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"I tasted the most awful taste in my mouth. I was sick and my whole body hurt. I could not stop crying."– Marisol Lopez, on her first taste of drinking water from a pure source south of her homeMarisol Lopez’s first sip of water from an unpolluted stream convinced her to join 64 other Honduran communities in five years' time to protest the construction of a new dam on their land. After 27 hours standing under rain with no food or shelter, they were arrested by police acting on behalf of the company constructing the dam. Initially, the authorities offered them a cup of water to drink. They drank. Then the police hit them with their batons. The men were beaten and kicked until they were unconscious. Friends and family members took the unconscious women, children and men to a clinic where they received medical attention. The men were transferred to custody of the Honduran army, who beat them again when they arrived at base camp. The families have been denied access to their loved ones in custody in the Honduran state penitentiary in Comayagua for political purposes. The Honduran authorities have not allowed these women and children access to their detained family members. Marisol Lopez, the mother of four children, is one of them. In their struggles to bring people face-to-face with the injustices they suffer in Honduras, the women have been joined by local and international supporters from Europe and North America who have been following their plight closely under the umbrella of Water Is Life. From her tiny village in western Honduras, Marisol Lopez has seen her sisters, brothers and mothers die at the hands of armed forces while protesting against the construction of a hydroelectric dam on their land. Her eldest daughter, Marisol Lopez, was only four years old when she began to protest. She is now 27 years old. Her belief that water is a right that must not be privatized has taken her into the hills of Honduras every day with nothing more than a cup in her hand. This determination helped her remove her children from school midway through their studies several times when she realized at the age of 13 that their education was being used for purposes other than what had been promised. The family of Marisol Lopez suffered for decades under corrupt government policies designed to benefit foreign investors at the expense of the people by withholding critical national resources. After her family members were killed for protesting, she joined the struggle. Her husband was killed in May 2010 by private security guards who had been hired by the company building the dam. It was not until 2013 that she learned that her husband was murdered in the presence of soldiers who did nothing to prevent it or catch his killers. When Water Is Life met Marisol Lopez, she had just become a grandmother for the third time. She has struggled to educate her children while fighting against the dam, but they also have suffered due to lack of clean water and food contamination caused by deforestation of their land. "We are women who realize that our struggles are connected," says Marisol Lopez.
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