Honduran President Lobo Given Leadership in International Relations
Award at CHLI Gala
by TRNN
Right wing CHLI started by same Cuban American politicians who
backed the 2009 Honduran coup and subsequent fraudulent elections that brought Lobo to power
VOICEOVER: On Monday, May 7th, a number of Congress members,
corporate leaders, and international politicians gathered at an upscale
hotel in Washington, DC to attend the Congressional Hispanic Leadership
Institute, or CHLI’s, 8th annual gala, where awards were presented to
business and political figures. This year’s recipients included
AT&T Mobility CEO and President Ralph de La Vega, Republican
Representative Thaddeus McCotter, and perhaps most notably, Honduran
de-facto President Porfirio “Pepe” Lobo. CHLI’s stated goal is to
advance the Hispanic community’s diversity of thought, placing an
emphasis on private enterprise and hemispheric trade. Attendees of the
$250 ticket gala applauded as announcers read the long list of corporate
sponsors and contributors of the event, among them some of the largest
US Spanish language media conglomerates like Univision and Telemundo.
*Excerpt from reading of sponsors*Announcer “I feel like I’m in Miami!”
VOICEOVER:
A number of familiar faces from the far right Cuban-American
Congressional block and lobby, with its base in Southern Florida, are
among those who sit on CHLI’s board, including Ileana Ross Lehtinen,
Marco Rubio, David Rivera, and the Diaz Balart brothers. CHLI’s founder
and chairman is former Republican Congressman Lincoln Diaz Balart, who
introduced each of the award recipients as his close personal friends.
Lincoln retired from Congress in 2011 and was replaced by his brother
Mario Diaz Balart.
LINCOLN DIAZ BALART: A number of like
minded members of congress and business leaders came together 8 years
ago to fill a void, to form a Hispanic organization in the US that’s
pro-international trade, pro-business, and pro-human rights…we never
cease in our advocacy in providing constant solidarity with those who
fight dictatorship throughout our hemisphere in Cuba and Venezuela, we
know that those freedom fighters the heroes of today are the leaders of
tomorrow we never forget that.
VOICEOVER: Much of the Gala
seemed to focus less on domestic issues facing Latino communities in
the U.S. and more on regional international affairs, with a particular
emphasis on promoting the regime of de-facto Honduran President and CHLI
leadership in international relations award recipient Pepe Lobo. The
event was kicked off with the singing of the Honduran national anthem,
and Honduran tourism advertisements were later screened during the
dinner. Outside, demonstrators protested Honduras’ deplorable human
rights record under Lobo’s tenure as president. Hundreds of members of
the country’s popular resistance have been the targets of politically
motivated assassinations since the coup, with the majority taking place
under the Lobo administration. In the Bajo Aguan region, the private
security forces of wealthy landowner Miguel Facusse, a key financer of
the coup, have murdered dozens of peasant farmers with the backing of
the U.S.-trained Honduran military and police. More than 20 journalists
have also been murdered while death threats and attacks have become the
norm for those who are critical of the government’s policies, making
Honduras one of the most dangerous countries in the world for
journalists. A deadly prison fire that killed more than 350 inmates in
February has cast further doubts on the Lobo government’s professed
commitment to human rights, along with the assassinations of dozens of
Honduran LGBT activists.
PEPE LOBO: Quiero ante ustedes
reiterar que hemos superado la crisis politica en Honduras y la
democracia se mantiene firme y vibrante hasta que aquellos que decian
que habia aqui por la ruta de las armas, hoy son parte del ajuste
electoral y van a participar en elecciones como corresponde, el pueblo
es el que decide libremente en las urnas… sanamos muchos las heridas y
aprendimos que a parte del interes personal que podamos tener o
politico, todos somos parte de esa pequeña nacion pero con mucho orgullo
y que alegria ver aqui la bandera de estados unidos de America, la
bandera de Honduras, dos pueblos que tiene una larga tradicion de
amistad Translation: I want to reiterate that we have
overcome the political crisis in Honduras and that our democracy is
strong and vibrant, to the point that some of those who once discussed
going down the path of taking up arms are now part of an electoral pact
and are going to participate in elections as it should be, where the
people are the ones who decide freely at the ballot box…. We have healed
many of our wounds and learned that more importantly than any personal
or political interests we may have, that we are proud to be part of this
small nation, it brings me joy to see the flag of the United States
here together with the flag of Honduras, two peoples who share a long
tradition of friendship.
VOICEOVER: Adrienne Pine is an
assistant professor of anthropology at American University who has been
researching violence in Honduras for 15 years. She participated in the
demonstration held outside the gala.
ADRIENNE PINE: Pepe
Lobo’s theme has been unity and reconciliation and all throughout his
presidency what we’ve seen instead is the plastering over of huge
violence carried out by the state…while Pepe talks about the inclusivity
of his government and the fact that people who had been and do still
consider themselves resistance are still running in elections it does
not negate the fact that his military and militarized police are killing
people on a regular basis in defense of people who financed the
coup…Pepe Lobo is a coup president and represents a politics that people
like Ileana Ros Lehtinen are very in favor of, they were so worried
that Manuel Zelaya the former president was actually bringing Honduras
down a road to socialism and towards something like Chavez at least this
is the worry that they talked about I think more than a fear of
socialism what congress people like Ileana really want is to is to open
up countries for complete exploitation of natural resources complete
capitalist exploitations of countries whether they be Cuba or Honduras
to make sure that the most profit possible can be made by corporations.
MARIO
DIAZ BALART: “The entire world had not only abandoned the Honduran
people, they were on the side of imposing a Marxist dictatorship.”
LINCOLN
DIAZ BALART: “Wise leadership brought Honduras back into the
international community after the people of Honduras had rallied in an
admirable manner to defend its freedom from the imposition of
totalitarianism from abroad and by honoring president Lobo CHLI honors
the people of Honduras.”
VOICEOVER: At the same time the
CHLI awards ceremony was taking place, the body of missing Honduran
journalist, LGBT activist, and opposition candidate Erick Martinez was
found north of the capital city of Tegucigalpa, having been strangled to
death. CHLI Congressional members like Lincoln Diaz Balart and Ileana
Ross Lehtinen have been instrumental in backing first the coup regime of
Roberto Michelletti and later the illegitimate elections carried out
under the coup government that brought Pepe Lobo to power. On the
domestic front, CHLI’s gala award recipient Representative Thaddeus
McCotter has consistently voted yes on anti-immigration measures such as
the construction of a US-Mexico border fence, English only legislation,
support for the border vigilante group the Minuteman Project, and
seeking to require hospitals to report undocumented immigrants who seek
medical care.
ADRIENNE PINE: It’s not really about
diversity of thought and it has nothing to do with Hispanic community in
reality what they are pushing is a corporate agenda that is against
human rights it’s against the 99 percent … which is meant to place the
blame for poverty on the poor and to pat each other on the backs so that
people like Pepe can go back to Honduras saying “I won an award by a
Hispanic organization in the US” and think that that’s going to give him
credibility back in Honduras
VOICEOVER: In March, 94
Congress members signed a letter calling for an end to U.S. military to
aid to Honduras citing concerns over human rights abuses carried out
under the Lobo government. SIGNOUT.