The Immigrant’s Journal - Vol. 156

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TIME FOR ACTION

Migrant Advocates Call for Reset with Honduras

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ashington, DC: A delegation of leaders of migrant-led organizations called for a reset in U.S.-Honduras relations, as President-elect Xiomara Castro is set to assume power in Honduras on January 27. The delegation represents a coalition of some 55 migrant-led organizations across the United States. The delegation is visiting Honduras this week, in order to meet with administration officials and civil society leaders, and call attention to the need to prioritize establishing a productive partnership with the Biden White House, in order to advance joint efforts to address the root causes of migration. As seen with the turmoil with Honduras’s Congress over the weekend, collaborating with Congress will be hugely challenging for the Castro administration, and will pose significant obstacles. Additionally, the Castro administration will face budgetary challenges, including a growing fiscal deficit. Still, there will be many viable reforms that the Castro administration can pursue via executive action and through foreign policy. “The Honduran diaspora in the U.S. has a message for the Xiomara Castro administration: we know firsthand the painful cost of being forced to migrate, because of intolerable conditions back home,” said Mirtha Colón, a Garifuna leader originally from Honduras, who currently serves as president of the Alianza Americas Board of Directors. “This new political era in Honduras is an opportunity for a reset, in order to center policies that create a more equitable Honduras where everyone can live with dignity and in peace.” “This new government introduces a ray of hope for Hondurans at home and abroad,” said Oscar Chacón, director of Alianza Americas. “Vice President Kamala Harris’s visit to Honduras this week is indicative of how the Biden White House sees new opportunities for productive engagement with President Castro’s administration. The relationship with the Biden administration should be leveraged in favor of a rigorous addressing of corruption, poverty and violence, and climate change impacts that are driving migration. By doing so, President Xiomara Castro’s administration can make headway in addressing migration’s root causes.”

TEAM Publisher I.Q. INC. Legal Advisor Brian Figeroux, Esq. Managing Editor & Editor-in-Chief Pearl Phillip Senior Writer Linda Nwoke

Mirtha Colón

Oscar Chacón

Graphic & Website Designers Praim Samsoondar Kendrick Williams Anvar Sabirov Email immjournal@aol.com Visit www.ijlef.org www.falaw.us www.cawnyc.com

José Daniel Hernández

“It’s time for Honduras to close the chapter on the appalling authoritarian and corrupt regime of the Juan Orlando Hernández years,” said Patricia Montes, executive director of Centro Presente. “For a new dawn in Honduras, the Castro administration must do everything within its power to work with international partners in re-establishing an international anti-corruption commission in Honduras.” “For too long, Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and Garifuna communities in Honduras have faced marginalization and exclusion in Honduras,” said José Daniel Hernández of CARECEN San Francisco. “The Castro administration must prioritize including and elevating these voices.” The delegation includes: Mirtha Colón Mirtha Colón is originally from Honduras and has lived in New York for almost 40 years. She currently serves as president of the Alianza Americas Board of Directors; she also heads Hondurans Against AIDS in New York. She also serves as president of the Black Central American Organization (Organización Negra Centroamericana, ONECA), which fights for human rights and social justice for Central Americans of African descent. Oscar Chacón Oscar Chacón is co-founder and executive director of Alianza Americas. He has

Patricia Montes

been an advocate for the economic, social, political, and cultural rights of all people for more than three decades, with an emphasis on migrants. Oscar has been a pioneer in promoting advocacy strategies conceived from a transnational perspective. Patricia Montes Patricia Montes is the executive director of Centro Presente, one of the longest standing immigrant-led, immigrant rights organizations in Massachusetts. Patricia earned her degree in journalism from the National Autonomous University in Honduras and is a recognized immigrant rights leader and a tireless advocate for just economic and social policies, including a just U.S. immigration policy. José Daniel Hernández José Hernández is the director of the Second Chance Youth Program for the Central American Resource Center of Northern California (CARECEN San Francisco). He was born in Los Angeles and was raised in the Bay Area by Honduran parents. José received his B.A. in Latin American Studies from UCLA in 2010, and received his Master’s of Public Health in Community Education from SFSU in 2019. While at SFSU, José dedicated his studies to critically analyzing the criminalization and incarceration of young people through a public health lens.l

Volunteering at THE IMMIGRANT'S JOURNAL LEGAL & EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. Internship positions available throughout the year. The Immigrant's Journal Legal & Educational Fund, Inc. is an organization dedicated to the educational and economic empowerment of all immigrants and immigrant organizations here in the United States. We at the Journal recognize the enormous contribution of immigrants to this country economically, socially and politically. Since September 11, 2001, however, immigrants have increasingly been discriminated against and Congress has passed legislation curtailing the rights of immigrants here in the U.S., broadly claiming that immigrants are a threat to ''National Security.'' We at the Journal believe that these charges are unfounded, unsubstantiated and exaggerated. The Immigrant's Journal Volunteer Intern Program was introduced to give our volunteers the opportunity to work in an immigrant friendly environment while developing the necessary skills for college or law school. They assist our staff in resolving immigration and other legal concerns through personal interviews, radio, email and telephone contact. They also assist the public with citizenship applications and in researching whether or not children of naturalized U.S. citizens have derived citizenship from their parents. Some of our volunteers assist our legal staff by engaging in legal research and writing letters on other legal issues. Volunteer interns are also assigned various other jobs in our Youth Programs. Hours are flexible. Email your cover letter and resume or any questions to immjournal@aol.com Tel: 718-243-9431

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