[HNA] Petition of Support for Darío Euraque: Illegally dismissed by Coup Government in Honduras

Avi Chomsky achomsky at salemstate.edu
Mon Aug 24 08:59:45 PDT 2009


Hi All,
Please distribute as widely and as quickly as possible to our professional organizations and universities.  Please send all signatures, with affiliation, to Kevin Coleman (kecolema at indiana.edu) by 10 AM on Tuesday, June 25th.  

By noon Tuesday, I will submit the signed petition to the American Historical Association’s Conference of Latin American History: Jeffrey Lesser and Mary Kay Vaughn. I will send to U.S. State Department and U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa.

Also, I will distrubute a translated version of our petition to Honduran media.

Thanks.

Kevin




Petition of Support for Darío Euraque: Illegally dismissed by Coup Government in Honduras

The undersigned, researchers, university faculty, administrators, and students, from a wide range of universities and institutions, condemn the illegal dismissal of 

Professor Darío A. Euraque by the coup government in Honduras. We urge the international community and, in particular, the United States to use its leverage to restore constitutional rule in Honduras.

Professor Euraque’s seminal work, Reinterpreting the Banana Republic: Region and State in Honduras, 1870–1972, transformed the historiography of Honduras. In it, he demonstrated that the relative liberalism on Honduran elites could be traced to a tension between North Coast industrialists of Middle Eastern descent and the conservative criollo (descendants of Spanish colonists) oligarchy of the country’s interior. In subsequent studies, he has offered some of the most innovative and original interpretations of Honduran history. His investigations into nationalism, ethnic identity, and sexuality have opened new paths of investigation for other researchers in Central America.

Since June 2006, Professor Euraque has served as the Director of the Honduran Institute of Anthropology and History (IHAH), a government agency tasked with overseeing all of Honduras’s cultural patrimony, including the national archives, archeological sites, and public museums. Under his leadership, the IHAH has thrived, offering multiple in-depth workshops for local historians from around the country, greatly increasing the quantity, quality, and plurality of its publications, and significantly expanding the number of historical and archaeological sites protected by the national government.

On Friday, August 21st, Ms. Myrna Castro, the new Minister of Culture appointed by the coup government, added to the long list of constitutional breaches committed by the de facto regime. Violating the laws in place for discharging political appointees, she skipped over the IHAH’s Board of Directors, who would have to vote on a resolution to dismiss Professor Euraque, and simply sent him a letter of dismissal. Rather than go quietly, he has decided to contest it.

This comes on the heels of an attempt by the Reserve Forces of the Honduran Military to occupy the National Archives in Tegucigalpa. When Professor Euraque’s office received a letter from the Reservists of Honduras, the IHAH immediately issued a clarification, noting that the building itself and the archives it houses are Honduran cultural patrimony and, as such, protected by the Law for the Protection of the Cultural Patrimony of the Nation (Decree 220-97). Even in the case of a situation of national emergency or a legally declared State of War, this National Monument, and any other National Monument inventoried as Cultural Patrimony of Honduras, is under the protection of the Convention of the Hague of 1954, "Convention for the Protection of Cultural Properties in case of Armed Conflict.”

As a community of researchers, we offer our solidarity to Professor Euraque and the tens of thousands of Hondurans who are bravely risking their lives to restore democratic rule in their country. Furthermore, we condemn the coup and the systematic human rights violations that have followed in its wake. We call upon the U.S. government to increase pressure, perhaps by freezing the personal bank accounts of the coup leaders or the funds allocated to Honduras through the Millennium Challenge Corporation, until constitutionality is reestablished in Honduras.

Kevin Coleman

Doctoral Candidate in Latin American History

Indiana University, Bloomington


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