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Zelaya Crosses Border And Returns To Honduras As Police, Supporters Clash

MORGAN LEE   07/24/09 11:41 PM ET   AP

Nicaragua Honduras Coup

EL PARAISO, Honduras — Ousted President Manuel Zelaya took a symbolic step into his homeland Friday, vowing to reclaim his post a month after soldiers flew him into exile.

But he stayed less than 30 minutes before returning to Nicaragua, saying the risk of bloodshed was too great. He said he would give talks with the coup-installed government another try.

"I am not afraid but I'm not crazy either," Zelaya told the Venezuela-based television network Telesur. "There could be violence and I don't want to be the cause."

Shortly before Zelaya's crossing, his supporters clashed with soldiers and police nearby after the government ordered everyone off the streets along the 600-mile (1,000-kilometer) border with Nicaragua in a noon-to-dawn curfew. Police said one demonstrator was slightly injured.

Wearing his trademark white cowboy hat, Zelaya walked up to a sign reading "Welcome to Honduras" and smiled to cheering supporters at the remote mountain pass flanked by banana trees.

He stopped a few steps into Honduran territory, speaking to nearby military officials on his mobile phone.

"I've spoken to the colonel and he told me I could not cross the border," Zelaya said. "I told him I could cross."

But he soon went back to Nicaragua and said he was ready to return to the negotiating table.

"The best thing is to reach an understanding that respects the will of the people," Zelaya said.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called Zelaya's trip "reckless." International leaders had urged Zelaya not to go home without an agreement out of fear it would lead to bloodshed. Zelaya had said he had no choice after U.S.-backed talks with his ousters failed to reinstate him.

The interim government has insisted it will arrest Zelaya once he returns, ignoring threats of sanctions from nations worldwide if he is not reinstated. Soldiers formed a human chain near the border crossing Friday but did not move to approach Zelaya.

Interim President Roberto Micheletti called Zelaya's excursion into Honduras "an irresponsible act, ill-conceived and silly."

In a statement, the interim government said it too still believes in negotiations. Its deputy foreign minister, Marta Alvarado, accused Zelaya of seeking "subversion and a bloodbath."

Interim Deputy Security Minister Mario Perdomo told The Associated Press that authorities didn't bother to arrest Zeyala because he barely entered Honduras.

"Zelaya made a show of entering Honduras, he put one foot in, and left," Perdomo said. "And he did this in a dead zone of the frontier, which we tolerated."

Zelaya said his reinstatement is necessary to preserve democracy and prevent coups, not only in Honduras but across a region that has seen many in its turbulent political history.

"The people of Latin America and the world have been losing their rights," Zelaya said.

Thousands of Zelaya opponents demonstrated in San Pedro Sula, the country's second-largest city.

An equal number of supporters flocked to the border to support Zelaya's return, and soldiers manned checkpoints on highways leading to the border area to prevent them from getting to El Paraiso. Some made their way on foot after bus drivers refused to risk the trip.

The government said the border curfew was intended to preserve the peace, but by late afternoon authorities did not appear to be enforcing it.

All governments in the Western Hemisphere have condemned the coup, in which soldiers acting on orders from Congress and the Supreme Court arrested Zelaya and flew him into exile. Nations on both sides of the political spectrum say Zelaya's return to power is crucial to the region's stability.

But Washington and the Organization of American States have asked Zelaya to be patient and not return on his own, fearing it would plunge the country into chaos.

"President Zelaya's effort to reach the border is reckless," Clinton said in Washington.

She said it would not help restore democratic and constitutional order in Honduras.

An initial attempt to fly home on July 5 was frustrated when officials blocked the runway of the Honduran capital's airport.

Honduras' Supreme Court ordered Zelaya's arrest before the coup because he ignored court orders to drop plans for a referendum on whether to form a constitutional assembly. The military decided to send Zelaya into exile instead.

The negotiations stalled after neither side accepted a proposal from Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, the chief mediator. Arias called for Zelaya's reinstatement, amnesty for the coup leaders and early elections.

