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CESCR: Rural women call for justice and an end to eco-destruction in Honduras

This week in Geneva the State of Honduras will respond to questions from the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) concerning its compliance with obligations under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. An informal dialogue with civil society will also take place to inform Committee members on the human rights situation in the country.

Lily Mejía from FIAN Honduras and a community leader from the Golf of Fonseca region will meet the Committee. They will also participate in an interactive dialogue on the impact of loss and damage from the adverse effects of climate change on the full enjoyment of human rights at the Human Rights Council’s 57th session.  

Rising sea levels and recurring floods

The community leader accompanied by FIAN Honduras is from a small fishing community whose livelihoods and right to food and nutrition have been severely affected by the adverse impacts of climate change and eco-destruction. Rising sea levels and recurring floods are destroying people’s homes and businesses and endangering people’s health and lives. The sea is slowly eating up the village: in some parts, up to 100 meters of coastline have been lost in little more than a decade (see diagnostic on impact of climate change). Extreme weather events are also placing limits on fishers’ ability to go out to the sea to fish, sometimes reducing their catch and income to zero. The community also has to cope with pollution from industrial shrimp farming - an export industry strongly promoted by the Honduran government and operating with little government scrutiny or oversight.

A combination of rising water temperatures and contamination have caused fish stocks to decline, with native fish and clams disappearing entirely or becoming rare. All of this has a dramatic impact on the right to food and nutrition of community members who depend on these for their livelihoods and for subsistence and have few alternatives for income generation. The situation is similar in other coastal communities. As a consequence, many people are emigrating and families are torn apart. 

Government action is urgently needed to protect and support rural communities in the Gulf of Fonseca and other regions of the country in the context of climate change and environmental pollution. Currently, the government is notably absent, with communities left to themselves. In addition to the environmental challenges faced, the communities lack access to natural resources and technical and financial support as small-scale artisanal food producers and small entrepreneurs, while at the same time they face discrimination and exclusion with regard to markets and social protection systems. These and other human rights challenges as well as the proposals by rural communities – and especially rural women – are summarized in FIAN Honduras and FIAN International’s submission to the CESCR for the review of Honduras.

For more information contact Laura Michele: michele@fian.org

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