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Increasing Security in a Precarious Place
“The righteous will inherit the land and dwell in it forever.” —Psalm 37:29
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To get to the Villa Cristina, you have to take a highway to one of the far edges of Tegucigalpa . Then, take an unmarked turnoff onto a steep dirt track that seems far to skinny, steep, and rutted to be the main entrance into a neighborhood whose population nears ten thousand. Follow that road through innumerable twists and turns, but always up, up. If you're scared of heights, keep your eyes straight ahead: if you glance left you'll see corrugated aluminum roofs—thirty or a hundred feet below you. When the road doesn't go any higher, you'll have reached Gerson's [pronounce “Hair-son”] house. It's built on one of the few relatively flat pieces of ground here in Tegucigalpa 's Villa Cristina neighborhood. But until recently, living there was in some ways just as precarious as living in nearby houses that keep an unsteady grip on sheer cliff faces. The reason: Gerson had no legal title to the lot his home is built on. “I've lived here since this neighborhood was settled 28 years ago,” says Gerson, who is not much older. “And we've been fighting to get title to our land all this time.” Part of the problem was that no one knew who the previous owner was. “Some people said it was the city government. Others said it was doña Cristina [a member of Tegucigalpa 's elite]. We didn't know who to believe, and we were afraid that if we paid someone for our title, it might end up being the wrong person and that money would just disappear.” A Property Law passed by Honduras' congress in 2004—thanks in part to AJS-sponsored advocacy—set up a system to finally get clear, valid titles for Gerson and his neighbors. Under the law, the government expropriated all of the property in the Villa Cristina, then began selling valid, affordably priced titles to the residents. If in-depth investigations showed doña Cristina's ownership claims to be true, she would be repaid for the expropriated land. But that didn't solve Gerson and his neighbors' problems completely. Under the new law, residents must pay not only for their own lots but also for a portion of their neighborhood's public spaces, such as community centers, soccer courts, and green spaces. The problem was, according to the pricing setup slapped together by government officials who did little to consult Villa Cristina residents on the matter, many people were being charged more for the public spaces than for their own plots. Residents complained that they had been better off buying titles from the dodgy doña Cristina—while the legitimacy of her ownership of the neighborhoods land was doubtful, at least she charged less! Complaints about the high title prices set by the government weren't just empty bickering. Many Villa Cristina residents, especially those who live even higher up the mountainside than Gerson in houses reached only by steep staircases and paths, survive by scavenging in Tegucigalpa 's nearby municipal dump. Paying just for their titles would already be hard enough without the overblown public spaces fee. “It seemed like all was lost, and we would be stuck paying this exaggerated price,” says Gerson. “But ASJ turned that all around.” ASJ's land rights team has been teaching communities about the Property Law, accompanying and backing them up in the titling process, and keeping on eye on government officials in charge of implementing the law since it was passed. When ASJ land rights advocates Gilda (pronounce “Hilda”) and Eric ka heard about the situation in the Villa Cristina, they set up a meeting with community leaders and government officials that resulted in the government lowering the price to a more affordable level. Gerson and his family now rest easier knowing their land is incontrovertibly theirs. And now even their poorest neighbors have a better chance of getting their own titles too. Learn more about AJS-supported work helping poor Hondurans get land titles.
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Breaking the Cycle of Violence: Putting an End to Vigilantism While the mothers of these boys will never get their sons back, they at least can be satisfied that the men |
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Laura's Story: From Trauma to Hope But Laura did report the crime committed against her, and thanks to her bravery, and to the AJS-supported Peace & Justice Project, all three of her attackers have been arrested and are awaiting trial. read more |
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Historic Conviction in Juvenile Inmates Torture Case One October day in 2004, four staff members of a government institution whose goal is supposedly to rehabilitate troubled youths beat several juvenile inmates with wooden clubs. They beat them so severely that one inmate, who was struck on the hands, subsequently lost all his fingernails, and another suffered fractures in his hands and one of his arms. If the AJS-supported Peace & Justice Project had not intervened, this horrible beating would have gone unpunished. read more |
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"Tami" |
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"María" |
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Tomasa Turcios and other Security Guards |
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Bienvenida Carías |
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Yazmin Zuniga Things were fine for the first year and a half, but when a new manager took over Yazmin's job turned into a nightmare... read more |
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Felipa Mejia Felipa's anxiety was so bad that she had stopped eating, and was in danger of starving herself to death. Thankfully, a friend stepped in and helped her get help at the Gideon counseling center in Nueva Suyapa...read more |
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Eufemia Cruz Eufemia is every bit as persistent as the woman in Jesus' Parable of the Persistent Widow...read more |
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The Association for a More Just Society (AJS) oversees and funds initiatives carried out by Honduran partner organization la Asociación para una Sociedad más Justa (ASJ). AJS is a US-registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit, so all donations to AJS are tax-deductible for US taxpayers.
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