Honduras Coup: Soldiers kidnap VZ, Cuba, Nicaragua envoys

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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 7:53 pm

http://phoenixwoman.wordpress.com/2009/ ... iv-day-16/

According to TeleSur, Zelaya has appointed eight representatives to negotiate on his behalf. Three are from his government: Víctor Meza (Minister of Government); Patricia Licona (Vice Chancellor) and Milton Jiménez (Ex-president of the National Commission of Banks and Insurance).


We are close to Act V, in which either the dictatorship will fold, a false deal will be struck pushing off the reckoning for a time, or Honduras will enter a period of protracted conflict. But we are not quite there.

In the meantime, Micheletti is saying that, sure, the decree is revoked, only the revocation has no legal effect until it’s published in La Gaceta. This gives him a few more days to close down media, storm into people’s homes, arrest people without cause, and sentence them to prison for political crimes. The Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court has accepted five stays to the decree, while leaving the decree intact, and will remove them as soon as the decree is repealed. The Attorney General Luis Alberto Rubí says his office continues to proceed criminally against Zelaya for charges that were invented after Zelaya had been expelled. The resistance continues to demonstrate in front of the American embassy.

Brazil and the EU denounced the interruption of the constitutional order, requested that the Brazilian embassy be left in peace, and demanded that Zelaya’s safety and that of his family be guaranteed.
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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 8:15 pm

http://weeksnotice.blogspot.com/2009/10 ... duras.html

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Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen went to Honduras and then apparently sat and caressed Roberto Micheletti's arm while holding up a copy of the constitution that specifically prohibits forced exile. If you were curious about what exactly happens during a "fact finding trip," then now you know.

Her overall conclusion was that the U.S. will be overrun by drugs if we don't support the coup government immediately. She learned this from classified conversations that she cannot disclose.

Feel free to insert your own caption.
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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 8:27 pm

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/10/ ... tness.html

Edgard Garrido wrote:For two weeks, I have slept with my finger on the shutter button, just meters from where Honduras' President Manuel Zelaya, ousted in a coup, waits in refuge and hopes for a return to power.

As a Reuters photographer in Honduras, I was one of the few reporters who managed to slip into Brazil's embassy when Zelaya crept back into the country and sought refuge here, almost three months after troops toppled him and sent him into exile.

Two weeks after his return, Zelaya is still holed up inside the embassy, surrounded by hostile police and troops. And so am I, privileged to bring images to the world but struggling with food shortages, a lack of sleep and rollercoaster emotions.

Scoring an image of Zelaya asleep with his trademark white cowboy hat covering his face was a high point, and the picture has been used widely around the world.

But I'm tired of sleeping on the floor and being short of food, and my nerves have been shot by intimidation from the troops outside and the uncertainty about when this will end.

Honduras' de facto leader Roberto Micheletti and Zelaya are edging towards negotiations to break the deadlock. But the leftist Zelaya insists he must be restored to power while Micheletti says he must face treason charges.

With both sides so far apart, it's not at all clear when there will be an end to the crisis, or my unusual and uncomfortable assignment.

It began with a news flash that Zelaya had returned. I kissed my wife and son goodbye and rushed out so quickly that I forgot to put on my socks.

"Bye, see you soon!" I told them. Little did I know then.

After chasing a false rumour that Zelaya was in a United Nations building, a pack of his followers and reporters rushed to the Brazilian embassy, a modest two-story building. A crush at the door, and I was inside.

I was told Zelaya was in the next room, where he remains to this day. People entering and exiting the room confirmed his presence, but I needed to see him. A door opened and there he was. I snapped two photos and sent my first dispatch.

TENSIONS AT NIGHT

Zelaya decided to camp right where he was. His supporters celebrated and slept outside. With a cement floor as my mattress and a backpack as pillow, I got no sleep amid the screams and chanting.

The government responded quickly, with soldiers and police breaking up the pro-Zelaya demonstrations outside the embassy and turning on a high-frequency acoustic device to harass those inside.

Tensions rose, and we worried about a military operation to seize control of the embassy.

I slept with my finger practically on the shutter ready for what seemed to be an imminent intervention, ready to protect myself, ready to shoot.

After two days inside the embassy, there was no food, no telephone, no rest, no bath and no clean clothes.

At night, soldiers banged on their riot shields. It became a war of nerves. Stones hit the roof as Honduras' national anthem was blasted out on powerful sound equipment nearby.

Then came allegations of a gas attack. Zelaya said he believed mercenaries were trying to force him out using toxic gas. Some in the compound had bleeding noses. Outside, officials said the odours were from a cleaning crew nearby. But it was unclear what was really happening.

Later at least the pressure tactics eased and I began to receive food, fresh clothes and an inflatable mattress from my colleagues on the outside, although part of one package was eaten by the police who had promised to pass it in.

Zelaya found out that my photo of him sleeping was being published around the world, and he called me over. He applauded the picture but we disagreed over how public officials can be photographed and the documentary value of images.

Two weeks into the standoff, we have developed new routines to get access to food, water and even the bathroom.

Zelaya, his family and closest friends have more comforts but there are just two showers for the other 70 people inside the embassy.

We now get food delivered to the embassy by friends on the outside but it can be chaotic. I have fabricated a spoon out of a plastic cup and I pay a Zelaya supporter to do my washing.

The supporters eat whatever the United Nations sends. Zelaya eats his own food and I eat the Reuters food. We are envied for the air mattresses.

At the end of each day I get another phone call. My wife says, "Our son is fine, we'll see you soon."
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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 8:29 pm

http://socialistworker.org/2009/10/06/w ... ras-headed

Where is Honduras headed?

Shaun Joseph, who was part of a solidarity delegation to Honduras following the coup, looks at the politics of proposed deal to restore President Manuel Zelaya to office.

October 6, 2009

HONDURAN COUP leader Roberto Micheletti said his regime would end a repressive state of emergency today--but only after presiding over vicious repression designed to smash the opposition ahead of elections scheduled for next month.

And while Micheletti has raised the possibility that deposed President Manuel Zelaya could return to office briefly, he told Honduran media that this could take place only after elections set for November 29. Zelaya's term expires January 27 of next year.

Micheletti's suggestion that Zelaya could become president again, but only as a lame duck, is aimed at putting a constitutional gloss on an increasingly militarized state. Even before it ordered the suspension of constitutional rights September 27, the regime's crackdown on the popular movement and the left was in full swing.

In a Washington Post column published September 22, Micheletti maintained that no coup had taken place in Honduras. Although the Honduran military kidnapped and expelled Zelaya June 28, with the connivance of U.S. military personnel based in that country, Micheletti maintained that Honduran democracy remains intact.

"Coups do not allow freedom of assembly," he wrote. "They do not guarantee freedom of the press, much less a respect for human rights. In Honduras, these freedoms remain intact and vibrant."

On the very morning these words appeared, the Honduran military was engaged in brutal violence against supporters of the legitimate president, as they gathered peacefully around the Brazilian embassy where Zelaya has taken refuge since secretly returning to the country last month. As the Honduran writer Jorge Handal said in an interview, "[T]he military and the police came with their water tanks to clear us from the streets, beating everyone up: women, children, men, anyone in the streets."

On the same day, the anti-coup Radio Globo was forced underground, and the human rights organization COFADEH was attacked with tear gas. In addition, a blanket curfew was imposed, forcing people to stay in their homes for two days.

Five days after Micheletti's declared his regard for civil liberties in the Post, he announced that he would put the country under a "state of siege" for 45 days. The declaration effectively nullified all constitutional protections.

In addition to making a mockery of the coup-makers' "legal" arguments, the state of siege also cut into the campaign period for the November 29 elections.

Although these elections are rejected by the popular resistance, boycotted by anti-coup candidates and recognized by no other country, the golpistas (coup-makers) do consider them important in their overall campaign to legitimize the coup. The state of siege, originally scheduled to end only a few weeks before the elections, renders the vote a farce, even by golpista standards.

- - - - - - - - -

THE STATE of siege accelerated the development of splits in the coup regime that began with Zelaya's underground return to Honduras September 21.

In the face of continued popular resistance, the National Congress, controlled by coup supporters and led by Micheletti before the coup, threatened to overturn the siege decree.

