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SANTA BARBARA, Honduras -- Maria Jose Alvarado expected
some difficult questions about her country at the Miss World pageant in
London, so the 19-year-old beauty queen enlisted a teacher to help her
prepare.
They reviewed the history of
Honduras, including the military-backed coup in 2009 that sent the
president into exile. They went through the daily newspapers to discuss
politics and the gang and drug violence that makes this small Central
American republic one of the most dangerous countries in the world.
The
odds of winning the Miss World crown were long, Alvarado knew, but she
practiced her English in the weeks ahead of the pageant, just in case
she needed an acceptance speech, said Jose Eudaldo Diaz, the philosophy
professor who was coaching her.
"She knew that
the questions would be about the insecurity and violence because that
is what the world knows about Honduras," Diaz said. "Her goal was to
explain that she wanted to contribute to a Honduras in which children
could walk the streets without fear of being murdered."
No
one ever got to hear Alvarado's speech, and she didn't get to the
pageant. She was shot to death along with a sister, their bodies
discarded on a riverbank. They were laid to rest in a rain-soaked
cemetery Thursday.
---
The
senseless murder of Miss Honduras along with the older sister, Sofia,
is both a family tragedy and a national outrage in a country that had
seemed to be sleepwalking through a homicidal bloodbath. While many of
the daily dead are gangsters, drug traffickers and police officers, many
others are taxi drivers, journalists, abused women and other nameless
innocents caught in the line of fire.
Alvarado
would have fallen into the last group were it not for the fact she was
unusually beautiful, and rose from humble roots in the hinterlands to
represent Honduras on a world stage.
"If she
had been any other girl, if she hadn't been Miss Honduras, this would
have been one more crime amid the impunity of Honduras," said Jose Luis
Mejia, director of the Technological University campus in Santa Barbara,
where Alvarado studied. "They would have said what they always do: that
this was the settling of accounts between drug traffickers, and they
wouldn't even have bothered to investigate."
Most
South American cocaine headed for the United States passes through
Honduras, and Santa Barbara is on a main corridor from the brutal city
of San Pedro Sula to the Guatemalan border. Officially, the killing of
Miss Honduras and her 23-year-old sister isn't related to drug
trafficking. Police say Sofia's suitor, Plutarco Ruiz, confessed to
shooting the sisters in a jealous rage after she danced with another man
at his birthday party. He killed Sofia first and then shot Maria Jose
twice in the back as she tried to flee.
But to
Alvarado's friends and family, the killings are the result of a
traditional machismo made worse by the wealth and muscle of drug
traffickers.
"This region is imbued with
narco-culture represented by the image of a man who moves in a big car,
drinks, takes drugs, walks around armed and is bad," Mejia said. "The
culture of violence and death."
---
Santa
Barbara is a Spanish colonial town of one-story houses with wood posts
holding up clay-tiled roofs. Its parents are, for the most part,
conservative Roman Catholics who walk their daughters to and from high
school in the belief that unaccompanied young women should not be on the
streets. Smoking and drinking in public are scorned, if not prohibited,
and beauty pageants in this region don't allow contestants in bikinis.
The
town is surrounded by fog-shrouded mountains and coffee farms, its dirt
streets muddied by days of heavy rain. A house once owned by 19th
century Honduran President Luis Bogran serves as the private high school
and university where Alvarado was enrolled and planned to study
international relations. In a covered patio, her friends held a
candlelight vigil with a slideshow of pictures from Alvarado's pageant
and modeling career.
Nusly Casana, a classmate of Alvarado's since kindergarten, described what a tough town Santa Barbara is for women.
"They
tell you: `Don't' dress like that. Don't go out. What are you doing,
where are you going? Who are you going with, what will people say?"
Casana said.
"A man is free, a woman not; a
man may choose and a woman not. And along with this is the violence that
begins at home from childhood and continues throughout life. ... To
call the murder of a woman by a man a crime of passion, to talk of
jealousy, is to avoid the daily reality of violence against women," she
said.
Casana recalled how she and Alvarado
used to carry their Barbie dolls to school in their book bags. Alvarado
loved beauty and fashion and talked of wanting to grow up to be like
Barbie.
The youngest of three sisters,
Alvarado began competing in pageants at age 13. She won Miss Northwest
Honduras, Miss Teen Honduras and, finally, Miss Honduras, the stepping
stone to the Miss World pageant.
After each
competition, she would come back to Santa Barbara and share the details
of her experiences with friends, who described her as generous and
innocent to the point of naivete. She still wore braces on her lower
teeth.
"Her successes were our successes," said Ludin Reyes, another schoolmate. "We were friends and fans."
While
Alvarado pursued her dream, and her oldest sister married and moved
away, Sofia was not so lucky, friends and officials said. She was a
teacher until the school where she worked closed, and in love with a
married man who left his wife to be with her, but was murdered in
October 2013.
Then Sofia took up with Ruiz,
who confessed to killing the sisters. Ruiz was known about town as a man
to be feared from a family deeply involved in drug trafficking,
officials say. Although he had no police record, he was seen as someone
who could offer protection or eliminate enemies.
"This
is a drug trafficking corridor," said Lt. Col Ramon Castillo, an army
officer in charge of security in Santa Barbara. "David Ruiz, Plutarco's
brother was `the bull' and when he was killed in February, Plutarco took
his place. ... Plutarco is a violent person with a bad character and he
solves everything with a pistol in his hand."
Casana said everyone warned Sofia that Ruiz was dangerous, but she wouldn't listen.
"The
worst machismo is the one in the head of women who think that a drug
trafficker is a powerful man who gives her what she doesn't have,
protects her and makes her look good in a society that values money and
power," Casana said.
---
It's
a mystery to Alvarado's friends why she went with her sister to the
rundown "spa," or riverfront restaurant, that was believed to be a place
that Ruiz used to conduct illegal business. But Alvarado looked up to
her big sister and, after baking a cake together, apparently wanted to
join Sofia to celebrate Ruiz's birthday.
Ruiz
had six security guards at the Nov. 13 party, Castillo said. According
to police, Sofia and Ruiz got into a heated argument over her dancing
with another man. He shot the two women and with the help of a friend
buried them by the river, spreading lime to make the bodies decompose
more quickly.
The next day, Ruiz told
Alvarado's family the women had left the party with someone else, and he
invited them for lunch. Later, he even went with them to file a missing
persons report with police. But eventually investigators wrested a
confession from Ruiz and, nearly a week after they disappeared, he led
police to their bodies. Ruiz and three alleged accomplices were
arrested.
Mayor Juan Alvarado says most of the
town's 29,000 residents know who's who and what they do. He says it is
widely believed police waited days to interrogate Ruiz to give him a
chance to escape. But in a country where impunity prevails, he didn't
run.
"He felt so immune that he didn't flee
because he trusted they would never detain him," said the mayor, who is
not related to the beauty queen's family.
Now
that Ruiz is behind bars, the army should round up the rest of the drug
traffickers in the area, Alvarado said. "As mayor, I receive threats for
any little thing and I have to provide my own security so someone
doesn't come put a bullet in me."
At her
modest home on an unpaved road, Alvarado's distraught mother is left to
grapple with the loss of her beauty queen daughter and the sister who
led her to her death.
"Poor Sofia," said the
mother, Teresa Munoz. "I forgive her because she was responsible for
what they did to her sister, for the fact that Maria Jose died, too."
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