A/HRC/33/42/Add.2
I. Introduction
1.
This report examines the situation of indigenous peoples in Honduras and makes
recommendations in that regard. It is based on information received by the Special
Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples during her visit to the country from 2 to 10
November 2015 and on independent research.
2.
During her visit, the Special Rapporteur held meetings in Tegucigalpa with
representatives of the Government of Honduras, including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
the Directorate of Indigenous and Afro-Honduran Peoples, the Ministry of Human Rights,
Justice, the Interior and Decentralization, the Office of the Special Prosecutor for Ethnic
Groups and Cultural Heritage, the National Agrarian Institute, the Property Institute, the
National Institute for Conservation and Forestry Development, Protected Areas and
Wildlife, the Ministry of Energy, Natural Resources, the Environment and Mining, the
Honduran Institute of Geology and Mines, the Office of the National Commissioner for
Human Rights, the Honduran Social Investment Fund, the General Subdirectorate of
Education for Indigenous and Afro-Honduran Peoples, the Ministry of Labour and Social
Security, the Committee on Indigenous Peoples of the National Congress and
representatives of civil society organizations and the private sector. In Puerto Lempira, she
held meetings with municipal and departmental authorities and representatives of the
Attorney General’s Office and the Office of the National Commissioner for Human Rights.
She also met representatives of the Lenca, Maya Chortí, Nahua, Tolupán, Garífuna, Pech,
Tawahka and Miskito indigenous peoples in Tegucigalpa, Puerto Lempira, Auka, Río
Blanco, La Esperanza and La Ceiba.
3.
The Special Rapporteur wishes to thank the Government of Honduras for its
cooperation and for permitting her to conduct her visit freely and independently. She would
also like to express her deepest gratitude to the indigenous peoples for the invitation to visit
their territories, for the hospitality that they showed her and for the information that they
provided. She also thanks the indigenous persons and organizations that helped arrange her
programme and also those persons who travelled long distances from their communities of
origin to attend meetings. Lastly, she wishes to thank the United Nations Country Team in
Honduras and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
(OHCHR) for their assistance in ensuring the success of her visit.
II. Indigenous peoples in Honduras
4.
There is no precise or up-to-date information on the indigenous population of
Honduras. According to the 2001 national census, 7 per cent out of the total population of
about 6 million were indigenous or of African descent. According to a census conducted by
indigenous organizations in 2007, the indigenous population or people of African descent
amounted to 20 per cent, or some 1.5 million out of a total population of 7.6 million. Of the
indigenous population, 80 per cent live on their traditional lands and 20 per cent in urban
areas.
5.
The extent to which the indigenous peoples of Honduras have preserved their
languages and their social and cultural structures varies according to their specific
experience and levels of contact with European colonization and subsequent nonindigenous governments and societies. During her visit, the Special Rapporteur noted the
strong attachment that members of indigenous peoples had to their identity as distinct
peoples and their desire to maintain and strengthen their culture, language, lore, territories
and forms of governance.
GE.16-12632
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