Micheletti, in turn, has backed down. In an interview with the Brazilian magazine Veja, he even said it was a "mistake" for the military to have exiled Zelaya. "I am not responsible for the decision," he said. "I was only informed of the proceedings...but they told me they did it for fear that a conflict would have been unleashed" had Zelaya gone ahead with plans for a nonbinding referendum on whether to hold a constituent assembly to rewrite the country's constitution.

If Micheletti is now floating the idea that Zelaya could return to office under certain highly restrictive conditions, it's because some powerful members of Honduras' wealthy oligarchy are willing to make a deal. The business magnate Adolfo Facussé, a coup supporter, offered a fresh "compromise" plan on September 29, quickly drawing the approval of the coup's top military man, Gen. Romeo Vásquez Velásquez.

The plan foresees the reinstatement of Zelaya until the end of his term in January, after which he will face unspecified "corruption" charges. The golpistas, on the other hand, would enjoy amnesty, with Micheletti being granted the post of "Congressman for life"--like Chile's late dictator, Gen. Augusto Pinochet. The agreement would be enforced by 3,000 troops from Colombia, Panama and Canada.

This plan was greeted with much celebration in the U.S. press, despite--or perhaps because of--its crass partiality to the golpistas.

The most important aspect of the Facussé-Velásquez proposal, however, is not its content, but what it indicates about the oligarchy's lack of confidence in Micheletti.

The blanket curfew of September 21-24 completely disrupted production and commerce, and therefore profits. Leading businessman Jesús Canahuati, a coup supporter, complained to Bloomberg News that the curfew cost the Honduran economy $50 million a day, and that the country had lost $200 million in investment since June 28.

The oligarchs behind the coup expected only a brief disruption of "business as usual" before they could stabilize the situation and regain international legitimacy, as happened following the 2004 coup in Haiti against President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. This was also apparently the plan of the U.S. government, since Honduran capitalists are mainly front men for American and Canadian interests.

However, the rapid mobilization of the democratic resistance to coup, led by working-class and peasant organizations grouped together in the National Front Against the Coup d'État, smashed this plot of the imperialists and oligarchs.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

IN THE face of unexpectedly vigorous struggle from the Honduran working classes, the policy of the Obama administration has become confused.

While condemning the takeover in international forums, the administration never formally acknowledged that a military coup had taken place. Had it done so, the U.S. would have been forced to suspend all economic aid. The U.S. also declined to pursue tough measures that would have hurt U.S. and Canadian capital, such as expelling Honduras from the Central American Free Trade Agreement.

For their part, the Republicans easily made hay of Obama's two-faced policy by declaring full-throated support for the golpistas. But while it's easy to attack the Republicans' love affair with the Micheletti regime, liberal Democrats are caught in the trap of supporting Obama's ambivalent position.

Evidence of the contradictory U.S. policy abounds. When Sen. James DeMint's (R-S.C.) tried to take an absurd--and probably illegal--taxpayer-funded jaunt to Honduras, he was blocked by Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) in the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee. But the Republican leadership got the trip approved through the Armed Services Committee of Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.).

Meanwhile, the executive branch of the U.S. government says one thing and does another.

The State Department condemned Honduras' state of siege, while the Pentagon disclosed it was still running joint exercises with the Honduran military. And although Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Zelaya's return to Tegucigalpa "opportune to restore him to his position under appropriate circumstances," the U.S. Ambassador to the Organization of American States, Lewis Anselem, declared that Zelaya's return "absent an agreement is irresponsible and foolish."

The Honduran economy is utterly dominated by North American business, so the disposition of the U.S. government--will it support the golpistas or let them fall?--is a critical question. But the mixed messages of the Obama administration, combined with the open partisan division in Congress, have reduced U.S. influence to a surprising degree.

More broadly, Obama's handling of the coup has drained his political capital in Latin America. This is bound to create problems in other realms of Latin America policy, such as the deployment of the U.S. Navy's Fourth Fleet and a highly controversial agreement for the U.S. military to use seven Colombian bases.

What's forcing Micheletti to backpedal isn't pressure from the U.S., but the resistance of the Honduran working class. The movement is usually ignored by the mainstream U.S. press, which portrays the conflict as a dispute between the golpistas and Zelaya.

In truth, Zelaya would have certainly shared the fate of Haiti's Aristide as a permanent exile were it not for the daily mass actions organized by the National Front. Zelaya's spectacular return to country was coordinated by the Front. Having held out for nearly 100 days under terrible, repressive conditions, the resistance is not likely now--nearer than ever to victory--to accept oligarchic "compromises."

That said, the resistance may be at or near the point where it has to take decisive actions against the coup regime or risk disorienting its own base. This is a most serious and sensitive question that can, of course, only be properly answered by activists in Honduras with close links with the movement.

Certainly the spectacle of Micheletti's state of siege, compared to Zelaya's patient calls for dialogue, evokes sympathy for the deposed president. But that's insufficient to take the struggle forward. And while the demoralization of the armed forces seems to be increasing, the history of revolutions shows that armies generally switch sides only when "the die is cast"--not before.

The victory of the Honduran people's resistance would have two profound effects. First, it would defeat the first coup backed by the Obama administration, putting a major dent in U.S. imperial designs on Latin America and energizing people across the region. Second, it would recover the politics of mass working class action from the wreckage of the Central American left's experience under neoliberalism.

U.S. activists should offer all moral, political and material support for the victory of the Honduran resistance.
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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 8:33 pm

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/08/world ... wanted=all

A Cold War Ghost Reappears in Honduras

Image
Billy Joya in Tegucigalpa, Honduras.

By GINGER THOMPSON
Published: August 7, 2009

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras

THE coup here has brought back a lot of Central America’s cold war ghosts, but few as polarizing as Billy Joya, a former police captain accused of being the former leader of a death squad.

He didn’t sneak quietly back into national politics. He made his reappearance on a popular evening talk show just hours after troops had rousted President Manuel Zelaya out of bed and loaded him onto a plane leaving the country.

Mr. Joya’s purpose, he said, was to defend the ouster and help calm a public that freed itself from military rule less than three decades ago. Instead, he set off alarms among human rights activists around the world who worried that the worst elements of the Honduran military were taking control.

“The name Billy Joya reverberated much more than Micheletti,” Mr. Joya protested, perhaps a little too strenuously, referring to the head of the de facto government, Roberto Micheletti, installed by the military. “Instantly, my image was everywhere.”

Mr. Joya’s conflicting images — a vilified figure who portrays himself as a victim — are as hard to reconcile as his life story. Human rights groups consider him one of the most ruthless former operatives of an American-backed military unit, known as Battalion 316, responsible for kidnapping, torturing and murdering hundreds of people suspected of being leftists during the 1980s.

Today, Mr. Joya, a 52-year-old husband and father of four, has become a political consultant to some of the most powerful people in the country, including Mr. Micheletti during his failed campaign to become president last year. Now that Mr. Micheletti has effectively secured that post, Mr. Joya has resurfaced again as a liaison of sorts between Mr. Micheletti and the international media.

Mr. Joya looks straight out of central casting, though not for the role of a thug. He has more of the smooth, elegant bearing of a leading man. And in the 14 years since he was first brought to trial on charges of illegally detaining and torturing six university students, he has undertaken a solitary quest — one that can at times border on obsession — aimed not only at defending himself, but also at vindicating the government’s past fight against Communism.

In 1995, he released a 779-page volume of newspaper clippings, government records and human rights reports meant to substantiate the military’s narrative of the cold war, which essentially accuses its opponents of having blood on their hands as well. And in 1998, after living for a couple of years in exile in Spain, Mr. Joya said he was the first and only military officer to surrender himself for trial.

“Not once in 14 years has there been a single legitimate piece of evidence linking me to these crimes,” he said. Referring to human rights organizations, he said, “What they have done is to condemn me in the media, because they know if they proceed with these cases in court, they are going to lose.”

The odds would appear to be on Mr. Joya’s side. In 1989, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights determined that the Honduran military was responsible for systematic abuses against government opponents. Still, in the 27 years since this country returned to civilian rule, authorities say, Honduran courts have held only two military officials — Col. Juan Blas Salazar Mesa and Lt. Marco Tulio Regalado — accountable for human rights violations.

ONLY about a dozen other officers ever faced formal charges. And most of those cases, like Mr. Joya’s, remain unresolved by a judicial system that remains crippled by corruption.

Meanwhile, Mr. Joya has not suffered silently in legal limbo. In some ways, he has hardly suffered at all. His business as a security consultant and political adviser to some of the most powerful elected officials and businessmen in the country has been lucrative.

“He is like one of those guys who went to Vietnam,” said Antonio Tavel, president of Xerox in Honduras. “He had an ugly job to do once upon a time, and now he’s a regular family guy.”

Mr. Joya is the son of a businessman who helped start several successful companies in Honduras but gambled away more money than he made. Mr. Joya, one of four children, said he enrolled in the military academy at 14, mostly as a way to gain early independence.

He was expelled from the academy, he said, when a teacher caught him cheating on an exam. But instead of giving up his dream to be a soldier, he enlisted as a private and within two years had risen to become the youngest sergeant in the army.

Mr. Joya joined the military police, and in 1981 — as the Reagan administration spent tens of millions of dollars to turn this impoverished country into the principal staging area for a covert war against the region’s left-wing guerrilla groups — Mr. Joya said that he and 12 other Honduran soldiers received six weeks of training in the United States.

He acknowledged that he went on to become a member of Battalion 316. But that’s where his version of events diverges from those of his accusers. He has been charged with 27 crimes, including illegal detention, torture and murder.

The most noteworthy case involved the illegal detention and torture of the six university students in April 1982. The students said they were held in a series of secret jails for eight days. During that time, the students testified, they were kept blindfolded and naked, denied food and water, and subjected to beatings and psychological torture.

Among those detained was Milton Jiménez, who later became a lawyer and a member of Mr. Zelaya’s cabinet. In 1995, Mr. Jiménez told The Baltimore Sun that officers from the battalion stood him before a firing squad and threatened to shoot him.

“They said they were finishing my grave,” he said at the time. “I was convinced I was going to die.”

Edmundo Orellana, the former Honduran attorney general who was the first to try to prosecute human rights crimes, said it was “absurd” that Mr. Joya remained free.

“Billy Joya is proof that civilian rule has been a cruel hoax on the Honduran people,” Mr. Orellana said. “He shows that ignorance and complicity still reign inside our courts, especially when it comes to the armed forces.”

Absurd, Mr. Joya countered, are the charges against him. After his television appearance, he said he received so many threats that he took his wife and youngest daughter to the United States. Now he returns to Honduras only intermittently to meet with clients.

PORING over dozens of newspaper clippings and court dockets during an interview, he argued that Battalion 316 was not established until two years after Mr. Jiménez’s detention, and that it was a technical unit specializing in arms interdiction, not counterinsurgency.

He also argued that the former students’ testimony against him is rife with contradictions. He said Mr. Jiménez, for example, later recanted his charge that Mr. Joya was involved in his interrogations.

“It was never my responsibility to detain people, to torture people or to disappear people,” Mr. Joya said. “But if those had been my orders, I am sure I would have obeyed them, because I was trained to obey orders.

“The policy at that time was, ‘The only good Communist is a dead Communist,’ ” he continued. “I supported the policy.”
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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 8:52 pm

http://narconews.com/Issue60/article3858.html

Ros-Lehtinen Discovers Antidote to Honduran Tourism Crisis in Visiting US Congress Members

Coup Leader Admits that Lifting of Emergency Decree Does Not Apply to All Media Outlets

By Belén Fernández
Special to The Narco News Bulletin

October 6, 2009

TEGUCIGALPA, HONDURAS, OCTOBER 5, 2009: Two days prior to the scheduled visit to Honduras of a delegation from the Organization of American States (OAS), an abridged version of international diplomacy arrived in Tegucigalpa yesterday morning in the form of Florida Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee who was nonetheless defined as US Senator by prominent Honduran newspapers. Ros-Lehtinen starred in a mid-day press conference at the presidential palace, an event also qualifying as abridged based on the lack of representatives of the anti-coup press.

The absence from the conference of Channel 36 TV and Radio Globo – the two media outlets forced off the air last week with coup president Roberto Micheletti’s decree of a state of emergency – was called into question when Micheletti assured the audience that his decree had been completely revoked. The possibility that the coup government might thus return confiscated broadcasting equipment to its rightful owners was promptly declined, however, when Micheletti declared that said owners would have to earn back their rights in a court of law.

The stated purpose of Ros-Lehtinen’s visit to Honduras was to assess the current state of affairs in Honduras, something coup president Roberto Micheletti has repeatedly accused the rest of the world of being blissfully oblivious to. Evidence suggesting that the assessment was conducted prior to arrival includes Ros-Lehtinen’s introduction last month of a House resolution urging recognition of the legitimacy of the upcoming Honduran elections without the restitution of legitimate President Mel Zelaya as a prerequisite, and Ros-Lehtinen’s silence yesterday at the selective lifting of emergency decrees.

Ros-Lehtinen nonetheless stressed her commitment to Honduran democracy and conviction in the sacred nature of the Honduran Constitution – a categorization that had recently been challenged by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, who had described it as the worst such document on the face of the earth. The Florida Representative proceeded to express her concern that US withholding of select funds and travel documents from the coup government was only harming the citizens of Honduras, although she later conceded that it was also harming the US war on drugs as narcotraffickers would quickly discover that a Honduras without funds was incapable of purchasing radars.

Accompanying Ros-Lehtinen to Honduras were her south Florida congressional companions Lincoln Díaz-Balart and Mario Díaz-Balart. Micheletti failed to establish whether the poster proclaiming “Alianza de Miami, por Honduras” had been hung outside the presidential palace in honor of their visit, although he did refer to Ros-Lehtinen as an illustrious woman whose presence in Honduras was a reward from God. Ros-Lehtinen returned the cordialities by proclaiming that Micheletti was not at all de facto and that presidential succession in Cuba would hopefully one day produce a leader like him.

The Florida Representative refrained from mentioning the Castro succession by name, preferring to strike elsewhere on the hierarchy of international bogeymen and complaining that both Muammar Gaddafi and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had been permitted to attend the recent United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York, despite the fact that the former had not been elected and the latter had been elected via fraud. As for the coup government of Honduras that was not permitted to attend, Ros-Lehtinen reasoned that just because Micheletti had not been elected, either, did not mean that he had not risen to power in accordance with the law.

Ros-Lehtinen’s tactic of haphazard name-dropping in order to distract her audience from the illegitimacy of the Honduran coup regime suffered additional setbacks with Micheletti’s revelation that his “completely revoked” emergency decree had not in fact been revoked completely, apparently placing him in the same boat as the international bogeymen Ros-Lehtinen had accused of media repression. Ros-Lehtinen meanwhile blamed the propagation of such misconceptions on CNN, which has mysteriously and spontaneously been deemed a bastion of radical leftism by Honduran golpistas – who can then presumably argue that even bastions of radical leftism are permitted to broadcast in Honduras.

Assuring Micheletti that her community in south Florida was conscious of what was happening in Honduras despite media efforts, Ros-Lehtinen stressed that the coup regime was not in a position of international isolation and pledged to invite all of her “colleagues” to visit the Central American nation. She offered a list of sample colleagues that included all US Congress members, mayors, governors, and foreign governments, plus individualized invitees such as Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, and Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell. Not listed was Massachusetts Representative Bill Delahunt, who had however been falsely included on Ros-Lehtinen’s list of endorsements for her trip to Honduras despite his opposition to the coup; McConnell’s efforts to facilitate the recent Honduran excursion by South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint meanwhile indicated that McConnell probably already knew of his invitation.

Regarding Obama’s invitation, Ros-Lehtinen reminded the press conference audience that she had not come to Honduras to condemn the Latin American policy of the president, who was “mi presidente” despite the fact that she had not voted for him. Whether the emphasis on open-mindedness was part of an effort to convince Hondurans that they might also adopt a president they hadn’t voted for was not explained, nor was Micheletti’s apparent focus on international rather than domestic adoption by announcing that the coup regime’s heart was open not just for the OAS but for the entire world.

I had just begun to wonder if Ros-Lehtinen and Micheletti were not perhaps receiving commission from a Honduran travel agency when Ros-Lehtinen herself pointed out that the tourism industry was suffering and added the following travel enticement: “Si les interesa la democracia, vengan a Honduras!” – “If you’re interested in democracy, come to Honduras!” She added that like-minded Hondurans could not reciprocate American visits at the moment due to lack of visas, causing Micheletti to chortle; not established was whether the invitation to the entire world included Libya and Iran.

