By: German H. Kings / Revistazo.com
Tegucigalpa. In a press conference, the Truth Commission (CDV) completed its third visit of progress in the investigation and recording of testimonies of human rights violations arising from the coup d'etat of 2009.
During the four-day visit QOL met with members of the diplomatic corps accredited in Honduras and representatives of international agencies, who outlined the progress of the research process.
also held a meeting with representatives of the G-16 to express their concerns over assaults by the technical team of QOL in recent days. Employees of an international commission reported to have suffered attacks at the offices of San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa recently opened, in the vicinity of the Institute for Teachers (INPREMA).
Mirna Perla, judge of the Supreme Court of El Salvador and member of the CSD, said they met with the full Court of Justice of Honduras, for related information capture and expatriation of former president Manuel Zelaya Rosales, the dismissal of three judges and a judge in San Pedro Sula and the criminalization of social protest.
QOL also visited Grande Grass community and the Flower, in the department of Choluteca, to hear the testimonies of human rights violations, aggression and constant threats of police elements and the insecurity prevailing in the area.
CDV was reported to have promoted in the U.S. trials for the denial of factual information related to the coup. "These requests for information were made months before by the Law on Access to Information, known by its initials in English FOIA" provides a statement distributed to the media.
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