Interverntion of S.E. Ambassador Giampaolo Rizzo Alvarado
Adjunct Permanent Representative
Human Rights Council/Forum on Minority Issues
Wednesday 15, December 2010
Madame President,
Among the guiding principles of the Plan for the Nation implemented by President Porfirio Lobo Sosa in
the beginning of his constitutional mandate, the recognition that Honduras is a multicultural and
plurilinguistic country was established, in recognition of the 11% of Hondurans that belong to the nine
indigenous peoples and Afro-Hondurans spread throughout the national territory. Consequently, its
programs and policies not only respect this condition but also propel its development.
In this sense, in addition to decreeing the month of April as the “African heritage in Honduras month,”
actions have already been implemented, such as the Program for the Integral Development of the
Indigenous Peoples, which has as an objective to improve their quality of life and contribute to their
integral and sustainable development. The Special Plan for Indigenous and Afro-Honduran Communities
seeks to provide the correct application of the Health, Education, and Nutrition Programs. The National
Program of Education for Ethnic Groups responds to their specific necessities with special attention to
language and culture; adapting texts into seven indigenous languages and training educators with an
orientation towards Intercultural Bilingual Education, with Spanish as a second language.
Madame President,
Without a doubt, much remains to be done: reduce the poverty indices and illiteracy of these
communities; implement more actions in matters of human rights, as well as in land tenancy, and the
application of additional policies to correct the inequalities that affect these peoples.
The creation of the Ministry of Indigenous and Afro-Honduran Peoples, whose secretary was sworn in
November 30 of this year, marks a historical landmark and clearly reflects the will and compromise of
President Lobo Sosa to protect and promote human rights in Honduras, including and with particular
importance towards minorities.
During the XV period of sessions of the Human Rights Council, the Delegation of Honduras manifested
its desire to confront the challenge of developing leadership capacity to guarantee in the long term the
participation of minorities in taking their own decisions, within an institutional framework where they are
truly represented. This is why we take with full satisfaction the different interventions made in this forum,