Farmworkers Seize Land in Massive Honduras Protest

Plantations are on public land, activists say
By Rob Quinn,  Newser Staff
Posted Apr 19, 2012 3:31 AM CDT
Farmworkers Seize Land in Massive Honduras Protest
Riot squad officers stand guard as rural workers vacate a plot of land they had occupied earlier in the day in San Manuel, north of Tegucigalpa.   (Getty Images)

Honduras saw its own kind of Occupy protest erupt yesterday. Thousands of impoverished farmworkers in the Central American nation took over land belonging to major landowners in a coordinated series of protests around the country, reports the BBC. The farmworkers insisted that the land was public land that small farmers can legally grow crops on under Honduran law, while the plantation owners said they had legally bought the land from the government.

Around 30,000 acres were seized across the country. Some 1,500 farmworkers peacefully left a sugar plantation after police and soldiers arrived but other occupations continued overnight, reports the AP. 'We want to avoid any type of confrontation," said a spokeswoman for the Via Campesina—"Peasants' Way"—activist group, adding that the farmworkers were unarmed. Dozens of farmworkers have died in land disputes in Honduras in recent years and activists want the government to open a national dialogue on land reform. (More Honduras stories.)

Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X