Rival Honduras gangs declare truce

Two of the most violent gangs apologise for their crimes and seek talks with the government on rehabilitation and jobs.

Two of the most violent gangs in Honduras have announced a truce under a church-brokered drive to stem a tide of violence that has turned Honduras into the world’s most murderous country.

Following the example of similar gangs in neighbouring El Salvador, masked members of the “Calle 18” and “Mara Salvatrucha” gangs made separate announcements on Tuesday from within San Pedro Sula prison in northern Honduras, which houses the country’s most violent criminals.

Both gangs said they were keen to end the cycle of violence, but also demanded help from the government to find work and to be forgiven once they came out of prison.

“Today we’re agreeing to zero crimes, zero violence on the streets,” said a member of the Mara Salvatrucha gang on the ceasefire. “Both inside and outside, the boys know what we’re talking about.”

“We want change; from now on comes the positive,” added the Mara Savatrucha member, accompanied by Romulo Emiliani, the bishop of San Pedro Sula, and Adam Blackwell, Secretary for Multidimensional Security at the Organisation of American States, who brokered a similar deal in El Salvador between the two most violent gangs there.

“We’re willing to work to lower the violence, but we need everyone to be on board, because we’re not willing to be the only ones,” said a masked Calle 18 member.

Al Jazeera’s Rachel Levin, reporting from outside the prison in Honduras, said that the gangs were calling on the president of the country to respond and enter into a dialogue, but it still remains to be seen if the president will engage.

“Everyone here agrees it’s a positive step forward but people are cautiously optimistic because back in 2005, these two gangs had another peace treaty with each other. Now that treaty was very tentative, it only lasted less than two months.

Hector Silva, lecturer in Organised Crime and Gangs at the American University’s Center for Latin American Studies, told Al Jazeera that government aid would make the agreement endurable.

Highest murder rate

Honduras has the highest murder rate in the world, according to the United Nations, with 87 killings per 100,000, while San Pedro Sula, the country’s second city and industrial hub, is the world’s most murderous city.

Violence linked to organised crime in Honduras has sky-rocketed in recent years, partly due to the presence of Mexican drug gangs who use the Central American country as a transit point for contraband.

In December 2009, the head of the government’s drug control office was shot dead by suspected cartel hitmen in the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, while the country’s top anti-money laundering official was murdered in April.

On Monday, Honduran President Porfirio Lobo gave his blessing to Emiliani’s efforts to broker peace between the gangs, but said the government would ensure the law is upheld if peace falters.

“The state will keep strengthening its criminal investigations in order to impose order,” he said.

Bishop Emiliani has a long history of trying to negotiate peace between the cartels in San Pedro Sula and its anarchic prison and has arranged social rehabilitation programmes for former members.

“This is the beginning of something new, but it’s not the end,” he said. “This is a covenant between the gangs and Honduran society.”

Last year, El Salvador’s two largest street gangs, which go by the same names as their Honduran counterparts but have independent leadership structures, signed a pioneering truce that cut the country’s murder rate by half in just four months.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies