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Honduras faces isolation after president remains exiled

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Published Date: 05 July 2009

HONDURAS' refusal to restore ousted president Manuel Zelaya, despite an appeal by the top envoy for the Americas, has put the impoverished nation on a collision course with the world community that could lead to its isolation.
Honduras said it would no longer recognise the Organisation of American States charter, claiming the diplomatic body attempted to impose "unilateral and indignant resolutions" on the new government, which took power a week ago in a military-backed co
up and forced Zelaya into exile.

OAS chief Jose Miguel Insulza had demanded Zelaya be restored to office and yesterday the organisation was to discuss suspending the Central American nation's membership. But interim Honduras president Roberto Micheletti has said "the OAS is a political organisation, not a court, and it can't judge us".

The move means Honduras, one of the poorest countries in the Americas, will leave the OAS and will not face sanctions by the organisation, though it would not prevent other groups and countries from suspending aid and loans.

Several nations are set to shun Micheletti. Neighbouring countries have imposed trade blockades, the United States has halted joint military operations and European Union ambassadors have abandoned the Honduran capital. The World Bank has suspended $200 million (£123m) in financing, and the Inter-American Development Bank has put $450m on hold.

Insulza, who was in Tegulcigalpa, met the country's Supreme Court, attorney general and other political figures. "We wanted to ask that this situation be reversed," he said afterwards. "Unfortunately, there appears to be no willingness to do this."

The Supreme Court, which had authorised the coup, said it would not agree to reinstate the toppled leftist leader.

Micheletti's interim government has blamed Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez for stoking the crisis. "If Honduras is out of the OAS, well, we will be isolated ... little by little we will regain the confidence of other nations," said assistant foreign minister Martha Lorena Alvarado. "Zelaya's return is not negotiable."

Insulza was given documents showing that charges are pending or have been brought against Zelaya. The OAS diplomat also met the two main candidates in Honduras' 29 November elections, as well the Popular Block umbrella group of farm, labour and student groups that largely supports Zelaya.

But Insulza said he would not see Micheletti, whom Congress named president, to avoid legitimising the government.

Zelaya, meanwhile, was travelling in Central America and planned to return to Honduras today, according to Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega. But officials have vowed to arrest the ousted leader on his return.

The US embassy last week expressed "deep concern" over restrictions imposed by the new government, including a curfew and "reports of intimidation and censorship against individuals and media outlets."





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  • Last Updated: 04 July 2009 9:59 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
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05/07/2009 01:37:29
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woodchopper,

Leeper, USA 05/07/2009 01:54:43
Zelaya was going to go against their constitution and his party, the people and the supreme court told him that it was wrong. He was going to force his will and the army said no. Think in this case Zelaya got what he deserved and other countries should let if drop and The Yak connection, should have your propoganda minister give you better stupid comments.
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05/07/2009 02:59:41
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Mashimaro,

China 05/07/2009 04:42:38
Ah yeah... the isolation will last for a while then it will be business as usual, regime change thanks to the CIA.
5

Bolivarian Scot,

London 05/07/2009 10:11:24
The coup increasingly looks like a huge tactical and strategic blunder by those conservative elements within Honduras who arrested and exiled Manuel Zelaya merely because he sought to have a referendum about a referendum about possibly changing the constitution.

There is no guarantee that such a referendum would have succeeded, given the conservatives' power and wealth, which enables them to fund high-profile campaigns against progressive change (eg as in Venezuela in 2007 when Chavez suffered his one and only electoral reverse).

The Hondurans have some reason to feel aggrieved with Mr Zelaya, who moved from being centre-right when first elected to a supporter of Hugo Chavez. He "saw the light" and realised that, in Honduras as in many so-called democratic countries, the rules tend to favour the wealthy elites, therefore he decided to do something about it, which was his personal undoing.

Having said that, Zelaya still seems to have a good hardcore level of domestic support despite his political "Damascene conversion". US media reports that his demonstrating supporters numbered just 150 are clearly inaccurate:-

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8134699.stm

Given the level of international pressure, and Honduras's weak economy, some kind of climbdown seems inevitable. Perhaps the easiest solution, from the conservative viewpoint, would be restoration of Zelaya to the presidency for the remainder of his term, which is mere months. That would buy them time to build up a head of steam and spread black propaganda about reform efforts.
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05/07/2009 10:48:02
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05/07/2009 16:25:52
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Wally,

by The Rivers Of babylon (USA) 05/07/2009 19:23:12
there are some like Woodchopper in #2 who say that the army's coup was OK because the president was outside the law. However as bolivarian said in #5 all the president wanted to do was poll the people to ask if he should proceed on a certain change in the Honduran constitution. Their constitution has provisions in it for change. They've changed their constitution many times.

Every president of the US breaks the US constitution when he sends troops to war. because per the US constitution for the US to wage war the US Congress must declare a war before fighting a war. Should the US Army stage a coup against President Obama for waging wars unless the US Congress officially declares a war?
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05/07/2009 22:15:38
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Wally,

By The Rivers of Babylon (USA) 05/07/2009 23:04:03
Loser:

For many people there are many times when presidents have sent people to war with no action at all by congress. In the past it was interpreted that there must be a formal declaration of war before actually warring. we don't do that any more. so at a minimum the constitutions are interpreted differently by different people. as a general rule it is not good for the army to arrest and exile elected leaders.

If every time somebody thought the constitution was violated a group of army officers staged a coup, then there'd be coups all over the world all the time.

so when you listen to brainwashed neo-con type americans tell you there was no coup in honduras keep this in mind.

but you are correct FH in that legislation does exist to enable military action as you said. it is a question of legal interpretation.
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06/07/2009 06:00:25
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06/07/2009 06:05:33
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07/07/2009 15:39:25
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Smooth Operator,

07/07/2009 15:53:51
THis man should be reinstated forthwith.
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14/07/2009 22:08:40
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