NEWSPAPER ARTICLE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
4
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 16, 2012
Sequence Number: 
5
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 3, 1988
Content Type: 
MEMO
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7.pdf165.73 KB
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50X1 -HUM Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 R Next 9 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 In Human Rights Court, Honduras Is First to Face Death Squad Trial By J A M ES LeMOYNE Specoal to Inc Ncw York Tunes Killings by Government death squads in Honduras since 1980 are well kilown to the Reagan Administration and to the Central Intelligence Agency, which trained Honduran soldiers who then worked in the death squads, ac- cording to several American officials and a former member of a Honduran death squad who said he was trained by the C.I.A. SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, Jan. 18 ? In the first case ever tried by the Inter- American Court on Human which a Government has been put on trial. Honduras is being accused here of maintaining army*.death squads that. caused, the "disappearance" of civil- ians suspected of being leftists. Honduras denies the Charge, but two key witnesses involved in the case have been shot to death in Honduras in the last two. weeks in what human rights advocates assert is an effort by mem- bers of the Honduran Army death squads to silence their critics. Despite that knowledge, the Reagan Administration continues to contend that Honduras has an acceptable human rights record, continues to aid the Honduran police and army and ap- pears to have done nothing to assist the trial under way here nor denounce the killings of witnesses in Honduras. "I have never seen a Case in which the United States Government is so deeply linked to the human rights abuses of a Government as in Hon- duras," Aryeh Neier, vice chairman of the New York-based human rights group, Americas Watch, said in an in- terview. "The killings of witnesses in this trial is a direct threat to the integrity of the Inter-American system, which the United States has not in any way de- fended." The Inter-American Court on Human Rights, which is hearing the case here And is expected to reach a verdict wilhin the next two months; is a judi- cial.arm of the Organization of:Amer- ican States; vihich islhe;leadirig inter- American political organization of which both the United States and Hon- 'duras are members. ? . Honduras has promised to fully and Continued on Page A6, COlumn I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16 : CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 --Honduras Is First country Tried for Death ? ; ? Coln inued From Page Al immediately comply with a new Cen- (rat American peace ; treaty that de- mands that Governments in the region respect and defend human rights. The lead witness in the trial here, Mi- guel Angel Pavan, was shot to death with a friend four daysago in the town The case is a way I to .condemn the ,I disappearance of civilians. San Pedro Sula, a center of recent death squad killings in Honduras. Mr. Pavan was a prominent figure in Honduras who headed the regional of- fice of the Honduran Human Rights Commission, the most outspoken human rights group in the country and the target of regular criticisms by American and Honduran officials. Two weeks ago, unknown assailants also fatally shot Jose Isaias Vilorio, a termer Honduran Army sergeant who is believed to have been a death squad member and who was to have testified here today. The gunmen covered Mr. V ilorio %kith a rebel banner after killing him, a fan that Honduran officials say indicates leftist rebels carried out the murder. Critics of the Government say, how- ever, that the rebel banner was a crude attempt by an army 'death *Squad to shift the blame for the killing. The Hon- duran guerrillas have not carried ont such a killing before and. it seems un- likely they 'would hoot -a witness in a trial that is so damaging to the Govern- ment and, indirectly, politically benefi- cial to them. The court case here? focuses on the disappearances in Honduras from 1981 to 1982 of two Honduran civilians, Saul; God inez and Manfred? ?Velasquez, as: ? well as two Costa Ricans, Yolanda Solis, and Francisco Fairen Garbi. The fa mi-; lies of the four disappeared civilians contend that army death squads cap- tured and keft them, a charge the Honduran Government denies. But there appears to be considerable circumstantial evidence that the four were captured and killed by the Hondu- ran military and the weight of evidence in the trial here 'so far-appears-to be strongly against the Government. Solledfiy Terrcirism While the case formally deals Only with the four missing persons named in -the trial, it is being treated by diplo- mats and judges as of far greater sym- bolic significance. In effect, the trial is - the first public effort by the Organiza- tion ofAmerican States to condemn the activities of Government death squads throughout Latin America. The four people in the case here ap- pear to -be among an estimated 140 and the American Embassy in 'Hon- ? duras were well aware of the slitylogi. Despite that fact, the Reagan Admin- istration has annually asserted that the Honduran Government is improving its human rights performance. Despite, recent killings in the last year. Secre-. taritif:State?George P. Shultz tad Con-: 'gress tfiat'Hondurpilias an acceptable' human. rights '...t*O.td,--Orie again ? thereby : apprOlng,liew-..-police assist- ance forHondtirits.7?--,-, ?7*.. ? ' ? - ?? -"TN, ? That Approval comes despite tile fact ? that tintll .rp;-:enilkitleading bifida! in - the Hondinitn..poli**is:?:44:40Sf.01- cer wellkrtciyfziZtO-T?ajei-AirkritantEin-'. bassy as the' forMei critriiriarider army death squads,.according-to,three. American officials iand two' Honditran soldiers. ? The army off icerinquestiOn Col. Alexander ; Hernandez, who .has denied the Charges ? against, Jim. But American officials- arid41Oriauran mili- tary sources said Mr:?Iiernandez for- merly commanded the 316th Battalion, an intelligence unit established by the C.I.A. that ran several death Squads. Despite such, acCas.atiOns Mr. -Her- nandez has regularly been given top jobs in .. the army ;and . was recently promoted to lieutenant?colonel by President Jos?zerina --Hoy? of Hon- duras, who two. days,ago in Cotta- Rica premised to uphold.; th4. new regional peace treaty calling for full respect of human rights. ? ? civilians killed by army death squads in Honduras from 1980 to the present. Those 140 civilians are a small fraction of the tens of thousands who have been captured, tortured and killed without trial by the armies of Brazil, Argenti- na, Uruguay, Paraguay. Chile, Bolivia, Peru, ;Colombia. El Salvador and Guatemala, among other offenders, in the wave of terrorism that has soiled Latin America In the last two decades. --A former Honduran Army sergeant, Florencio Caballero, testified in earlier proceedings in the trial here that he was a member of an army death squad: He then detailed his involvement in in- terrogating civilians captured by army death squads. He said the prisoners were all killed. Mr. Caballero said he was trained by the C.I.A. to be an interrogator and he has given-convincing ,details to back that assertion, which American offi- dais concede is true. Mr. Caballero 'Mid in an interview last year that he, tiled to hide his death squad activities from his C.I.A. advisers in Honduras, but American officials say the C.I.A. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 50X1 -HUM Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90M00005R000100130005-7