As for Ros-Lehtinen’s appeal for election observers to take advantage of Honduran travel opportunities, the Florida Representative stressed that the precedent for voter turnouts under difficult conditions had already been set in Iraq and Afghanistan and that Zelaya’s intention to discourage voting by filling the population with dread would prove ineffective. Other varieties of popular dread were meanwhile potentially assuaged to some extent with the revocation of the emergency decree.

Micheletti revealed in the question-and-answer section of the press conference that Channel 36 and Radio Globo were not the only elements of Honduran society that would be required to submit to a judicial process and that the orchestrators of Zelaya’s expatriation would be punished, as well, despite the fact that Article 239 of the Honduran Constitution clearly prohibited reelected presidents. The proposal that the only crime of the Honduran coup regime had been to respect the law was meanwhile put forth by Ros-Lehtinen, whom Micheletti continued to refer to as illustrious.

Such terminology was momentarily called into question when a member of the press inquired as to how the minority party in the US hoped to alter government policies. Ros-Lehtinen dispelled such concerns with the claim that even minorities were listened to in democratic societies like the US and Honduras, a claim apparently seconded by Micheletti when he declared that he would remain in power until January 27.
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Postby John Schröder » Tue Oct 06, 2009 9:05 pm

http://quotha.net/node/444

Journalists in Honduras: "They know who we are"
30 September 2009

Testimony from Marvin Ortiz, a journalist with Radio Globo in Honduras

On Monday at 5am, we started broadcasting with our normal schedule, starting with the Radio Globo news from 5 to 8am, presented by the director of our radio station and two other journalists. At around 5.20am, the heard someone beating on the door and people shouting "get outside!". They were soldiers and police who had come to confiscate all the radio equipment.

My colleagues heard the sound of shots aimed at the lock on the door, as if to break it and get inside the building. At that moment, several journalists decided to jump from the third floor of the radio station building. Now they´re bruised and wounded. Luckily, a passerby saw them, gave them first aid and took them to a safe place.

When the soldiers and police entered the radio station, without warning, they took all the equipment, everything you need to run the radio, computers, microphones, the console, the telephone switchboard, the amplifiers, and even the aerials. They destroyed the news table. They took everything away in a police patrol car.

After that they started to occupy the building. As well as the radio station, a state agency also works in the same building - the National Register of Persons - and when the staff of that agency arrived, the police wouldn´t let them in. All they could do was punch in their time cards and go home.

I arrived at the radio station at around 7am. I was with a colleague. Straight away the police and soldiers started to harass us. They threatened and harassed us. They took photos of us and insulted us.

They confiscated the equipment of several journalists who were covering the shut-down of the radio, and arrested some of them.

Everybody left the building at around 9am.

All of this happened because of an Executive Decree issued by the de facto government led by Roberto Micheletti, which suspends Hondurans´ constitutional guarantees and restricts freedom of expression. The Decree specifically mentioned Radio Globo and Canal 36 [TV station], which has also been shut down.

Since the coup d´état, Radio Globo has maintained its stance of informing the public about what has been happening in our country. We condemn the coup d´etat. We give a space to people to express themselves freely and to make their complaints.

There are around 50 of us who work at the radio station, including reporters, presenters, operators and administrative staff. There is a high level of persecution directed against us and a lot of fear. We never feel safe.

A lot of people gathered near the radio station to protest against the [de facto] government´s decision to close it down.

At the moment, Radio Globo is only operating via the Internet at www.radiohonduras.com. Yesterday [Monday], we had about 400,000 listeners. People are waiting to see what happens to the radio station.

Following the intervention of several human rights organizations, the military and police decided to end their occupation of the radio station. A group of lawyers are working at the moment to ensure that the radio can start to operate again without restrictions on its broadcasts.

Today [Tuesday], there are only two of us here, both presenters. We´re broadcasting via the internet because the ban, the Decree, doesn´t allow us to broadcast using a radio frequency.

Threats, repression and arrests of journalists continue, but we reporters continue working. We have to go to where the news is happening but it´s frightening because we know that there could be repression against us, especially because they already know who we are. They know we´re part of the Radio Globo team.

We have a commitment to the people, to our profession and to our family.

In spite of everything, we´re going to carry on, informing.
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Postby geogeo » Tue Oct 06, 2009 9:41 pm

Unbelievably creepy apology for Joya from NYT. Incredible how the US whitewashes everything when it doesn't just plain lie. As if the thugs have to look like thugs--as if family men can't also order disappearances. The CIA outdoes itself in writing this crap. One of the reasons that Joya and his ilk don't spend time in jail is that they peel the faces off your children if you testify to anything meaningful.
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 5:48 pm

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/thefie ... elaya-back

Poll: Wide Majority of Hondurans Oppose Coup d’Etat, Want Zelaya Back

By Al Giordano

Image

Finally, hard and reliable data - by a legally certified Honduran polling company – provides a clear measurement of how the Honduran people view the June 28 coup d'etat, its “president" Roberto Micheletti, President Manuel Zelaya and the national civil resistance.

The polling data – which we make public for the first time here - shows that Hondurans widely (by a margin of 3 to 1) oppose the coup, oppose coup “president” Micheletti by a margin of 3 to 1 and favor the reinstatement of their elected President Manuel Zelaya by a clear majority of 3 to 2.

On February 9 of this year, the Gaceta Oficial of the government of Honduras published the Supreme Electoral Tribunal’s certification of a Tegucigalpa polling company, COIMER & OP (Consultants in Investigation of Markets and Public Opinion), as a legally authorized pollster for the November 29 elections. The Tribunal inspected the company’s polling methodology, its offices, its staff, gave it the stamp of approval and the green light to survey the Honduran electorate.

The Field has obtained the full results of a recent COIMER & OP survey of 1,470 Honduran citizens over 18 years of age at randomly selected homes (no more than one respondent allowed from each home) proportional to national, state and municipal population and matching other demographic measurements (gender, age, etcetera) in the country, from August 23 to 29 of this year. The poll has a margin of error of four percent.

This is the first survey to be made public since a July Gallup poll showed a plurality of Hondurans opposed the coup d’etat and Roberto Micheletti, and a plurality wanted Zelaya back as president. What is interesting from this survey is that opposition to Micheletti and the coup increased between early July and late August from mere pluralities to a punishing majority: evidence that the nonviolent civil resistance movement has worked effectively to strip legitimacy from the coup regime. As of late August, only 17.4 percent of Hondurans favor the coup d’etat, only 22.2 percent believe Micheletti should remain as president, and only 33 percent oppose the restitution of President Manuel Zelaya.

And those were the numbers before Micheletti’s very unpopular “state of siege” decree of September 29 began to divide his supporters even further.

For Spanish-language readers, political reporters and analysts, The Field and Narco News today make available the full survey and all its cross-tabulations for your analysis.

For English speakers, we will translate the survey questions and the results here, adding some analysis:

    Are you in favor of the June 28 coup d’etat against President Manuel Zelaya Rosales?

    In favor of coup: 17.4 percent

    Opposed to coup: 52.7 percent

    No response: 29.9 percent
Strip away the “no response” and the percentages among those with an opinion reveal a stunning 75 percent percent against the coup with only 25 percent in favor: an anti-coup margin of 3 to 1.

Meanwhile, coup “president” Micheletti remains a very unpopular man among Hondurans:

    Should Micheletti stay in power or leave the current government?

    Micheletti should stay: 22.2 percent

    Micheletti should leave: 60.1 percent

    No response: 17.7 percent
Among those who express an opinion, Micheletti’s opponents outnumber his supporters by a margin of nearly 3 to 1.

A clear majority supports Manuel Zelaya’s return to the presidency – 60 percent of those who express an opinion:

    Do you support the return of Manuel Zelaya Rosales to the Presidency of the Republic?

    Support Zelaya’s return: 51.6 percent

    Oppose Zelaya’s return: 33 percent

    No response: 15.4 percent
Even the National Civil Resistance - maligned daily in the pro-coup media, portrayed sensationally as lawless and threatening of the civil order - enjoys a plurality of support from the Honduran population:

    Do you agree or disagree with the marches by the national resistance throughout the country against the coup d’etat?

    Support the marches: 45.5 percent

    Oppose the marches: 41.8 percent

    No response: 12.7 percent
By a more than 2 to 1 margin, Hondurans view the police and military as overly repressive against the national resistance:

    Do you think that the Armed Forces and National Police are engaging in repression or not against the National Resistance?

