Honduras: Campesinos occupy farms in struggle for better conditions

May 6, 2017
Issue 
Honduran campesinos participate in anti-government protests.

More than 2000 Honduran campesinos have taken over 10 farms in La Lima belonging to the Tela Railroad Company, a successor to the dissolved United Fruit Company, La Prensa reported on May 3.

The campesinos, demanding better working conditions and health care from the company, vowed to indefinitely occupy the space until they take action.

“They’ve taken away doctors for primary attention at the private hospital run by the company, making it hard for us to get treated,” strike leader Manuel Diaz told La Prensa.

Tela Railroad Company has not commented on the matter or announced retaliatory actions.

The United Fruit Company began building railroads along Honduras’ northern Caribbean coast in the late 19th century, using them to transport fruit to North America and Europe. The former company was responsible for the deaths of thousands of campesinos protesting for the right to organise during the early 20th century.

In 1954, tens of thousands of banana workers began a wildcat labour strike in the northern city of Tela, demanding an eight-hour work day and a union. The strike, which led to the birth of the Communist Party of Honduras, was met with severe repression by landowners connected to the United Fruit Company and state authorities.

By 1984, former United Fruit Company chief Carl Lindner renamed the organisation Chiquita Brands International in an attempt to erase the company’s dark past. The company’s operations in Tela later became known as the Tela Railroad Company.

Many of those occupying the farms in Tela are the descendants of those who led and participated in the 1954 strike.

[Reprinted from TeleSUR English.]

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