation on Feb. 22nd of the “Special Report on the Kidnapping of Migrants in Mexico.”

Some 44.3 percent of the victims were Hondurans, followed by Salvadorans (16.2 percent), Guatemalans (11.2 percent), Mexicans (10.6 percent), Cubans (5 percent), Nicaraguans (4.4 percent), Colombians (1.5 percent) and Ecuadorians (0.50 percent), the CNDH, Mexico’s equivalent of an ombudsman’s office, said.

The CNDH documented 214 kidnapping cases, many of them mass abductions, and found that some migrants were employed by criminals and corrupt officials to “infiltrate” groups of migrants.

Honduras news article from: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2011/03/17/8-central-american-migrants-detained-mexico

Honduran Foreign Minister Ends Trip

Today Honduran Assistant Foreign Minister Alden Rivera concluded his three-day visit to Mexico to address the issue of migrant safety and human rights.

On the first day of his trip, he met with the Undersecretary for Latin America and the Caribbean, Ruben Beltran, in the Foreign Ministry. He then met with the Interior Ministry’s Undersecretary for Population, Migration and Religious Affairs, René Zenteno; the Commissioner of the National Migration Institute, Salvador Beltran del Rio; and the Deputy Attorney General for Legal and International Affairs, Jorge Lara.

Assistant Foreign Minister Rivera acknowledged the Mexican government’s fight against organized crime, the main threat to the security of the countries of the region, including migrants…continue news article here.