    Yes, there is repression: 54.5 percent

    No, there is not repression: 21.8 percent

    No response: 23.7 percent
When asked their opinion about that repression, an overwhelming majority of Hondurans opposes that repression:

    Do you agree with the repression or condemn the repression that the Armed Forces and National Police have engaged in against the National Resistance?

    Against repression: 65.4 percent

    For repression: 8 percent

    No response: 26.4 percent
Strip away the non respondents, and a whopping 89 percent oppose the repression against the civil resistance, including many Hondurans that do not themselves support the resistance marches.

Here’s another interesting question and result:

    Who promoted and financed the coup d’etat that toppled President Manuel Zelaya Rosales? Among the political, business, military sectors or foreign capital, which was behind the coup?

    All of the above: 23.6 percent

    Business sector: 16.8 percent

    Political sector: 15 percent

    None of the above: 9.5 percent

    Military sector: 6.7 percent

    International capital: 2.4 percent

    No response: 26.8 percent
The COIMER & OP survey also reveals a chilling fact regarding freedom of the press under the coup regime: that the two national TV and radio stations shut down by the coup regime happen to be the most trusted news sources in the entire country, out rating all other media outlets:

    Which radio news do you prefer to inform you of events in the country?

    Radio Globo: 23.4 percent

    HRN: 22.4 percent

    Radio América: 13.7 percent

    Radio Cadena voces: 0.7 percent

    Local station: 10.3 percent

    No answer: 29.5


    Which television news program do you prefer to inform you about the happenings in the country regarding the coup d’etat against President Manuel Zelaya Rosales?

    Channel 36 Cholusat: 18 percent

    Channel 6: 16.9 percent

    TNS: 15.7

    Abriendo Brecha: 10.7

    Hable como Habla: 7.8

    TVC: 7.3

    Once Noticias: 3.7

    Local and regional channels: 9.5

    No response: 11.4
The survey also shows that only 53.9 percent of Hondurans read daily newspapers, and that only 55.2 percent prefer any newspaper at all to inform them of happenings in the country:

    Which newspaper do you prefer to inform you about the happenings in the country regarding the coup d’etat against President Manuel Zelaya Rosales?

    No response: 44.8 percent

    La Prensa: 22.6 percent

    La Tribuna: 12.2 percent

    Tiempo: 9.9 percent

    El Heraldo: 9.3 percent

    El Libertador: 1.2 percent
Interestingly, prior to June 28, the daily Tiempo of San Pedro Sula was the fourth most read paper in the country. Since the coup it has now surpassed the daily Heraldo and is catching up on second place La Tribuna – both of Tegucigalpa – and Tiempo is in striking distance for second position. Tiempo is the only newspaper of the four that has not offered extremely dishonest pro-coup spin.

The results of the next question should indicate why the Micheletti regime keeps talking so loudly about the November 29 elections which the rest of the world has said cannot be recognized as fair or free under the repressive conditions imposed by the coup regime. However, a strong majority of Hondurans still favor those elections:

    Should the general elections organized by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal for November 19 happen even if the institutional crisis isn’t resolved?

    Yes, have elections: 66.4 percent

    No, don’t have them: 23.8 percent

    No response: 2.9 percent
The 23.8 percent that oppose holding the elections before the crisis is resolved is actually a very high number compared to general public opinion: Elections are like mom and apple pie. Only a very highly politically conscious citizen would make the leap of understanding that elections are not fair and free under a coup regime and therefore openly oppose them happening. I would venture an estimation that that number of 23.8 percent represents participants in the Civil Resistance movements, who have universally argued that the conditions do not exist to hold free elections given what the coup regime has done to censor and violently repress all dissent. That would represent an unusually strong base from which to continue organizing.

Here are some questions about those elections:

    What political party do you belong to or sympathize with?

    Liberal: 38.5 percent

    National: 28.5

    Democratic Unification: 1.4

    PINU: 1.1

    DC: 0.9

    Independent Candidate: 2.9

    None: 21.5

    No response: 5.0


    Will you vote in the General Elections to elect President, members of Congress and Mayors?

    Yes: 53.8 percent

    No: 18.8 percent

    Maybe: 12.5 percent

    Don’t know: 9 percent

    No response: 3.5 percent


    What is your opinion of Independent Candidates?

    Good opinion: 51 percent

    Bad opinion: 16.2 percent

    No response: 32.8 percent


    If the elections were held today for President, who would you vote for:

    Pepe Lobo (National Party): 28.2 percent

    Elvin Santos (Liberal Party): 14.4 percent

    Carlos H. Reyes (Independent): 12 percent

    César Ham (Democratic Unification): 2.2 percent

    Bernard Martinez (PINU): 1.2 percent

    Felipe Avila (Christian Democrat): 1 percent

    None of the above: 24.7 percent

    No response: 16.3 percent
We can see from those combined numbers that while Zelaya’s Liberal Party remains the most popular, its pro-coup nominee Elvin Santos is rejected by about two-thirds of his own party members. We can also see very low interest in participation by voters, with only 53.8 percent saying they will definitely vote. And – should there be a negotiated solution in time for the resistance movements to participate in clean elections (a very big “if”) – Independent candidate Carlos H. Reyes is very well positioned to supplant the Liberal Party nominee to become one of the top two candidates, the most viable alternative to Lobo, especially if, as has been talked a lot about, the Democratic Unification Party of candidate Cesar Ham joins in coalition behind Reyes.

But, of course, such talk is way premature, since conditions do not at present exist for fair and free elections, and its not clear there is enough time in the next 53 days to fix that.

This chart measures the popularity (“Excelente y Buena opinion”) against the negative rating (“Mala opinion”) along with the middle category of “regular opinion” and “don’t know or no response”):

Image

The most popular political figures in the country are:

    President Manuel Zelaya: 44.7 percent (to 25.7 percent negative)
And…

    First Lady Xiomara Castro de Zelaya: 42.6 percent (to 17.9 percent negative)
That they enjoy the highest favorability compared to any other national figure - after a massive PR ad campaign all summer long on TV, radio and in the pro-coup dailies to portray Zelaya as a national villain - is also an indication of the pro-coup media's own crisis of credibility with the public.

The least popular political figures in Honduras are those perceived as coup leaders:

    Coup “president” Roberto Micheletti: 56.5 percent negative (to just 16.2 percent positive)

    Liberal Party candidate Elvin Santos: 45.2 percent negative (to 18.6 percent positive)

    Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez: 42.6 percent (to 26.1 percent positive)

    General Romeo Vasquez: 40 percent negative (to 19.1 percent positive)

    National Party candidate Pepe Lobo: 34.1 percent negative (to 30.5 percent positive)

Interestingly, Independent and anti-coup presidential candidate Carlos H. Reyes is more popular (24.6 percent) than unpopular (14.1 percent) as are anti-coup media voices like Radio Globo’s Eduardo Maldonado (31.4 percent positive to 23.2 percent negative) and Channel 36’s Esdras Amado Lopez (23.5 percent positive to 17.3 percent negative). They are, along with the Zelayas, the only national public figures to enjoy a significantly more favorable rating from Hondurans than negative.

The bottom line: A majority of the Honduran people oppose the coup, oppose Micheletti and a wide majority oppose the regime’s repression against the national resistance. And a plurality openly support the civil resistance movement.

So when Republican US Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen yesterday issued a “Twitter communiqué” claiming that “nobody wants Zelaya back,” she was blowing smoke out of the wrong air hole. All those - from the regime, to the oligarch diaspora to Lanny Davis and the US political consultants they hire, to the spoiled brat class of some (but not all) gringo expats in Honduras that repeated unsupported claims that a majority of Hondurans favor the coup, or support Micheletti, or oppose Zelaya’s return, now end with egg on their faces, their credibility shot. They just made it up and thought you would be gullible enough to believe them. But here we’ve given you, finally, the hard numbers, now available in full public view.

What’s more is that these results explain why the coup regime and its chambers of commerce and other big business organizations – the forces in the country that can afford to hire pollsters - have not released any of their own internal polling data to the public: Because they, too, know that a majority of Hondurans oppose them, and they are less popular even than the national nonviolent civil resistance movement that they treat with such disdain.
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 5:57 pm

http://www.anchorweb.org/opinions/the-s ... -1.1941362

The struggle against the coup in Honduras

By Shaun Joseph and Paul Lynch

The popular struggle in Honduras is a struggle to defeat the coup organized by the armed forces and the country’s elite that ousted the democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya. However, the roots of the conflict touch on major changes in the economic structure of the country that took place under the neoliberal (i.e. free market-ideology and deregulation-driven) policies implemented over the last 30 years.

