Among them, the powerful Atala family is involved. Owner of the Last Database hydroelectric plant that intended to be installed in Río Blanco – and against which Berta Cáceres was fighting «– and the Bank of Central America Honduras, a powerful banking institution that has received most of the trusts from the government since the coup d'état In 2009, the Atala family Last Database was singled out on numerous occasions as part of the criminal structure that ended the life of Berta Cáceres. But the power of it is such that no one has done anything about it. To understand the political-economic dimension of the Atalas, it is enough to mention that the Banco de América Last Database Central Honduras was, until just two years ago, the largest administrator of public trusts in the country.
Additionally, research published by The Interceptthey Last Database demonstrated a series of communications between the gunmen who murdered Cáceres and senior executives of Desarrollos Energéticos SA (DESA), the builder of the hydroelectric dam run by the Atalas. This case, marked by political-economic complicity, allows us to ask the Last Database central questions in the sociopolitical life of Honduras. What role do elites play in national politics? How do they exert their influence? What resources do they have? How do they guarantee their impunity even when there is Last Database evidence that directly implicates them in the murder of Berta Cáceres? As Benedicte Bull, a political scientist and professor at the Center for.
Development and the Environment at the University of Oslo, states, elites Last Database and their networks are stronger when institutions are weak. In her work De Ella Towards a Political Economy of Weak Institutions and Strong Elites in Central America[Towards a Last Database political economy of weak institutions and strong elites in Central America], Bull Last Databaseanalyzes the behavior of institutions and elites in the Northern Triangle of Central America.