Since April 2015, at least 14 Honduran union leaders and members have suffered threats or violence, including one who was disappeared and another one who was murdered, part of a campaign of intimidation against worker rights documented in a new report by the Union...
Honduras
Dozens of trade unionists have been assassinated in Honduras in recent years, due to their outspoken defense of labor and human rights, and hundreds more injured in violent attacks for attempting to form unions. Most of the alleged perpetrators were public officials, including the military and police, and employers, according to the Anti-Union Violence Network in Honduras, and almost none have been brought to justice.
Agriculture is the largest formal sector employer in Honduras, and the Solidarity Center partners with the agro-industrial workers’ union federation FESTAGRO and its affiliated unions to build union organizing outreach among workers on palm oil, banana and other export crop plantations. Another important sector, domestic work, employs more than 100,000 workers in Honduras. In 2020, the Solidarity Center played a key role in the founding of the country’s first union for domestic workers, SINTRAHO.
Through the Solidarity Center’s women’s leadership development and organizing process, complemented by strategic alliances with consumers and campaigners abroad, 20 of the 27 union organizations in Honduras’s garment sector, representing tens of thousands of workers, have negotiated collective bargaining agreements that significantly boost wages and provide benefits like free transportation to and from work and educational funds for workers and their children.
The Solidarity Center works also with partners such as FESTAGRO and the Federación de Sindicatos de Trabajadores Textiles Maquila y Similares de Honduras (FESITRATEMASH) in the apparel sector to assist in developing strategies to address sexual harassment as an occupational safety issue. These unions have achieved framework agreements with global brands to combat sexual harassment, and created leadership programs for women workers to reverse the embedded exclusion of women from union leadership prevalent across the region.
Outrage over Second Murder of Honduran Rights Defender
The murder of a second Honduran rights activist, Nelson Noé García this week, days after the assassination of Berta Cáceres, a globally recognized leader for indigenous rights and environmental justice, has widened international outrage and amplified demands for...
Honduran Leader Berta Cáceres Murdered in the Midst of a Life Defending Her Community
This is a cross-post from the AFL-CIO Now blog. In her life and in her death at the hands of assassins this week, Berta Cáceres, a leader in Honduran struggles for social justice, exemplifies the difficult choices that so many Central American communities have faced...