In 1980, 63 percent of economically active Hondurans were employed in agriculture, mostly as peasants; at the same time, only 16 percent of GDP came from manufacturing. These levels were roughly the same as in 1960. By 1999, only 13 percent of the active population was in agriculture, and 32 percent of GDP came from manufacturing. North American business also penetrated into Honduras far more deeply during the neoliberal period than previously.

Thus, neoliberalism in Honduras produced both an expanded working class and a Northern-oriented native oligarchy. This was accompanied by severe social dislocation, since the structural transformation of the Honduran economy was carried out under “free market principles” – that is, anarchically. A dramatic illustration of this came when Hurricane Mitch hit in 1998: 11,000 people were killed, and an additional 2 million were left homeless.

Zelaya came to power in 2006, when the crisis of neoliberalism was already evident in Latin America – as were the beginnings of an alternative center-left model, pursued most vigorously by Venezuela under Hugo Chávez. Though a candidate of one of the two main parties of Honduras’ elite, Zelaya, implemented a series of important reforms including increasing the minimum wage by 60 percent. He led Honduras into joining the Bolivarian Alliance for the People of Our Americas, an economic alliance initiated by Venezuela; and he pushed through a Citizen Participation Law allowing the president to initiate consultative referenda. Such reforms began to grate on the oligarchy.

The June 28 coup was undertaken by the Honduran ruling elite to arrest the process that was threatening their obscene social privilege. The golpistas (coup-makers) claim that Zelaya was attempting to hold a referendum to allow him to run for another term. This is simply untrue. Instead, Zelaya was trying to hold a non-binding national survey on whether the November ballot should include a referendum on whether to convoke a Constituent Assembly to consider constitutional reform. Zelaya could not have run for reelection, regardless of the results of the survey, as he has pointed out several times. Because the coup represents only the interests of the wealthy, it is opposed by a majority of Hondurans, especially workers and peasants. This is obvious to anyone who walks around the country with their eyes open. The democratic anti-coup resistance – organized primarily by labor, peasant and indigenous organizations – has broad political support, stretching well into the small business and professional layers.

The return of Zelaya to Honduras on Sept. 21, in defiance of the coup regime led by Roberto Micheletti, ushered in a new stage in the battle against the oligarchs. Within hours, thousands of people had gathered around the Brazilian embassy to welcome Zelaya home. The coup regime violently dispersed the nonviolent gathering and announced a blanket curfew that was extended for 48 continuous hours. This caused terrible disruption in people’s lives, especially since many Hondurans live hand-to-mouth on their daily wages.

Although the golpistas still control the machinery of state violence, they are near defeat. Because the popular resistance is so broad and powerful, the de facto regime never conquered the passive acquiescence of the people: that sense of “This sucks, but I’ll put up with it,” that is so essential for any society ruled by a wealthy elite. With Zelaya’s return, the people of Honduras are inspired to risk great sacrifices to win democracy. For this reason, they are likely to win. Sensing this, the world’s major powers are rapidly withdrawing support from the golpistas, even though they are natural allies due to their business and social class connections.

The Honduran people are very conscious of the fact that they are defending not just themselves, but all the progress that has been made for working people in Latin America. People in the United States should show solidarity with the Latin American workers, even though the US government has traditionally been the major opponent of independence and reform in that region. However, if people there are able to win their struggles, it would mean big benefits for us: an end to the “race to the bottom” of wages caused by so-called “free trade” agreements; a reduction of the wasteful military budget; an attack on racist and chauvinist attitudes against Latinos; and more. Their fight is our fight.

The authors are members of the International Socialist Organization.
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 6:22 pm

http://www.ticotimes.net/dailyarchive/2 ... 007092.cfm

For Guatemalan activist Rigoberta Menchú, the Honduran crisis stretches beyond the country's jagged borders, green mountains and far-reaching farmlands.

The Nobel Peace Prize recipient, who became human rights icon after her advocacy work during the Guatemalan Civil War, said the issue can't be limited to Honduras.

“It's a profound crisis. It's an ideological crisis. It's a political crisis,” she said, speaking before reporters in San José on Tuesday. “But it is also a crisis that belongs to Central America.”

She said the situation must be studied, turned over and analyzed again so that it doesn't become a “concern for our children.”

We must prevent “a tomorrow in which any madman says, ‘I don't like this government,' overthrows it and is legitimized by an election,” she said.

Meeting with academics, a representative from the Honduran media and political analysts on Tuesday, Menchú denounced the de facto government, called for greater intervention on the behalf of the United States and praised the efforts of the Organization of American States (OAS) along with fellow Nobel Peace Prize recipient Oscar Arias, the president of Costa Rica.

She criticized the United States for not being “more congruent” or “clear” in its position, believing that the northern superpower should intervene “not to resolve the crisis, but to create a ‘free zone'” where persons and institutions that resist the de facto government could seek asylum.

With the return of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya on Sept. 21, the situation has grown tenser, boiling over into moments of violence as the feuding parties meet face to face.

Ismael Moreno, who joined Menchú on the panel on Tuesday, and works as the director of Radio Progreso in Honduras, said he's never before seen the level of repression he's experienced in the country over the past few months.

“I was a witness to many conflicts in the 80s, in Nicaragua, in Guatemala, in El Salvador,” he said. “And I want to tell you that I have never experienced an environment of as much repression and terror as I lived in Honduras in these three months.”

Recounting stories of repression in the case of a religious figure who was captured during one of the demonstrations and dragged by his hair and of a young mother who was raped by several soldiers, Moreno criticized the de facto government for covering up the reality of the situation.

Meanwhile, the OAS has named a new delegation of foreign ministers who will arrive in Honduras Wednesday in attempt to break the stalemate in Honduras. The delegation includes the organization's secretary general, José Miguel Insulza; foreign ministers from Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico and Panama; and top diplomats from Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, Argentina and Brazil.
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 6:42 pm

http://hondurasemb.org/2009/10/05/honduran-hangover/

HONDURAN HANGOVER

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Cover Profile / Eduardo Enrique Reina García

Local Diplomatic Rift Emblematic Of Divide Tearing Honduras Apart

by Larry Luxner of the Washington Diplomat

At 5 a.m. on the morning of Latin America’s first coup d’état of the 21st century, Honduran Information Minister Eduardo Enrique Reina García was awakened by an urgent phone call.

“The president’s secretary told me soldiers had surrounded the president’s house and that shots were being fired at his daughter’s house. We didn’t know what was happening,” Reina told The Washington Diplomat, recalling the dramatic events of June 28, 2009.

“I tried to reach Honduran media, but they didn’t know anything. Then I called correspondents for Reuters and [Spanish news agency] EFE. I drove to the national TV headquarters, but army trucks were coming through. So I went to the Embassy of Spain and they gave me refuge.”

Reina’s boss, President José Manuel Zelaya, wasn’t as lucky. Yanked from his bed by troops acting on orders from the Honduran Supreme Court, the leftist president — still in his pajamas — was bundled into a military aircraft and flown against his will to neighboring Costa Rica. All this happened on the day Zelaya’s government was supposed to hold a nonbinding referendum on constitutional reform that critics — including many in his own party — say was part of a coordinated effort by leftists to consolidate power and turn Honduras into a populist dictatorship resembling Venezuela under Hugo Chávez or Bolivia under Evo Morales.

Nothing could be further from the truth, retorts Reina.

“The Honduran constitution does not provide any process for impeaching a president. So they tried to arrange things by faking his resignation,” he argues. “Then they jumped due process. If they had a legal process against him, whey couldn’t he defend himself in a court of law? Why did they call the army out?”

Now the Honduran army is back — and so is Zelaya. Despite worldwide condemnation from the United Nations, the Organization of American States and the Obama administration of the coup, the new de facto government of Roberto Micheletti refused to budge on allowing Zelaya back into the country, vowing to arrest him on charges of violating the constitution if he stepped back onto Honduras soil.

