Honduras Government and Politics
The Mayan god Ik, Río Ulúa valley
IN LATE 1993, HONDURAS was again in the midst of an
electoral
campaign to elect a president, deputies to the National
Congress,
and municipal officials nationwide. The November 1993
elections
were the third since the military turned the nation over
to a
democratically elected president in January 1982. Regular
national
elections, which have come to be celebrated in an almost
holidaylike atmosphere, appear to be institutionalized. For most
of this
century, the Honduran political system has had two
dominant
traditional parties, the Liberal Party of Honduras
(Partido Liberal
de Honduras--PLH) and the National Party of Honduras
(Partido
Nacional de Honduras--PNH). In the 1980s, the PLH captured
the
presidency in the 1981 and 1985 elections, choosing
Roberto Suazo
Córdova and José Azcona Hoyo, respectively; in 1989, the
PNH was
victorious, with Rafael Leonardo Callejas Romero assuming
the
presidency.
The Honduran military has been a powerful force in
domestic
politics since the 1950s. From 1963 until 1971, and again
from 1972
until 1982, the military essentially controlled the
national
government, often with support from the PNH. In the 1980s,
after
the country had returned to civilian rule, the military
continued
to be a potent political force, particularly during the
Suazo
Córdova government (1981-85). During that administration,
the
military allowed a United States military presence and
hosted
members of the Nicaraguan Resistance (more commonly known
as the
Contras,
short for contrarevolucionarios--Spanish for
counterrevolutionaries; see Glossary), a group attempting
to overthrow the Nicaraguan government. In the early 1990s,
the Honduran military continued to operate as an autonomous
institution with increasing involvement in economic activities.
Within the civilian government, the executive branch of
government has traditionally dominated the legislative and
judicial
branches. The Honduran judiciary has been widely
criticized for
politicization and for having unqualified judges among the
lower
court officials. The justice system for the most part has
not held
military or civilian elites accountable for their actions.
A
significant departure from this record was the July 1993
conviction
of two military officers for the 1991 murder of an
eighteen-year-
old high school student, Riccy Mabel Martínez. The case
galvanized
Honduran public opinion against the military's immunity
from
prosecution. The political system also suffers from the
endemic
corruption found within its ranks; bribery is an almost
institutionalized practice.
In the early 1990s, a myriad of interest groups
influenced the
Honduran political process. Despite the nation's political
tradition of a strong executive branch, an elaborate
network of
interest groups and political organizations has thrived
and at
times has helped settle conflicts. The Honduran labor
movement has
traditionally been one of the strongest in Central
America. The
nation's organized peasant movement helped bring about
limited
agrarian reform in the early 1960s and 1970s.
Nevertheless, some
critics maintain that in the early 1990s the government
increasingly intervened in the affairs of labor unions and
peasant
organizations, including through the introduction of
"parallel
unions," government sponsored unions that had little
worker
support. In the 1980s and 1990s, a variety of special
interest
organizations and associations were active in Honduras,
including
student and women's groups, human rights organizations,
and
environmental groups.
In the foreign policy arena, Honduras in the early
1990s was
just emerging from a decade of regional turbulence marked
by civil
conflicts in neighboring El Salvador and Nicaragua.
Honduras had
become a linchpin for United States policy toward Central
America
in the 1980s. It hosted the United States-supported
anti-Sandinista
Contra force as well as a 1,100-troop United States
military force
at Palmerola Air Base (renamed the Enrique Cano Soto Air
Base in
1988). Military exercises involving thousands of United
States
troops and National Guardsmen were conducted in the
country, many
involving roadbuilding projects; and Honduras received
almost
US$1.6 billion in United States assistance during the
decade. In
the early 1990s, however, with the end to the Contra
conflict in
Nicaragua and a peace accord in El Salvador, Honduras's
relations
with the United States changed considerably. Aid levels
fell
dramatically, and military assistance slowed to a trickle.
The
United States became more willing to criticize Honduras
for its
human rights record and urged Honduras to cut back its
military
spending. As in the past, however, the United States
remained
Honduras's most important trading partner and its most
important
source of foreign investment.
Amidst the waning of civil conflict in the region in
the early
1990s, Honduras and the other Central American states
turned their
efforts to regional integration, particularly economic
integration.
In 1990 the Central American presidents signed a Central
American
Economic Action Plan (Plan de Acción Económica de
Centroamérica--
Paeca), which included economic integration commitments
and
guidelines. In 1993 they established a regional
integration
governing body, the Central American Integration System
(Sistema de
Integración Centroamericana--Sica). As a first step toward
political integration, the Central American Parliament
(Parlamento
Centroamericano--Parlacen) was inaugurated in 1991;
however, as of
1993 only Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador--the
so-called
northern triangle states--had elected representatives to
that body.
In September 1992, Honduras's long-time border conflict
with El
Salvador was resolved when the International Court of
Justice (ICJ)
awarded Honduras approximately two-thirds of the disputed
territory. Both nations agreed to accept the ruling, which
was
viewed by many as a victory for Honduras.
Data as of December 1993
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