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Eva Golinger wrote:Yesterday, the coup regime in Honduras led by Roberto Micheletti decreed a 45-day state of emergency, suspending all constitutional guarantees, including freedom of association, freedom of expression, freedom of press and privacy. The Brazilian Embassy in Teguicigalpa, where President Zelaya remains in a state of refuge, has been surrounded by repressive regime forces for days now and is under siege. Tear gas bombs and high frequency sounds are being directed towards the embassy in an effort to torture Zelaya out of the building. These violent actions violate the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and Consular Affairs, which accords embassies and consulates immunity and prohibits host countries from invading their territory or engaging in attacks against their personnel. On Saturday, September 26th, coup dictator Roberto Micheletti issued an "ultimatum" to Brazilian President Luis Ignacio "Lula" Da Silva, claiming that the coup regime would raid the Brazilian Embassy and strip it of its diplomatic immunity if the Brazilian government does not hand over President Zelaya to the regime. President Lula rejected the illegal demand.
Sunday's decree is a severe turn for the worse in Honduras, as a 45-day state of emergency will allow the coup regime forces to massacre and persecute Hondurans on a widespread scale without restraint by law. So far, since yesterday's decree, the death toll has risen above 100. Television and radio stations opposing the coup regime, such as Radio Globo, have been shut down and journalists have been detained and/or disappeared. The police and military under the coup regime's control are raiding poor communities seeking out supporters of President Zelaya and disappearing them. On Sunday, an Organization of American States (OAS) delegation that was heading into Honduras to attempt negotiations with the coup regime was prohibited from entry and turned back at the airport. Borders have been sealed.
This is an urgent call to activate all political and social emergency networks to organize support for the Honduran people and to further pressure the Obama Administration to withdraw immediately all its economic and military support to Honduras. Just last week, the Pentagon invited the Honduran military - under the control of the coup regime - to continue participating in training exercises with the United States. This is outrageous considering the Honduran military is principally responsible for the widespread human rights abuses taking place in the country since the coup was executed on June 28th. Furthermore, the State Department continues to provide USAID and other funding to NGOs and political parties backing the coup. All aid should be suspended and diplomatic relations and commercial ties should be immediately cut in order to suffocate the regime out of power. The Obama Administration's ambiguity and hesitation on Honduras has allowed for a viciously violent and repressive coup regime to dig its power deeper and has resulted in the deaths and injuries of hundreds of Hondurans. Those abuses and crimes are in large part a result of Washington's failure to cease its support for the brutal coup dictatorship.
Monday morning update: Military soldiers entered the studios of Radio Globo in Tegucigalpa this morning by force and took it off the air. Our correspondents throughout Honduras confirm that its signals are silenced today.
Our friend Latuff, the political cartoonist in Brazil, was listening at 5:27 a.m. Tegucigalpa time this morning and recorded the final moments on the air:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZI2qqw80Mf4
The text says, in Portuguese and Spanish: "Exact moment in which Radio Globo of Honduras was taken off the air by coup soldiers, Monday, September 28 of 2009."
9:14 a.m. Tegucigalpa (11:14 a.m. ET): Note that the "gaceta oficial" above has contradicting information about when it takes effect. On the one hand it says "immediately upon publication" and on the other hand it says the text "will be sent to the Congress to be made law." The Honduran Congress has taken no such action. But the coup soldiers went ahead and busted down the doors at Radio Globo anyway. These monsters don't even respect their own make-believe rules and laws.
Juan Almendarez wrote:I, Juan Angel Almendarez Bonilla, Honduran doctor, member of the Medical Association of Honduras, registration number No 430, Executive Director of the Center for Prevention, Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture Victims and their Families (CPTRT) duly authorized by the person concerned and their families, am bound for ethical reasons and respect for human rights to submit the following testimony to both national and international human rights organizations and world public opinion, regarding the violence and torture of the subject Agustina Flores Lopez, a teacher of fifty years specialising in Educational Management.
