REGIMENTED greenery marches down the Sula valley -
row after row of citrus trees and banana groves, stretching
away towards the Caribbean and merging eventually
into the bluish haze of the delta. It is a rich land
- sending its glistening green 'hands' of bananas
out into the world in 20 million 40lb boxes every
year. And on the land lying fallow, cattle peacefully
get on with the job of converting Honduran grass into
American burgers.
With
so fertile a soil and so favourable a climate; Honduras
should have little trouble in providing for its population
of only 3 million or so people. Yet it is the poorest
country in Central America. Half of its adults are
illiterate. Half of its children are malnourished.
Although the rich and the poor in Honduras may be
kept physically apart, the contrast between them is
never very far from anyone's mind. Most of the campesinos
probably know that three-quarters of the
country's land is owned by just ten per cent of its
people, leaving one million landless out of a total
rural population of only 2.4 million. They will have
been given this information many times by the labour
unions to which over half of the campesinos belong.
Almost thirty years ago, after the banana workers
on the plantations of Standard Fruit and United Fruit
had won a long and bitter strike battle, their
promised land had seemed closer. They had won the
right to organise and dug the foundations of what
is still today the strongest labour movement in Central
America.
But even the slow progress in the years which followed
led to the inevitable military coup. And so today
the worries of the rich about hanging on to what they've
got are expressed in their own kind of trade union
- the Honduran army which has effectively ruled this
country for the last 18 years. After last year's token
'return to democracy' the country's Liberation/National
Coalition chose as its President General Policarpo
Paz Garcia - who by some coincidence had also been
the head of the military junta. And the twenty-year-old
promise of land reform is not a day closer to delivery.
Meanwhile, President Reagan decided that Honduras
was an 'oasis
of peace and stability' in Central America and awarded
it a prize of $20 million in armaments. This has strengthened
the power and intransigence of the armed forces and
perpetuated the profitable links between the military,
the American corporations, the large land owners,
and the middle-class citizens of Tecugigalpa and San
Pedro Sula - an alliance of vested interests which
stands as art almost impenetrable barrier to meeting
the physical needs of the human rights of the majority
of this country's people.