Human Rights Defenders Face 'Unthinkable Spiral of Violence' in Latin America

October 2, 2020 Off By EveAim

Last year was the deadliest year for human rights activists in Latin America—particularly women and defenders of the Earth—according to a new report by Oxfam International, which suggests that governments co-opted by economic elites are partly responsible for driving this “unthinkable spiral of violence.”

Citing data from the independent investigative organization Global Witness, the report, The Risks of Defending Human Rights (pdf), found that of the 185 human rights defenders killed worldwide in 2015, 122 were murdered in Latin America.

And this trend appears to be continuing, with 58 additional murders occurring in that region between January to May of this year. Even worse, those numbers do not include the recent assassinations of Brazilian environmental official Luiz Araujo, Honduran Campesino movement leaders José Ángel Flores and Silmer Dionisio, nor the recent attack on Goldman-Prize-winning environmental activist Máxima Acuña de Chaupe in Peru.

“Oxfam is deeply concerned about the worsening trend of violence and repression against defenders in recent years; and believes that this situation is linked to an economic model that creates extreme inequality and undermines people’s fundamental rights,” the report states.

The study highlights three key factors driving this increase in violence.

First, the report notes that female defenders are more exposed to violence, due to the prevalence of a patriarchal culture across Latin America. “El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, and Honduras have all reported an increase in attacks against female human rights activists; the great majority of these cases remain unsolved and the perpetrators act with impunity,” it states.  

Secondly, Oxfam highlights the connection between human rights violations and “the expansion of extractive industries as a national revenue model for Latin American and Caribbean countries.”

It reads:

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