On 24 September at 6:30 pm, I was called by Berta Ceres, leader of the Lenca indigenous organization COPINH, sister of Agustina and the President of COFADEH, Berta Oliva, to urgently assess the condition of health of Agustina, who is incarcerated at the Criminal Investigation Directorate (DGIC) in Comayagla.
We visited with the team and Berta Ceres of COFADEH at the DGIC on 24 September 2009 at 7 PM ET close to the hour of curfew. The authorities in control at that time allowed us to speak with and review the teacher.
By her own account Agustina Flores Lopez was taken prisoner by eight policewomen on Tuesday 22 September between 6.00 and 6:30 am, while walking in the area near the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa.
“While one twisted my arms behind my back the other hit me on the face, squeezed my neck and assaulted meI had already been handcuffed– and I recognised one of them with the surname Garcia. During the beating they shouted at me” YOU ARE THE DOGS OF RESISTANCE, ITS GOOD THAT YOU SHOULD BE FUCKED UP.
“First, they took me to Manchen and the patrol was carrying six members of the resistance who had been beaten up. Then I was taken to the Chochi Sosa Stadium where at first there were 11 detainees; but later I managed to see about thirty members of the resistance who had been beaten and wounded.
Then I was moved on to the CORE VII detention center. They took my cell phone and to date it has not been returned.
A clinical description of Agustina shows the following features:
Profound sadness, facial deformities and pain afflicting various parts of the body: face, neck, back, arms and legs by the multiple traumas caused by police. Occasional dizziness and vertigo with frequent loss of balance. Does not remember whether she lost consciousness; sometimes are confused and sleepy.
Has a history of suffering Primary Sjogren’s syndrome, with dryness of ocular and oral mucous membranes and autoimmune problems that make her susceptible to severe infections, especially under extremely unsanitary conditions in prisons. She is under treatment for hypothyroidism, with two hundred micrograms of levothyroxine. During her capture the taking of levothyroxine tablets was suspended, putting her life in extreme danger. This medication should be adjusted periodically under strict medical supervision because of the extreme stress and the physical and psychological torture under which teacher Lez Flores has been under.
Another of her major problems is hypertension. At the time of examination she had a reading of 220/100 mmHg, which exceeds the value for predisposition to cerebral vascular haemorrhage, due to the traumatic situation in which she lives deprived of liberty.
Among other findings:
Bruises from blows, with bruises below her lower lip and right labial region with inflammatory edema of the right half of lower lip, contusion area on the labial mucosa on the same side and right molar area ecchymosis of approximately 4 cm in an almost rectangular form.
Pain in the antero lateral left neck with blunt injuries and severe pain and spasms of the sternocleidomastoid muscle. Neck movements associated with paresthesia (tingling) in both bilateral upper limbs.
Severe pain that follows the anterior and lateral thigh.
Severe pain in the shoulder region, upper trapezius area and the back lumbar region of the spine and pain adjacent to both sides of the traumatic spinal injuries she received during capture.
Blunt injuries and muscular aches on the internal lateral left forearm.
Multiple injuries in blunt multiple trauma axillary, anterior right inner arm.
Bruises on the left elbow region and posterior aspect of left arm and ecchymotic circular lesions in the lower third of the inside of her left arm.
Based on the above I consider that Agustina Flores Lopez has high risk to her health as result of her imprisonment and should be transferred immediately to a hospital and placed under medical supervision for physical and psychological politraumatizatiwbr>n; to be evaluated by specialists in Neurology, Endocrinology, Cardiology, Rehabilitation and Physical Therapy, and provided counselling and under other conditions by trained personnel in torture CPTRT. In a beautiful gesture Agustina told me that one of her major concerns is not fulfilling her duties as a tutor to my grandchildren. Her eyes filled with tears when she stated that one of the most horrible experiences in her life has been to share the suffering and inhuman and degrading treatment suffered by detainees in Honduras
Based on the above we demand the immediate release of Agustina Flores Lopez; in addition to which, we have a moral obligation to demand freedom for each and all political prisoners in Honduras following the military coup.