___

Associated Press writers contributing to this report included Juan Carlos Llorca in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and Matthew Lee in Washington.

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EL PARAISO, Honduras — Ousted President Manuel Zelaya took a symbolic step into his homeland Friday, vowing to reclaim his post a month after soldiers flew him into exile. But he stayed less th...
EL PARAISO, Honduras — Ousted President Manuel Zelaya took a symbolic step into his homeland Friday, vowing to reclaim his post a month after soldiers flew him into exile. But he stayed less th...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
n4m
07:36 PM on 07/28/2009
Michelletti also once proposed to lengthen the president's term of office.
Doesn't that also make him ineligible to be the Honduran president?

The url for the quote below is,. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Honduran_constitutional_crisis

"President of the Congress, Micheletti, claimed that article 374 of the constitution states that no referendum can be used to alter the entrenched articles in the constitution that are specified in article 384.[40] He went on to insist that that even to announce such a referendum privately is a crime (" . . . porque eso, incluso, anunciarlo privadamente es un delito.") Micheletti was part of a group of members of Congress who tried to convene the National Congress in 1985 as a National Constituyent Assembly in order to prolong the term of president Roberto Suazo Cordova. That attempt ended when Efrain Bu Giron, President of the National Congress, called Walter Lopez Reyes, the head of the armed forces."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ergon
Man From Atlan
01:51 PM on 07/25/2009
This is the history of United Fruit, whom Chiquita and Dole clearly seek to copy.
In 1954 the CIA sponsored a coup against the elected government of Arbenz in Guatemala, and had acted on its behalf in severeal other Latin American countries.
http://www.mayaparadise.com/ufc1e.htm
And going back all the way to 1910, Samuel Zemurray of Standard Fruit overthrew the government of Honduras for not giving him a favourable lease: http://www.unitedfruit.org/chron.htm

Some here seem to want the South American nations to remain 'b, forever.anana republics', and their peoples, to be peons
03:50 PM on 07/25/2009
Bravo! This website is considered “leftist” by centrist Democrats and virtually every Republican, yet the political views of some readers would easily pass muster at many a rightwing gathering. I have been accused of being “conspiratorial” by discussing the role of the CIA and Military Intelligence in both Iran’s “color revolution” and the coup d’etat in Honduras, although the CIA’s despicable conduct in Latin America and the Middle East are well-known and indisputable. Secretary of State Clinton, who yesterday lectured President Zelaya on the “recklessness” of his attempt to reenter his own country, proved by her words that the so-called negotiations in Costa Rica are merely a stalling tactic to allow the Honduran military and its puppet government to consolidate power.
01:13 PM on 07/25/2009
President del golpe Roberto Micheletti can't set foot in most countries. He can't even go to Miami.
11:28 AM on 07/26/2009
You're wrong watch A mano limpia (41) Miami. They have a three part interview with Roberto Micheletti.
Don't believe all you hear. RESEARCH.
12:48 PM on 07/25/2009
who cares about this guy? He palled around with Chavez and Castro, and both pal around with Ahmadinejad. He wasn't even popular nor that democratic at all. Can't Latin America just elect leaders who are friendly to the US? No I don't care if "the corporations benefit" because more people benefit from capitalism than Latin American communism
01:11 PM on 07/26/2009
Don't you rightwingers have your own websites to argue your b.s. points on? What Latin American country would want to be friendly to the US after being exploited for over a century and creating cash crop economies where the average worker makes pennies on the dollar for every banana, pineapple, and every ounce of cocaine picked, Just ask Oliver North, he knows quite well how exporting cocaine to the US after using cheap Latin American farm workers will give you huge profits for all your guerilla-sponsoring exploits. Benefit from capitalism my a**. I don't support the communists either, but to say the regular people in economically exploited nations can benefit from capitalism when the deck is stacked against them is absurd. Capitalism and communism are both failures. Everything in moderation. Laizze faire capitalism hasn't existed for over a century. A capitalist economy with a socialist welfare system is the only sustainable development for future economies. You have to impose a poverty floor. The market doesn't address morality. FDR proved it. If you don't believe me, try getting rid of Medicare and Social Security.
10:32 AM on 07/25/2009
This man is a clown. Every news agency considered yesterday's stunt as a political show or 'circus' as they put it. In no way had he ever have intentions of going into Honduras. He just wanted international attention cause the world is finally learning the truth about his crimes and the meddling Venezuela has had in Honduran affairs. Imagine this he travels everywhere in a Venezuelan jet accompanied always by Venezuelan advisor. Doesn't take a genius to know who is behind this.

