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Press Releases

Welcome to the Press Releases section of Honduras Weekly.

Mar 18
2010

House Foreign Affairs Committee Holds Hearing on Honduras

Posted by HW in Human Rights

HW

US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs to Hold Hearing on Honduras

CONTACT: Patty Adams, +1 (301) 699-0042

HYATTSVILLE, MARYLAND/March 17/Quixote Center/ -- On March 18, the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs will hold a hearing titled "Next Steps for Honduras."

This hearing follows Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to Latin America earlier this month, where she announced that the United States would be restoring aid to Honduras based on the "successful conclusion of the crisis…without violence" and praised the establishment of a "Truth Commission" in Honduras.

The reality in Honduras stands in stark contrast to Secretary Clinton's statements. National and international human rights organizations have widely denounced the violent attacks against political opposition in Honduras, which continues under the Lobo government, including over 40 murders in the last eight months.

The Human Rights Platform in Honduras, which includes each of Honduras' key human rights organizations, has rejected the "Truth Commission" promoted by the Lobo and US governments stating that it is politically compromised.

Mar 17
2010

Aura Minerals Will be Added to S&P/TSX Composite Index

Posted by HW in MiningGold

HW

Aura Minerals Clarifies Inclusion to S&P/TSX Indices

CONTACT: Patrick Downey, +1 (604) 669-4777, info@auraminerals.com

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA/March 17/Aura Minerals/ -- Aura Minerals Inc. ("Aura Minerals" or the "Company") (CA:ORA 3.99, +0.06, +1.53%) announced earlier today that the Company will be added to the S&P/TSX Composite Index, effective Monday, March 22, 2010. Aura Minerals has not been included in the S&P/TSX Composite Index, but will be added to the S&P/TSX Global Mining and the S&P/TSX Global Base Metals indices, effective March 22, 2010 at market open. Aura Minerals is also part of the S&P/TSX SmallCap Index and the S&P BMI Canada Index.

Aura Minerals is a Canadian resource company focused on the acquisition, exploration and development and operation of gold and base metal projects in the Americas. The Company's portfolio includes the San Andres Gold Mine in Honduras, the copper-gold-silver Aranzazu Project in Mexico, and the feasibility-stage Serrote Deposit at the copper-gold-iron ore Arapiraca Project in Brazil. In addition, the Company has agreed to acquire the producing Sao Francisco and Sao Vicente gold mines in Brazil, subject to regulatory approvals.

Mar 17
2010

Committee to Protect Journalists Condemns Palacios Killing

Posted by HW in Freedom of the PressCrime

HW

Third Honduran Journalist Gunned Down in Two Weeks

CONTACT: Meredith Greene Megaw, +1 (212) 465-1004/x105, mgmegaw@cpj.org

NEW YORK/March 16/Committee to Protect Journalists/ -- Unidentified attackers gunned down Honduran journalist Nahúm Palacios Arteaga in the city of Tocoa on Sunday, the third deadly attack against the Honduran press in the last two weeks, according to news reports. Honduran authorities must put an end to the wave of deadly violence and ensure that the killers are punished, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

“We condemn the murder of Nahúm Palacios Arteaga and urge authorities to swiftly bring those responsible to justice,” said Carlos Lauría, CPJ’s senior program coordinator for the Americas. “Rising violence is seriously limiting crime coverage while depriving Honduran citizens of critical information on the country’s security.”

Palacios, 34, a journalist for Channel 5 TV and Radio Tocoa in the Atlantic region, was driving home when two cars pulled alongside his vehicle at about 10.30 p.m., the local press said. At least two unidentified individuals fired several times, according to the Honduran press. The journalist died at the scene, while a companion seated next to him was severely wounded, news reports said.

Local police told the news media that the gunmen used AK-47 assault rifles, a weapon regularly used by Honduran criminal groups. Authorities have not disclosed possible motives.

Palacios had reported on drug trafficking, violence, local politics, and an agrarian conflict between landowners and peasants in the Aguán region, according to Meri Agurcia, a researcher for the local human rights group Comité de Familiares Detenidos-Desaparecidos en Honduras. Palacios had received recent, anonymous death threats, according to the Honduran press and CPJ sources.

In June 2009, Palacios had been threatened by members of the military for his critical coverage of the coup that ousted President Manuel Zelaya, according to Agurcia and local news reports. The journalist’s home and office were raided and his equipment confiscated in an effort to intimidate him, press reports said.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), an autonomous body of the Organization of American States, urged the Honduran government in July 2009 to provide protection for Palacios based on the threats and harassment, local press reports said. Honduran authorities, however, didn’t implement the measures recommended by IACHR. In a press release issued today, the Inter-American Commission said it deeply regretted the murder and noted the Honduran government’s failure to carry out measures to protect Palacios.

Organized crime has made the country’s Atlantic region an extremely dangerous place for the press, sources told CPJ. On March 11, radio reporter David Meza was murdered in the city of La Ceiba, also in the Atlantic coast, under similar circumstances. A spokesman for the attorney general’s office told CPJ today that the police are looking at the journalist’s work as a possible motive.

A third Honduran reporter was also killed this month. On March 1, reporter Joseph Hernández Ochoa was slain in Tegucigalpa in a shooting that left another journalist seriously wounded. CPJ is investigating whether the killings are linked to the journalists’ work.

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Mar 16
2010

IMF Technical Team Arrives to Evaluate Public Finances

Posted by HW in Finance

HW

IMF Mission Arrives in Honduras to Evaluate Finances

CONTACT: xxp69@xinhuanet.com

TEGUCIGALPA/March 15/Xinhua News Agency/ -- A technical team from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) arrived in Honduras on Monday on a mission to evaluate the country's public finances and financial plans after the new government took office in January.

The IMF team will stay in Honduras till March 25 and will meet Finance Ministry and Central Bank officials, as well as senior government leaders and business leaders.

Honduran Finance Minister William Chong Wong told local media on Monday that the IMF team's visit "is normal, because they arrive in the country every year, but the meeting had been interrupted for the political event of June 28 of last year," referring to the army-backed coup.

"They come to review where we are, to make a diagnosis ... to put the finances in order," Chong said.

Honduras saw some 450 million US dollars in international aid frozen due to the coup as the European Union, the World Bank and Inter-American Development Band all halted funding. However, the World Bank resumed aid to Honduras in February after President Porfirio Lobo's inauguration.

Mar 15
2010

Television Journalist Nahúm Palacios Killed in Tocoa

Posted by HW in Freedom of the PressCrime

HW

Third Journalist Gunned Down in Honduras in Two Weeks

CONTACT: Dean Graber, knightcenter@austin.utexas.edu

AUSTIN, TEXAS/March 15/Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas/ -- Nahúm Palacios, a news director for TV Aguãn (Channel 5), was shot to death Sunday in Tocoa, Colón, a city near the Atlantic coast. A companion riding in the car with him was severely wounded, and a camera operator riding in the back was grazed by a bullet El Heraldo and El Tiempo report.

Journalists in the city of San Pedro Sula marched Monday to demand justice and an end to violence and threats against members of the profession, La Tribuna and La Prensa add.

Palacios’ killing follows the shooting death of David Meza last Thursday in the coastal city of La Ceiba. Hundreds turned out for the broadcaster's funeral Saturday and demanded justice in the case, El Heraldo reports.

Meza’s killing followed the shooting death of Joseph Hernández Ochoa and the wounding of Karol Cabrera—both TV hosts—in an attack on their auto in Tegucigalpa.

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