According to information provided by the Association for Freedom of Political Prisoners most of these people are deprived of their liberty in the “Marco Aurelio Soto” National Penitentiary and accused of crimes and sedition:
1. SANTOS GARCIA REYNARD MONCADA (Paradise)
2. ORLANDO GARCIA JOE MONCADA (Paradise)
3. MARIA GARCIA ANTOLINA HERNANDES (Paradise)
4. JOAQUIN GARCIA OSCAR MONCADA (Paradise)
5. ASUZENA GLADYS LAGOS (Paradise)
6. VICTOR RAMOS ADOLFO IZAGUIRRE (18) (Paradise)
7. MARIO ENRIQUE MOLINA DGIC (Tegucigalpa)
8. PORTA ANTONIO ALVAREZ (SPANISH)
9. MILTON MARTINEZ MATTHEW RYE (Tegucigalpa)
10. WALTER JOEL RODRIGUEZ ANDEAN (Tegucigalpa)
Two youths left with interim measures with the false charge of Aggravated Robbery:
KOREA Ibraham VICTOR MARTINEZ
ARIEL FRANKLIN OLIVE BAQUEDANO
Tegucigalpa September 25, 2009
Honduran government hires PR shop
The de facto government of Honduras that ousted President Manuel Zelaya has hired a well-known public relations firm to bolster its image in Washington.
According to Justice Department documents, the Honduran government signed Chlopak, Leonard, Schechter & Associates to a four-month contract worth more than $290,000. Filed on Sept. 18 with Justice by the public relations firm, the documents say the company will “advance the level of communication, awareness and media/policy maker attention about the political situation in Honduras.”
The agreement is a first for the interim government since their takeover in late June from Zelaya and comes after business leaders in Honduras hired lobbying firms this summer to make the case for the ousted president.
The contract comes as the crisis in the Central American country has flared up again. Zelaya, who was exiled to Costa Rica by the Honduran military, has slipped back into the country to try to reclaim his position as president. He has taken shelter with family members in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, threatened with arrest if he leaves its grounds.
Zelaya was forced into exile after the opposition alleged he wanted to remove term limits on the presidency and stay in power past the country’s November elections. Zelaya has denied those charges and instead has said he should be reinstated as president.
Many countries, including the United States, and international organizations have condemned the exile of Zelaya and said he should be returned to power. The U.S. government has increasingly put pressure on the de facto Honduran government to meet those demands by suspending some foreign aid and canceling American visas for many of the leaders behind Zelaya’s ouster.
As part of the contract with Chlopak, the firm will reach out to Capitol Hill aides to improve the image of the de facto government. They will also reach out to opinion leaders and media outlets.
At least nine people at the firm will represent the Hondurans, according to registrations on file with Justice. Several are familiar with Congress and the political world, such as Mike Buttry, once chief of staff to former Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.), and Sharon Castillo, a spokeswoman for President George W. Bush’s 2004 reelection campaign.
Chlopak’s entry into the Honduran crisis is not the first among Washington advocates. Business leaders in Honduras have hired a variety of firms, such as Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe and Vision Americas, to lobby in support of the de facto government and say the ouster of Zelaya was just.
Honduran Foreign Minister Patricia Rodas denounced that two Israeli companies supplied putschists with the toxic gases thrown inside the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa, where President Manuel Zelaya is staying.
"We have received information that the chemicals and arms have been supplied by Alfacom and Intercom companies, owned by Israeli Yehuda Leitner," Rodas said in press conference in thit city.
After putschists soldiers threw gases inside the embassy, nearly 80 people have had headaches, vomiting, diarrhoeas, and nose bleeding over the last hours.
Dr. Mauricio Castellano stated that air samples taken in the embassy's surroundings had high concentrations of hydrogen cyanide, which obstructs breathing when it gets in contact with iron levels in the blood.
