Grupo Dinant, a Honduran palm oil company that declared last
month that it has been awarded international environmental certifications for
its achievements in environmental management and occupational health and
safety. Dinant has also been making overtures toward joining the Roundtable on
Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), including hosting the RSPO's 4th Latin American
conference in Honduras in 2013. But, Dinant, which produces about 60 percent of
the palm oil in Honduras, is at the center of what has been called "the most
serious situation in terms of violence against peasants in Central America in
the last 15 years."
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Owned by Miguel Facussé, one of the wealthiest men in
Honduras, Dinant has been associated with the killings of over 100 peasant
farmers, and appears to be involved in a virtual terror campaign to ensure
control of a large swath of land in the Lower Aguan Valley near the Caribbean
coast of Honduras. While credible human rights groups like Human Rights Watch
denounce the killings and note that "virtually none of the crimes are
properly investigated, let alone solved." Former Attorney General Luis
Alberto Rubi told the Honduran congress in 2013 that 80 percent of homicides go
unpunished; of 73 killings recognized by the government to be linked to land
conflicts, seven have been brought to trial, and none has resulted in
conviction. Human Rights Watch affirms that government security forces
themselves have committed human rights violations including arbitrary
detentions and torture. Dinant continues to enjoy financing from the World
Bank's International Finance Corporation, support from the United Nations Clean
Development Mechanism, and brand relationships with multinational consumer
goods companies such as Mazola Oils.
In the 1980s, a combination of loans from the InterAmerican
Development Bank (IDB) and bilateral aid allowed the Honduran government to
construct a road network in the Aguan, as well as three palm oil processing
plants and a modern port. Hoping to pay down its large debts to the IDB, the
state-controlled mills bought palm from peasant cooperatives at rock-bottom
prices, in return promising peasants eventual control over the processing
plants. In the early '90s, an "agrarian modernization law" was passed
with support from the World Bank and the US Agency for International
Development that again stimulated large land purchases and made the Aguan
Valley the national poster child for re-concentration of land.
Over the next several decades, cooperatives and smallholders
were coerced into selling their land to powerful landlords, often through
intimidation and manipulation, from bribes of peasant leaders to threats and
outright violence – tactics that continue to reign in the region to this day.
Peasant farmers in the Aguan again found themselves as day laborers on large
plantations, working hard for little pay. In a few years in the early '90s,
more than three-quarters of the land in the Aguan Valley was re-concentrated
into the hands of a few Honduran oligarchs. One of these landlords was Miguel
Facussé. Among the wealthiest men in Honduras - and now the richest - Facussé
established a series of food commodity businesses, culminating in 2005 with
Grupo Dinant. Dinant produces cooking oil, snacks, and other food products, as
well as biofuels. To do this, the company took a $30 million loan from the
World Bank's International Finance Corporation and a $7 million loan from the
InterAmerican Investment Corporation (IIC). Trade liberalization also enriched
Facussé: Both Unilever and Proctor & Gamble gained important footholds in
Central America by acquiring distribution networks and brands owned by Facussé.
The profits and the status conferred on Dinant through such purchases enabled
more land purchases in the Aguan Valley, furthering the concentration of land.
In 2001, farmers in the region organized as the Unified
Peasants Movement of the Aguán Valley (MUCA), with the aim of reclaiming their
land rights through the courts. With legal routes exhausted, in 2006 they began
land occupations. In June 2009, they occupied one of the palm oil processing
plants of Exportadora del Atlántico, part of Grupo Dinant, provoking
then-President Manuel Zelaya to promise to investigate the land rights issue.
However, Zelaya was removed in a coup later that month. The months following
the coup saw a dramatic increase in killings. As of October 2010, a year after
the coup, 36 small-scale farmers had been killed. None of these cases were
resolved or brought to court, but as a result of the escalating violence and
murders, the government militarized the area. During this time, Dinant became
implicated in the murder of dozens of peasants. Following the coup, Dinant
became implicated in the murder of dozens of peasants. Killings have continued
with complete impunity, the region around the plantations has been heavily
militarized, and long-standing peasant communities have been violently evicted.
In 2011, FIAN, an international NGO working for food rights, produced a report
on human rights violations in Bajo Aguán, documenting "evidence of the involvement
of private security forces hired by Dinant and other companies owned by Miguel
Facussé in human rights abuses and, in particular, in the murder of peasants in
Bajo Aguán."
