Ten years ago, Berta Cáceres, a campaigner against dams and mining projects that were displacing rural communities in Honduras, said that death threats had forced her to lead a ‘fugitive existence’. Most of the threats came from Desarrollos Energeticos SA (DESA), a company planning a hydroelectric project on the Gualcarque River, sacred to Cáceres’s Indigenous Lenca community.
Hired killers were tracking her movements. An attempt to assassinate her on 5 February 2016 was aborted. On 1 March, Cáceres said goodbye to her youngest daughter, who was returning to college. ‘This country is fucked,’ she said, ‘but if anything happens to me, don’t be afraid.’ The next evening, she drove back to her house with a Mexican environmentalist, Gustavo Castro, who was staying the night. Castro was woken near midnight by armed men bursting into the house. They shot him, left him for dead, found Cáceres in another room, and shot her three times. Castro crawled to assist her, and she died in his arms as he called for help.
At first, the police treated the attack as a failed burglary. They then arrested a member of Cáceres’s organisation for supposedly killing her in a ‘crime of passion’. The seven actual culprits were arrested two months later, found guilty of the murder in November 2018, and given long prison sentences.
They were just the hired killers: who had hired them? Two years after Cáceres’s death, a former president of DESA, David Castillo, was arrested as he tried to leave Honduras. In 2021, he was sentenced to thirty years in prison for plotting the murder. DESA is owned by the Atala Zablah family. There is a warrant out for the arrest of one of them, Daniel Atala, but he remains at large.
If Cáceres’s murder is still unresolved, so is the question of how ordinary Hondurans can wrest control of their country from the dozen families, like the Atala Zablahs, that control much of the media and many large businesses, and have close ties with both the Honduran military and politicians in the United States.
Before her murder, Cáceres told the reporter Nina Lakhani (who later wrote the book Who Killed Berta Cáceres?): ‘I want to live. I love my country, and we must rebuild it so that young people are not forced to emigrate.’
After a succession of manipulated elections that kept the oligarchs in power, the progressive Libre party finally won the presidency in 2021. This proved to be temporary. Neoliberals are already back in charge, looking to reverse the modest gains from four years of Libre rule. President Nasry Asfura’s first foreign visits were to Donald Trump in Mar-a-Lago and Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem. He broke ties with Venezuela and promised to reset relations with Taiwan. Cuban doctors working in Honduras were told to leave, even as Honduran medics say their health system is close to collapse.
Environmental defenders face new threats. Draft legislation would outlaw protests against large-scale agroindustrial projects that threaten communities such as Cáceres’s. The Libre government tried to halt the worst of these projects, including the libertarian charter cities now known as ZEDEs (‘zones for employment and economic development’), backed by entrepreneurs including Peter Thiel and other Silicon Valley billionaires. Through the investor-state dispute settlement system, disappointed investors brought claims against Honduras that total nearly $10 billion, roughly a quarter of the country’s GDP. Asfura has signalled his intention to back down and allow the projects to continue.
During the eight years of President Juan Orlando Hernández’s narcostate (2014-22), Global Witness documented the murders of 81 environmental defenders, of whom Cáceres was one of the first. As Tegucigalpa’s mayor, Asfura was close to Hernández throughout that period. In 2020, he was accused of diverting public funds, laundering money, and committing fraud. The Honduran Supreme Court annulled the charges after he won the presidential election last November.
Trump not only intervened in the election to ensure Asfura’s victory but also pardoned Hernández, who was serving a 45-year sentence for trafficking hundreds of tonnes of cocaine to the United States. There was immediate speculation that Hernández would soon be back. Honduras’s brief respite from extreme neoliberalism is at an end.
Published by the London Review of Books
The post In Memoriam Berta Cáceres appeared first on Dissident Voice.
This content originally appeared on Dissident Voice and was authored by John Perry.
John Perry | Radio Free (2026-03-14T19:07:12+00:00) In Memoriam Berta Cáceres. Retrieved from https://www.radiofree.org/2026/03/14/in-memoriam-berta-caceres/
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