Rodas, who is attending the 64th General Assembly of the United Nations, called for the international community to send a medical mission to her country to examine those poisoned.
Wendy Elizabeth Avila, another victim of the regime
Translation and additional detail from María Soledad Cervantes.
Yesterday [Friday, Sept. 25] The National Resistance Front against the Coup in Honduras denounced the death of a university student provoked by the tear gas thrown by the police during the last incidents of repression occurred in the surroundings of the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa last Friday. "She was Wendy Elizabeth Avila and she died from a bronchospastic crisis caused by poisonous gases," her husband, Edwin Robelo, stated. Robelo said Wendy Elizabeth Avila studied Law and "she was a quite cheerful woman with so much social conscience, that's why no one would be able to stop her fighting for just causes." "We shared one year and a half as spouses, today I have lost her but her spirit is still here with us," he said, while receiving the condolences of dozens of people's resistance members congregated at the base of the Union of Workers of the Beverage Industry and Similar Activities in Tegucigalpa, where her wake was taking place. She suffered from asthma, unfortunatley didn't resist gasses in such amounts. She was admitted in the state Hospital-School where she had a relape and expired Saturday," added the widower. Avila's death was denounced by priest Andres Tamayo, a resistance member who is accompanying President Manuel Zelaya within the Brazilian embassy and was one of the first in go out the premises last Friday to denounce the harassing they were undergoing through tear gas sprayed and introduced by police and Armed forces into the diplomatic legation. Since Zelaya's surprise arrival in Tegucigalpa Monday last week, Honduran police has confirmed two casualties, one death in an incident not yet sufficiently clarified, and another one in a police checkpoint in the San Pedro Sula neighborhood.
Day 92, September 27 2009 from Oscar (my translation)
Every time we bury a martyr, something within us dies; a beautiful piece of all of us is lost forever. Wendy Ávila was a law student at the Universidad Tecnológica of Honduras. At some point we have glanced at each other in the cold hallway of the department, we've smiled at each other to escape from the fascist commentaries of the rest of the student body who live enclosed in their bubble without understanding that the world extends far beyond the campus gardens; certainly, like many others, she kept silent, facing the hostility of the environment that condemns us to feel like a minority when we are not. But she was always clear about her stance because she was sure that she was fighting for a better country.
She was 24 years old and together with her partner she threw herself fully into the resistance from the first day of this exhausting nightmare. When I met her she was getting her migratory papers to go to Ocotal, Nicaragua, when Mel Zelaya called his followers there in mid-July. They came, tired and excited, having left their motorcycle many kilometers behind and walked for many hours, boldly arriving to the border at Las Manos. "We came here because we are ready to give everything for the return of democracy," she told me with a firm voice, "we can't allow them to take away the little that we have managed to achieve in Honduras." Then she went off, hand in hand with her husband, and crossed the border.
Today I saw her again. Her dead body on the podium of the auditorium of the STIBYS hall looked so different from that young woman, full of life, who I recorded with my camera weeks earlier. Her death was caused by respiratory complications from the teargas attack in last Tuesday's violent eviction. Her martyrdom--at the same time that it reminds me that the people who are dying are people like me--adds to the long list of men and women victims of the fascist savagery of the Micheletti ungovernment.
Last night using the Emergency Broadcast System the ungovernment gave a 10-day ultimatum to Brazil to "clarify" the migratory status of Manuel Zelaya. Their words were threatening and seemed to be more of a warning for Zelaya than for Lula da Silva. The foreign ministry knows that Brazil cannot respond to this ultimatum; this government is not recognized by one single country on the continent and to respond to the warning would consist of a tacit recognition of its legitimacy. But they are creating the national conditions for the coup-government-controlled media conceal a coming attack on the diplomatic headquarters with the pretext that, not having responded to said ultimatum, the diplomatic status of the building has disappeared.
