Honduras

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Last updated: 11 July 2016

Summary: State Party Honduras ratified the convention on 21 March 2012. It has participated in most of the convention’s meetings and voted in favor of a UN resolution on the convention in December 2015. In 2007, Honduras stated that it no longer possesses a stockpile ofcluster munitions. It has not delivered the initial transparency report required by the convention to formally confirm it does not stockpile cluster munitions. Honduras is not known to have used or produced cluster munitions.

Policy

The Republic of Honduras signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions on 3 December 2008, ratified on 21 March 2012, and the convention entered into force for the country on 1 September 2012.

It is not known if Honduras intends to enact specific implementing legislation for the convention.[1]

As of 25 June 2016, Honduras had not submitted its initial Article 7 transparency report for the Convention on Cluster Munitions, originally due by 28 February 2013.

Honduras played an active role in the Oslo Process that created the convention.[2]

Honduras participated in the convention’s First Review Conference in Dubrovnik, Croatia in September 2015. In an address to the high-level segment of the meeting, Honduras welcomed the convention’s universality in Central America, reached after Belize acceded in 2014, and the establishment of a cluster munition-free sub-region. Honduras also expressed concern at the use of cluster munitions in certain regions of the world.[3]

Honduras attended the convention’s Meetings of States Parties in 2011, 2013, and 2014 as well as intersessional meetings in Geneva in 2011 and 2013. It has participated in regional workshops on cluster munitions, most recently in Santiago, Chile in December 2013.

On 7 December 2015, Honduras voted in favor of a UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolution on the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which urges states outside the convention to “join as soon as possible.”[4] Honduras has also voted in favor of UNGA resolutions condemning the use of cluster munitions in Syria, most recently in December 2015.[5]

Honduras is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty. It is also party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons.

Use, production, transfer, and stockpiling

Honduras is not known to have used or produced cluster munitions.

In December 2007, Honduras declared thatitdoes not possess cluster munitions.[6] According to officials, the stockpile of air-dropped Rockeye cluster bombs and an unidentified type of artillery-delivered cluster munitions were destroyed before 2007.[7] According to United States (US) export records, Honduras imported 120 Rockeye cluster bombs at some point between 1970 and 1995.[8]



[1] In October 2004, Congress passed the Law on Firearms, Munitions, Explosives and other Similar Objects Control (Decree 30-2000). See ICBL, Landmine Monitor Report 2004: Toward a Mine-Free World (New York: Human Rights Watch, August 2004), p. 487. In 2010, an official indicated that some aspects of the convention may already be covered by existing legislation, such as the 2004 decree on firearms and explosives. Telephone interview with Ivon Bonilla, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 10 March 2010. In June 2000, Honduras adopted Decree No. 60-2000 to enforce its implementation of the Mine Ban Treaty.

[2] For more information on Honduras’ policy and practice regarding cluster munitions through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), p. 89.

[3] Statement of Honduras, Convention on Cluster Munitions First Review Conference, Dubrovnik, 11 September 2015.

[4]Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions,” UNGA Resolution 70/54, 7 December 2015.

[5]Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic,” UNGA Resolution 70/234, 23 December 2015. Honduras voted in favor of similar resolutions on 15 May and 18 December 2013, and 18 December 2014.

[6] Statement of Honduras, Vienna Conference on Cluster Munitions, 5 December 2007. Notes by the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC)/Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).

[7] HRW meetings with Honduran officials, in San José, 5 September 2007, and in Vienna, 3–5 December 2007.

[8] US Defense Security Cooperation Agency, Department of Defense, “Cluster Bomb Exports under FMS, FY1970–FY1995,” obtained by HRW in a Freedom of Information Act request, 28 November 1995.


Mine Ban Policy

Last updated: 30 October 2011

The Republic of Honduras signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 3 December 1997 and ratified it on 24 September 1998, becoming a State Party on 1 March 1999. Honduras is not known to have used, produced, or exported antipersonnel mines. Legislation to enforce the antipersonnel mine prohibition domestically was adopted on 29 June 2000. Honduras submitted its sixth Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 report on 24 April 2007 but has not provided subsequent annual reports.

Honduras completed destruction of its stockpile of 7,441 antipersonnel mines on 2 November 2000. Honduras initially retained 826 antipersonnel mines for training purposes; this number was reduced to 815 in 2005. It is not known if any mines have been consumed during training activities in 2005–2010.

Honduras served as co-rapporteur and then co-chair of the Standing Committee on Victim Assistance and Socio-economic Reintegration in 2000–2002.

Honduras did not attend any Mine Ban Treaty meetings in 2010 or the first half of 2011.

Honduras is party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons and its Amended Protocol II on landmines. It joined Protocol V on explosive remnants of war on 16 August 2010. 

Honduras was contaminated by mines and unexploded ordnance along its borders with El Salvador and Nicaragua, the result of armed conflict in those two countries in the 1980s. Honduras completed its national demining program in 2004.