GENEVA (19 November 2021) –UN human rights experts* today urged Honduras, elected to the Human Rights Council last
month, to release eight environmental defenders in line with recommendations made by another UN body.
“As a new member of the UN Human Rights Council, Honduras should be redoubling efforts to clean up its human rights
record, and an obvious first step is to release the Guapinol defenders,” said Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the
situation of human rights defenders.
The defenders were placed in pre-trial detention two years ago for opposing an iron oxide mine inside a protected
national park in Tocoa, a municipality in the country’s northern Colón department. The defenders – Jeremías Martínez
Díaz, José Daniel Márquez Márquez, Kelvin Alejandro Romero Martínez, José Abelino Cedillo, Porfirio Sorto Cedillo, Orbín
Nahúm Hernández, Arnold Javier Alemán and Ewer Alexander Cedillo Cruz – come from the community of Guapinol on the
Guapinol River, polluted by the mine.
They belong to the Municipal Committee for the Defence of Common and Public Goods (CMDBPC), a network of local groups
dedicated to land and environmental defence. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention said in February that their
detention was arbitrary and breached a number of human rights standards including the guarantee to a fair trial.
Delivering an official Opinion in the case, the Working Group called for their immediate release.
However, a Honduran court in August extended their preventive detention; they are to go on trial on 1 December 2021.
The Working Group on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises raised
concerns on this specific case following its visit to Honduras in 2019. It recommended that the government of Honduras
take immediate measures to protect the life and integrity of human rights defenders working to protect the rights of
communities, their land or the environment in the context of development projects. It also called for prompt and
impartial investigations of cases involving threats and violence against them.
“Since the beginning, serious questions have been raised about the basis of the charges and the impartiality of court
rulings,” said Lawlor. “There appears to be no justification of the extension of their detention. In fact, the continued
detention of the Guapinol environmental defenders discredits Honduras’ efforts to improve the situation for human rights
defenders.”
When the General Assembly elected Honduras to the Human Rights Council for the first time in its history last month, the
country made a number of pledges to strengthen international human rights mechanisms and compliance with global human
rights instruments.
In addition to failing to honour the opinion of the Working Group, Lawlor noted that Honduras has not yet ratified the
Escazú Agreement, the first legally binding instrument in the world to include provisions on environmental human rights
defenders. She also noted the historical recognition of the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment by the
Human Rights Council on 8 October 2021 through the adoption of a resolution.
“How can Honduras be expected to promote meaningful engagement with international mechanisms if it is unwilling to do so
itself?” asked Lawlor. She is in contact with the Honduran authorities on the Guapinol issue.
Her call was endorsed by: Mr. Pedro Arrojo Agudo, Special Rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation; Mr. David R. Boyd, Special Rapporteur on human rights and the environment; and Ms. Elina Steinerte (Chair-Rapporteur), Ms. Miriam Estrada-Castillo (Vice-chairperson), Ms. Leigh Toomey, Mr. Mumba Malila, Ms. Priya Gopalan, the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention.
*Ms Mary Lawlor (Ireland) is the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders. She is currently an Adjunct Professor of Business and Human Rights in Trinity College Dublin. She was the founder of
Front Line Defenders - the International Foundation for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders. As Executive Director
from 2001-2016, she represented Front Line Defenders and had a key role in its development. Ms. Lawlor was previously
Director of the Irish Office of Amnesty International from 1988 to 2000, after becoming a member of the Board of
Directors 1975 and being elected its President from 1983 to 1987.