No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveIndigenous Chorti Demand Promised Land in Honduras

Indigenous Chorti Demand Promised Land in Honduras

TEGUCIGALPA – Hundreds of Chorti indigenous Hondurans posted themselves on June 23 in front of the Copan Ruinas archaeological park in western Honduras to demand that the government provide them with land on which they can grow crops to feed their families.

Chorti spokesman Manuel Mancia told Tegucigalpa’s Radio America that the protest was being staged because of the government’s failure to fulfill its commitment to provide them with land, an agreement made by then-President Ricardo Maduro in September 2005.

He added that last year an accord was signed with incumbent President Manuel Zelaya according to which the government would hand over to the Chortis some 14,700 hectares, but so far that offer has only been 35 percent fulfilled.

The demands of the Chortis have been made more forcefully starting in 1997. The tribe lives in the western provinces of Copan and Ocotepeque, a region in which there is not much available land because most of it is in private hands, a circumstance that has made the state’s purchase of promised land very difficult, officials say.

No end date was placed on the protest, which began last week, Mancia said.

In 2005, the Chortis staged a similar demonstration for six days in front of the park that includes the remains of the Mayan city of Copan, a protest that caused substantial financial losses because the site is one of the main tourist attractions in Honduras.

Mancia also noted that the Chortis, who number some 8,000, are demanding land on which to carry out their subsistence farming activities.

 

Popular Articles

Tennis Star Jannik Sinner Back on Court After Doping Suspension

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner returns to competition Saturday after his suspension, 104 days after winning the Australian Open.That Melbourne final in late January...

Costa Rica’s Rising Violence Challenges Chaves’ Security Claims

Costa Rica President Rodrigo Chaves, in his third annual report to be presented to the Legislative Assembly tomorrow, defended his administration’s security strategy, describing...

Costa Rica Expat Guide to Ticks and How to Avoid Them

Of the many strange and interesting species that many hope to encounter during their time in Costa Rica, arthropods are generally lower on the...
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Tours
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait

Latest Articles