Along the same lines, the executive yesterday approved a decree, further tightening the restrictions on the Honduran people. Freedoms of movement, association, strikes, shutdowns, and protests have always been repressed, and now they plan to find a legal framework permitting them to the regime to jail those who go against the illegal decree. But the most sensitive and dangerous element is in the possible closure of the media voices of the resistance: Radio Globo and Canal 36. These two stations have endured threats and attacks for three months now. Yesterday afternoon, the nephew of Alejandro Villatoro, owner of Radio Globo, was assassinated by hitmen. The police claim the death was merely a common crime, not mentioning that this has been converted in another wing of the regime.
What is the connection between these two actions, the ultimatum and the nationwide gag order? Shutting down the media stations that up to now have served to link together the different actions of the resistance–especially necessary now that these have spread far and wide throughout the capital city–will permit the de facto regime the necessary space to prevent Manuel Zelaya from communicating with his people, making him a prisoner inside the diplomatic headquarters and in that way decapitating the resistance. On the other hand, this could allow them to violently enter the diplomatic headquarters without having to worry about an immediate response from the different centers of resistance throughout the country.
But the dictatorship and their expensive Israeli advisers are once again making the mistake of underestimating the resistance. Although Manuel Zelaya's captivity in the Brazilian embassy is currently the epicenter of the country's political crisis, it is a lie that taking him out of the picture (through imprisonment or death) will succeed in demobilizing the people. Mel Zelaya has called for a national strike and for people to mobilize throughout the country and come to the capital city; doubtless his call will echo throughout the Resistance although doubtless the repression will try to impede these actions. But one thing should be clear: the only reason that the resistance has stuck to a strategy of non-violence is because Zelaya has called for that. Removing him from the political scene will be the spark that the people needs to set every corner of this country on fire.
The leadership is tired and don't dare to take the next step in the Honduran fight. The conditions are there, with or without the leadership, with or without Manuel Zelaya, for the popular insurrection to begin, and widespread repression by the regime will be a result, just as it is the cause. In this war, each street will be converted into a trench to defend. "We have the arms," said an older woman today at the assembly, facing the body of Wendy Ávila, "Let us use them to defend ourselves." If Manuel Zelaya disappears, no one will have to ask permission.
¡NO PASARÁN!
Day 93, September 28 2009 from Oscar (translation by Camille Collins Lovell)
This morning at dawn our houses were silent. The silence of our favorite radio station that has been shut-down. Hearing about how the military broke down the gates of Radio Globo in order to cut transmission by the ¨chief of chiefs¨ was like watching a loved one die. We left the radio on with the dead static in hopes that we would again hear the voices of the announcers who after 90 days are part of us, but we are sure that time will pass before we hear their voices again.
We know that for the last 3 months the regime has had the intention of closing down those media channels that have played an important part in linking together the resistance since the coup on June 28th. Multiple attempts were perpetrated by the bloodthirsty golpistas, but the admirable skill, cleverness and bravery of these communicators allowed them to overcome terror and to carry on.
So now, if it was always their intention, what makes this an important moment to carry out the actions? The pro-coup communication media is now denouncing the repression, the closure of media channels, and the illegal presidential decree, and they see the new actions of the regime as clear evidence that something is changing in the regime´s inner circle.
In the Tribuna news paper, in the political gossip section we read: "Three months after Zelaya´s overthrown Honduras is in a real pandemonium... speculation and isolation are the order of the day. And if that weren´t enough even the public TV is making disconcerting announcements... They have ordered a new female anchor to say that if by January 27th a new president has not been elected then Micheletti will stay for two more years"
This could represent a rupture inside the dominant class that carried out the coup, and who see now that the beast they unleashed is out of control. Some analysts even speak of the interest of a certain sector of the Oligarchy in convening and controlling a national constitutional assembly as a way out of the crisis. But for that they would need to demobilize us and that they could only achieve by force.
