Minister of Human Rights of Honduras renounces health reasons

Tegucigalpa.

The Minister of Human Rights of Honduras, Karla Cueva, presented to the President of the Netherlands, Juan Orlando Hernández, his delivery to the cargo for “health reasons”, informs este viernes la Honduran Presidential House.

This communiqué was held in the Honduran governorate on November 15, 2020, and was confirmed by the President of the Central American country in a communiqué.

“El Governor of the Republic accept the meeting of the Secretariat of State in the despatch of Human Rights“Karla Cueva, who for health reasons has been obliged to pay the cargo”, indicates the Presidency.

The Executive lament “does not have to follow the valid collaboration of the senior Karla Cueva, who has a key actor in creating and structuring the institutional responsibility responsible for coordinating the mandate within the power Executive to guarantee the human rights“.

The President Honduran’s decision to “accept” Cueva’s resignation as Minister of Human Rights from today and there is a “recovery point”.

El Gobierno hondureño indicates that it will announce “a possible breach” to the person who will be assisting Cueva in the Secretarie de Derechos Humanos, to “continue impulsive actions that fortalezcan this theme tan fundamental for the country”.

Nacida en Copán, en el occidente de Honduras, October 5, 1970, Cueva is a professional advocate.

The governing Honduran tomo in January 2018 the jury to Cueva as the holder of the Secretarie de Derechos Humanos, as of May 2017, the decision to elevate the secretariat of Human Rights and Justice ‘n Secretaría o ministry de Gobierno.

I would also like to act as Deputy Minister of Human Rights, Justice, Governance and Decentralization, as well as the Secretary of Social Policy of the Secretariat of Development and Social Inclusion.

Since 2003, she has been consulting the independent specialist and derechos de la niñez para organisamos nacionales e internacionales como Unicef, International Plan, Interinstitutional Institute of the United States of America Organization (OEA), Aldeas Infantiles SOS, World Bank and the Honduras Work and Social Security Secretariat, in themes of infantile work, commercial and sexual exploitation, treaty, education and juvenile justice, among others.

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