Impatient for a resolution, Zelaya did just that, staging a daring return shortly before the U.N. General Assembly met Sept. 23. As of press time, the deposed president remained holed up at the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa as thousands of his supporters rallied outside despite threats from Micheletti’s people to disperse.

Reina also stands by his boss, telling The Diplomat that the “illegal” government won’t win the standoff by stalling in the hopes that November’s presidential elections would give the impoverished nation of 7.6 million inhabitants a clean slate.

“He’s not going to relinquish his right to come back. Zelaya’s a politician and he knows how to keep in touch with the Honduran people,” the envoy said.

“Many people in Honduras were under the impression that the people would not rise up against this, that within a week all their diplomats would convince the international community to accept the new government, then as a second step try to get recognition through the elections,” Reina added. “But they were wrong.”

Wrong indeed. At press time, 300 people were trapped inside the embassy, while another 10,000 to 15,000 people — mostly Zelaya supporters — had surrounded it before being forcefully dispersed by police using tear gas and water cannons. The U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa shut its doors for security reasons, and Honduran aviation authorities closed the country’s four airports to international traffic.

“We are very worried about the situation in Honduras, since President Zelaya is in the Brazilian Embassy and the golpistas [those who carried out the coup] have cut off all water and electricity. This is a clear violation of the Vienna Convention,” said Reina, who, like Zelaya, faces arrest on numerous counts of corruption if he returns to the country he represents (Reina’s wife and children are also back in Tegucigalpa).

“The international community is very well aware how this military government works,” Reina added. “I think pressure will increase very decisively, and the golpistas are also losing support within their own group, because their position is weakening day by day. Hopefully, they won’t do anything foolish like trying to take Zelaya out of the Brazilian Embassy.”

In the meantime, as both sides stubbornly dig in, world leaders have mostly urged peaceful dialogue to resolve the standoff, with some, such as Brazil, calling for Zelaya’s reinstatement.

“The United States calls on all parties to remain calm and avoid actions that might provoke violence in Honduras and place individuals at risk or harm,” said State Department spokesman Ian Kelly. “We urge that all parties refrain from actions that would lead to further unrest.”

Talks moderated by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias stalled over the interim government’s refusal to accept Zelaya’s reinstatement to the presidency, though the proposed power-sharing agreement would limit his powers and prohibit him from attempting to revise the constitution.

“I think this is the best opportunity, the best time, now that Zelaya’s back in his country,” Arias said in New York. Yet Micheletti showed no inclination to give ground, saying Zelaya had violated those mediation efforts by returning. Zelaya himself hinted he wouldn’t accept curtailed authority, proclaiming at the Brazilian Embassy his intention for an unconditional return to full power.

Meanwhile, the Honduran Embassy back in Washington has been a microcosm of the drama that’s been playing out for months back home. Within days of his exile, Zelaya replaced Ambassador Roberto Flores Bermudez — who quickly declared his loyalty to the interim Micheletti government and resigned his post — with Reina. A 40-year-old Liberal Party loyalist who arrived here on July 9, Reina has been awaiting State Department confirmation as ambassador for nearly two months.

“For any career diplomat, Washington is one of the top posts in the world. Maybe I’m not very good friends with the new government, but that doesn’t matter. Right now, I’m working for the principle of restoring democracy in Honduras,” said Reina, interviewed at the half-empty Honduran Embassy, located on the fourth floor of the Intelsat building off Connecticut Avenue.

Since Zelaya’s ouster, six of the embassy’s 12 staffers have abandoned their jobs and gone back to Honduras. One employee who was in charge of the embassy’s Web site even sabotaged the site and disabled all the passwords, though Reina’s team has since been able to put the site back online.

Meanwhile, Flores, the former ambassador, has been shuttling between Washington and Tegucigalpa, lobbying on behalf of those who overthrew the controversial president (see related story). The diplomatic split has left Reina and Flores in the unfamiliar position of being on opposing teams. Reina mused about the deterioration of his once-solid friendship with the man he replaced.

“I don’t know if I can call us friends now,” he said with obvious regret. “Roberto Flores was a respected diplomat here. He was my boss in London, when I was the deputy chief of mission at our embassy there and he was the ambassador. Afterward, when he was minister of foreign affairs, I was his chief of cabinet. Then, during President Zelaya’s inauguration, he was in charge of the ceremony and I was one of the coordinators. And my first job in the Zelaya government was vice minister of foreign affairs, so I was his boss.”

Reina, who started as a career diplomat in Brussels, served as a director of foreign investments within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as well as a private consultant for the Inter-American Development Bank and the U.N. Development Fund before joining the Zelaya campaign. In September 2008, he was appointed Zelaya’s private secretary and minister of information.

Reina says the former ambassador called him July 3, five days after the coup. “He told me, ‘I understand this will end my functions with the Zelaya government, but this is the decision I have taken.’ He didn’t explain it to me,” Reina said, recalling the conversation. “He only said that he respects that I’m doing for my country what I think is right, and that he’ll do for his country what he thinks is right.”

What’s right is a matter of intense debate both in Honduras and throughout Latin America, where Zelaya’s forced removal and the subsequent soap opera of his return have generated emotions ranging from outrage and indignation to pride and defiance.

The president’s critics still contend that the referendum he planned was really a power grab and that the military acted legally in removing Zelaya because he had defied the Supreme Court in pushing ahead with efforts to change the constitution

Zelaya, who was due to leave office in January after elections in November, has denied he was seeking to extend his term. Supporters also point out that that the poll was nonbinding and even if Zelaya had gotten everything he wanted, a new president would have been elected on the same November ballot, so he would have been out of office in January 2010 regardless.

Despite Zelaya’s stridently leftist credentials, most of the world has sided with the president that his ouster was illegal and set a dangerous precedent.

Yet the impetuous Zelaya isn’t exactly a beloved figure either. His antics along the Honduran border and his more recent return to the country despite persistent warnings that he’d be thrown in jail if he ever came back have only pushed Honduras further toward the brink of conflict. Some of his supporters even call Zelaya his own worst enemy.

“His presence is considered illegal by the ever-stubborn interim government of Honduras, and will result in either a sudden and unlikely acquiescence, or even more radical obstinacy. It will also likely spur an unfortunate clash with Zelaya’s most ardent supporters, many whom are now ratcheting up street protests and low-grade destruction in violation of an extended curfew,” Michael Lisman recently wrote in the Guardian. “While the clock may be unfairly running out on his upended presidency, Zelaya has failed to convey an appreciation for either the sensitivity of the situation at hand or his own role in its development. Both are factors that may have worked against him and those trying to help his rightful return.”

So far though, none of the 192 member countries of the United Nations have recognized Micheletti as the bona fide president of Honduras after the U.N. General Assembly voted unanimously to condemn the coup. Likewise, the Organization of American States has suspended Honduras, invoking for the first time ever Article 21 of the Inter-American Democratic Charter, with OAS Secretary-General José Miguel Insulza declaring that “a military coup is a rape of democracy.”

The White House was also quick to condemn the events in Tegucigalpa, although afterward, it was not as quick to formally declare what happened a military coup d’état. In early September though, an increasingly impatient State Department formally terminated $30 million in non-humanitarian aid to Honduras and revoked the visas of specific members of the Micheletti government and its supporters.
(It has also suspended the issuance of new U.S. tourist visas for all Honduran citizens until further notice.) In addition, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton suggested for the first time that it might not recognize the country’s elections this fall.

Yet the conspiracy theories remain, as some observers insist that the U.S. ambassador in Tegucigalpa, Hugo Llorens, coordinated Zelaya’s removal from power along with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Shannon and John Negroponte, who works as an advisor to the secretary of state.

Asked if he believed that the United States was behind the coup, Reina said “maybe not the U.S. itself,” but he pointed an accusing finger at “some right-wing groups who supported the golpistas” within the Washington power structure.

In fact, shortly after the coup, a Honduran business group hired lobbyist Lanny Davis, who served as White House counsel for President Clinton, as well as Bennett Ratcliff, a public relations specialist, to represent it in Washington.

“There’s very little Lanny Davis won’t do for money. He has worked for dictators in the past,” Ken Silverstein, the Washington editor of Harper’s Magazine, told a recent panel sponsored by the DemocracyNow.org daily TV/radio news program. “In 1999, when he was at Patton Boggs — one of the big law firms here — he worked for a Kazakh front group, just as he’s working for a Honduran front group now.”