Closing Radio Globo is only the first step in an operation that seems to be more complex. Surely TV channel 36, radio Uno, Radio Progreso, El Libertador newspaper, Channel 11, El Tiempo newspaper, Radio Gualcho, the Lenca radios in the western part of the country, the Garífuna radios on the coast, and any communication media that could be seen as dangerous to the dictatorship and its project of domination. Later they will try to silence the electronic media, and wouldn´t discard the possibility that they cut off our internet and cellular telephones as a last resort.
Definitely the repression will increase. The marches convened for today, as well as the general strike will be answered with violence and we should prepare ourselves for the murder of more of our companions. The forced eviction of resistance members who have been occupying the offices of INA (National Agrarian Institute) is imminent and probably the aggression at the Brazilian Embassy will also increase. These actions will find an immediate response in the barrios and neighborhoods which will again burn with rebellion.
The government has let it be known that it expects combat against some alleged Venezuelan special that have entered the country seeking to join the ¨final offensive¨ of the resistance sometime this week. For them, all the people in the resistance are special Venezuelan troops since they continue to deny our nationality. That could be their justification for using military force against the population, unleashing terror of chilling levels.
The dictatorship demands of us that we rethink our strategy, that we be creative and brave. The end of the regime is near. Hitting savagely is the last alternative left to the gorillas.
¡NO PASARÁN!
3:08 p.m.: Steve Benen at Washington Monthly makes note of another layer of the coup onion that seems to have gone silent today: US Congressional Republicans:
WHERE'S THE CONGRESSIONAL COUP CAUCUS NOW?.... In July, a variety of conservative Republican lawmakers were outraged by the official U.S. government opposition to the overthrow of the democratically elected government in Honduras. Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) officially endorsed the military-backed coup, and a variety of House Republicans organized a "congressional coup caucus" in support of the new, unelected government.
Indeed!
Oddly enough, we're not hearing much from this GOP crowd anymore. I wonder why that is...
When DeMint endorsed the coup, her heralded those responsible for ousting Zelaya as "guarantee[ing] freedom." House Committee on Foreign Affairs Ranking Member Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) hosted a private meeting for her Republican colleagues to "discuss how the U.S. can now work to support the democratic institutions and rule of law in Honduras."
All of a sudden, these GOP lawmakers don't seem to be bashing the Obama administration's position anymore. Interesting.
4:46 p.m.: Radio Globo is now broadcasting over the Internet from a clandestine location, at this link (click "listen").
There are also reports that the coup regime, unable to sell this 45-day suspension of the Constitution to the National Congress, is talking about withdrawing the decree. However, unless that includes returning the equipment to Radio Globo and Channel 36, and releasing political prisoners, any reporter who reports it as such would be a fool. Coup dictator Micheletti reportedly asks "forgiveness" for having executed the decree. No se olvide, ni perdón.
5:44 p.m.: Micheletti really seems to be losing it, mentally speaking. Today he handed out another ultimatum, this time to the governments of Spain, Argentina, Venezuela and Mexico (Mexico?!!):
"In the case of those countries that unilaterally decided to break diplomatic relations with Honduras... the situation of Argentina, Spain, Mexico and Venezuela, I'll let them know that the government will not receive diplomatic agents from those countries."
He gave them "ten days" to obey. I'm sure they're quaking in their shoes, crying and contemplating suicide because that silly little petty tyrant Micheletti threatened them. Not.
6:25 p.m.: Radio Globo - via its Internet broadcast - is calling on its listeners to go to its seized studios on Bulevar Morazan tomorrow (Tuesday) morning at 8 a.m.
11:05 p.m.: Regarding the aforementioned threats - already having the attention of the US Secret Service... and Blogspot, as well - on the Gringa blog cheering political assassination and magnicide... They were (as we predicted they would be) removed late tonight, but reflecting the cowardice of the person who approved them for posting, no explanation nor denouncement was offered. It's that those people really believe in those things. You just can't get any lower than that.
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