The government agreed to distribute some 30,000 acres to the
farmers, including 12,000 acres where oil palm has been planted by Exportadora
del Atlántico - not by giving the land back, but by selling it at market
prices. The company agreed to the proposal, but later announced it wanted to
renegotiate it. In protest, other peasant groups began land occupations,
exposing themselves to violent evictions by state security forces. A 2012
public hearing on the human rights situation in the peasant communities of the
lower Aguán concluded that the agrarian conflict there is the "most serious
situation in terms of violence against peasants in Central America in the last
15 years." By April 2013, at least 89 peasant farmers had been killed in
the Aguan Valley.
In 2008, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) of the
World Bank approved a $30 million loan to Dinant, to be delivered in two
tranches of $15 million each. When the June 2009 military coup ousted the
democratically elected president and violence in the Aguán Valley escalated,
the IFC put disbursement on hold, but the first tranche was eventually
distributed. In its assessment of the potential concerns under IFC's Policy on
Social and Environmental Sustainability, the IFC noted that "a limited
number of specific environmental and social impacts may result which can be
avoided or mitigated by adhering to generally recognized performance standards,
guidelines, design criteria, local regulations and industry certification
schemes. Land acquisition is on a willing buyer-willing seller basis, and there
is no involuntary displacement of any people."
This proved to be far from the case.
Human Rights Watch investigated 29 killings in the Aguan
Valley and reports that 13 of the 29 killings, and one disappearance, suggest
the possible involvement of private guards. The same report notes that Honduras
has more than 700 registered private security firms, and numerous unregistered
firms; the UN working group on the use of mercenaries reports that private
security guards outnumber police in Honduras by a ratio of 5 to 1. In December
of 2013, an independent audit by the CAO Ombudsman of the IFC, a
semi-independent body charged with overseeing the environmental and social
safeguards applied to IFC loans, issued a stinging critique of the IFC for
having failed to follow its own requirements. "According to civil society
source," the CAO investigation states, "there were at least 102 killings
of people affiliated with the peasant movement in the Bajo Aguán between
January 2010 and May 2013, with specific allegations being made linking 40 of
these to Dinant properties, Dinant security guards or its third-party security
contractor. Allegations in relation to the killing of at least nine Dinant
security personnel by affiliates of the peasant movement have also been
made."
The IFC rejected several of the CAO findings. Despite a list
of demands sent to the World Bank by 70
civil society groups, the World Bank has yet to withdraw funding from
the project. Instead, the IFC put in place an "enhanced action plan,"
which requires Dinant to adopt voluntary security protocols and to "engage
stakeholders" in order "to better understand the issues currently
impacting communities and to bring strategic focus and overall coordination to
Dinant's existing corporate social responsibility programs, such as funding for
school teachers, clinics, and conservation programs." Nothing in the plan
considers turning over land to local communities, and there is no mention of
sanctions, or loan withdrawal for failure to comply.
The rise of Corporacion Dinant as a leading palm oil
producer in Central America is inseparable from its history as part of a long,
violent and ongoing backlash against agrarian reform in Honduras. But it is
also indicative of the ways in which a lucrative agro-industrial crop like palm
oil, in a context of entrenched corruption and an authoritarian regime, lends
itself to land grabbing and agrarian violence. Palm oil production relies on
cheap labor and large expanses of land to turn a profit. In order to be
economically viable, nearly 10,000 acres of land are required to feed a single
palm oil mill. But the economy of scale that palm oil demands to reap a profit
is generally true across commodities - while palm oil is the particular villain
in the case of Grupo Dinant, the problem is not the crop, but the
agro-industrial model; decades ago with Standard Fruit, Honduras was the
archetype of the banana republic; today with Dinant it's an oil palm republic.
Researchers have recently introduced the term "flex-crops" for crops
that can be used for food, feed, fuel or industrial materia, and which lend
themselves to land grabbing due to growing demand and the land area required to
grow them.
As long as the IFC refuses to withdraw its financing and to
push the company toward reforms that are unlikely to address the root problem,
Dinant will maintain some credibility and will continue to produce some of the
world's bloodiest palm oil.
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