On the flip side, Zelaya has his own numerous U.S. supporters, among them leftist, grassroots groups such as the New York-based International Action Center, which is planning a three-day “Conference Against the Coup” in Tegucigalpa for early October.

Back home, Reina says Zelaya’s base of support stems from the 70 percent of Hondurans who are considered impoverished. In fact, the country’s annual per-capita GDP is around $1,840 — making it the fourth-poorest country in the Western Hemisphere after Haiti, Nicaragua, Guyana and Bolivia.

The wealthiest country in Latin America, by comparison, is oil-rich Venezuela, with a per-capita GDP of $11,388. Chávez is a model for Zelaya, who has made no secret of his admiration for the “Bolivarian revolution” and his contempt for “American imperialism” over the years.

Yet Reina says Chávez has nothing to do with the current crisis in Honduras. He insists the Venezuelan president is “just the scapegoat” — and that Micheletti, as president of Congress, heartily approved Tegucigalpa’s participation in both ALBA (a Venezuela-led economic bloc) and Petrocaribe (an oil preference program conceived by Chávez to help poorer Caribbean and Central American nations).

“The real reason behind the coup is that Zelaya upset the multinationals,” Reina declared. “The Honduran government buys liquidity from the banks, and he announced that he would not buy all the liquidity, but only half, in order to make more money available for borrowing. Before, if you wanted to buy a house in Honduras, you paid interest rates of 30 percent. With this measure, Zelaya lowered interest rates to 8 or 9 percent. Construction started to improve and we reached almost 8 percent GDP growth in the first two years of his administration.”

But Reina claimed the bankers were angry because the strategy reduced their profit margins and forced them to invest more money in attracting new clients.

“We raised more tax revenues by 40 percent just by making larger companies pay bigger taxes. In the past, those big companies were evading taxes,” he told The Diplomat. “The president also raised the minimum wage by 60 percent, from 3,500 lempira [around $185] per month to 5,000 lempira [about $265] per month. And the private sector didn’t like that.”

Reina also criticized the “intransigence of the golpistas” for causing immeasurable damage to the Honduran economy. “Foreign investment dropped by 18 percent in the three months since the coup, while international reserves have fallen from $2.5 billion to $2.1 billion. I don’t see the coup leaders really worrying about the poor people. The elite who supported the coup are the richest people in Honduras, and they don’t feel the pressure. But sooner or later, they’ll start feeling it when it affects their business.”

He added: “This de facto government has to understand the damage it’s doing to the country and the people. They’re not trying to find solutions. They’re just buying time.”

Meanwhile, Reina says he’s concerned about the coup’s spillover effect into other Central American countries — particularly El Salvador and Guatemala — where democracy is on shaky ground and powerful business interests clash with those of poor people.

“It’s very troublesome that some Guatemalan businessmen have visited Micheletti to congratulate him on what he did,” he said, warning that “Latin America cannot go back to the ’60s or ’70s. This is a matter of principle. If the international community permits this, it will open a Pandora’s box. Whenever you don’t like a president, you can just throw him out and call elections, and everything will be fine.”

On that score, Reina said that even if presidential elections scheduled for Nov. 29 somehow go ahead, he doubts the vote can be pulled off without violence. “One of the candidates, Carlos H. Reyes, was beaten by the police and had his arm broken. Another one, César Ham, was followed and detained. And the mayor of San Pedro Sula, Rodolfo Padilla, has been persecuted,” Reina said.

And with tensions still boiling over three months after Zelaya’s ouster, Reina warned that nothing will change without the president’s official restoration to power.

“The candidates have to understand that the international community will not recognize any of the winners of these elections,” he said. “Maybe a solution will be reached, but if we go to elections under current circumstances and the people are divided, it will be worse, much worse.”

Larry Luxner is news editor of The Washington Diplomat.
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 6:53 pm

http://weeksnotice.blogspot.com/2009/10 ... ument.html

For anyone who supported the ouster of Mel Zelaya, there are a variety of legal problems, but one is insurmountable. His forced exile was unconstitutional.

    ARTICULO 102.- Ningún hondureño podrá ser expatriado ni entregado por las autoridades a un Estado extranjero

    No Honduran can be expatriated or handed over by authorities to a foreign state.
That, of course, is exactly what the military did. Roberto Micheletti typically refers to this violation of the constitution as an "error." Oops, sorry about that.

But Senator Jim DeMint now claims he was told the following by the Honduran Supreme Court:

    DEMINT: They did it right. The only thing they know that is not specifically according to the Constitution was taking Zelaya...

    VAN SUSTEREN: Putting them on the plane and throwing them out of the country.

    DEMINT: They said the Constitution allows for exceptional situations, and they felt like he had presented a danger to people because of his ability to use Chavez's money to instill riots.
The coup government is therefore desperate enough to lie to a U.S. senator. There is no constitutional exception to the prohibition of exile.
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 7:12 pm

http://www.borev.net/2009/10/todays_lat ... out_t.html

Today's Latest Theories About This Honduran Coup Thingie

    1) Bloomberg: Zelaya's return was the result of a destabilization pact conspired by Chavez, Lula, and whatshisname, with the ears.

    2) NPR: Hmm there may be some elements of class divide that sparked the problems there.

    3) Ileana Ros-Lehtinen: "ppl...don't want Z back"
Confidential note to Ileana: "U r... rtrded"
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Postby John Schröder » Wed Oct 07, 2009 7:38 pm

http://www.democraticunderground.com/di ... =405x23810

rabs wrote:Radio Globo has been giving a lot of information this evening.

The next 48 hours will be critical with the arrival of the several foreign ministers, vice foreign ministers, ambassadors, EU, OAS, UNASUR, and UN reps.

The process has evolved from diplomatic in the first few weeks to massive civil resistance in the streets to a purely political stage beginning tomorrow. But whatever happens, a revolutionary social change has already taken place and Honduras will never be the same. Zelaya has named Cesar Ham, Barahona and Alegria to represent him in some of the negotations with the foreign delegations. Goriletti also to have three reps.

Beginning tomorrow, Globo will be aired on a network comprising radio stations in Central, South and North America to smash the media blackout the golpistas installed. The network will be via satellite from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

There was a strange announcement by the golpistas today that all public schools would be militarized and all students would be promoted to the next grade. Have no other information about why. The golpistas are organizing paid or forced "white shirt" rally tomorrow as the foreign delegations arrive.

Berta Oliva of the Honduran Human Rights ommittee said tonight that as of June 28,

16 people who were directly active in the resistance had been killed. Another man name Jairo was near death tonight from a bullet wound to the head.
3,200 people have been illegaly detained.
51 police and military checkpoints had been set up on highways around the country.
150 cases of people beaten were reported.
145 cases of people tortured (some used as human ash trays.)
3 cases of women raped.
280 cases of police/military savagery.
25 social leaders had reported death threats.
5 persons had been taken out of the country because of the threats.
11 persons, including 4 children, have sought political asylum in the Guatemalan Embassy due to the threats.
4 office and 14 residential searches without warrants.
4 attacks on buildings housing social organizations with bombs and bullets.
21 cases of outright censorship,
1 radio journalist killed, 26 others beaten, many have lost jobs when their media closed. Millions deprived of right to information.
92 people have been accused of terrorism.
42 people are classified as political prisoners.
38 people accused of sedition are on a hunger strike in a prison. Resistance lawyers and human rights workers tonight protecting them in jail.
There have NO reports of any soldier or police killed.


http://www.democraticunderground.com/di ... g_id=23826

rabs wrote:One of the unexpected side products of the golpe has been the explosion of anti-golpista, anti-goriletti and pro-Zelaya songs and music. The lyrics are witty, biting, and fun to listen to. Expect that there will be CDs of the music after this is all over.

I have discovered over the years that Latin American lefties always have the best music; Mercedes Sosa of Argentina comes to mind, Violetta Parra of Chile, Atahualpa Yupanqui of Uruguay, Cayetano Veloso and Chico Buarque de Holanda of Brazil, Silvio Rodriguez of Cuba, Quilapayun of Chile (the group that introduced "El Pueblo Unido Jamas Sera Vencido) and many, many other artists and groups.

At Radio Globo there is a young, (24-year-old) radio journalist who has become the sweetheart of the resistance because of her reporting and call-in show. Her name is Ariela Cacares and she too has been threatened. She will go far and probably be showered with awards for her work for the resistance.
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