The army had instructions to let him in. The top general said of course Zelaya can enter Honduras, he is in fact still a Honduran citizen. The only problem was that the police was waiting for his arrest. That is why he didn't cross. That coward. So all that show, all those news correspondents he took with him was just to set a left foot in? Was he doing the hokey pokey? LOL But what's sad is he calls for insurrection and disobedience almost wanting there to be bloodshed. Just so he can condemn the rightful government that is in place right now.

The truth is Zeleya is worth more to Chavez dead that alive now. At least if he was dead he could make a martyr of him.
12:57 PM on 07/25/2009
Seconded, very well stated, Thank you.
04:42 PM on 07/25/2009
Marbella, can you prove you have family there or back up any claims you just made? Cause I don't believe a word you just wrote.
04:48 PM on 07/25/2009
Excellent point. If people don't get it after reading Zatara's opinion nothing will do.
09:59 AM on 07/25/2009
Wake Up and Smell the Coffee as my beautiful aunt says all the ones that love Democracy….what is happening at Honduras is just the defense of the Honduran Constitution and its Democracy!!! If you still don’t get it just a quick tip: Hugo CHAVEZ equals Manuel Zelaya (MEL)…do you get it…..just remember that Hugo Chavez is an enemy of North America (USA)...…..
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08:35 AM on 07/25/2009
Another miss opportunity. President Zelaya was in Honduran territory and was not arrested. It only shows that the puppet Micheletti is a coward. After repeated times saying that if Zelaya returns to his Country, then he would be arrested. Micheletti only has "cojones" when standing behind the military.
04:49 PM on 07/25/2009
Zelaya never crossed to Honduran territory, who is the coward here.
04:59 PM on 07/25/2009
Zelaya never crossed the border. If they arrest him in Nicaragua it will turn into an international incident. Come on, you know that, I have read your comments.
06:19 AM on 07/25/2009
Latin American democracy what a beautiful thing! No wonder Sandford went south of the border!
12:38 AM on 07/25/2009
The military coup in Honduras that deposed President Zelaya has been in the planning stages for over a year. It had, at least until January 19th, the unequivocal support of Bush, Cheney, Reich, and the other war criminals in Washington and abroad whose paradigm was the “axis of evil.” But a serious miscalculation was made by both the Hondurans and the Americans: The Americans were unable to adhere to their side of the deal. Barak Obama was elected President. All bets were off.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sabocat
07:11 AM on 07/25/2009
Yes, but they went ahead with the coup anyway. This reminds me of the message the Cuban exile community and the CIA gave JFK with the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion. It means this: we're running the show here, not you Obama. Back off and let us do our job of overthrowing popular governments and keeping the populace as a colony with starvation wages and super profits for our friends in the honduran oligarchy.

Or else.
10:15 PM on 07/24/2009
Nikolas Kozloff on Chiquita (United Fruit Co.) in Latin America:

When the Honduran military overthrew the democratically elected government of Manuel Zelaya two weeks ago there might have been a sigh of relief in the corporate board rooms of Chiquita banana. Earlier this year the Cincinnati-based fruit company joined Dole in criticizing the government in Tegucigalpa which had raised the minimum wage by 60%. Chiquita complained that the new regulations would cut into company profits: 20 cents more to produce a crate of pineapple and ten cents more to produce a crate of bananas to be exact. In all, Chiquita fretted that it would lose millions under Zelaya’s labor reforms since the company produced around 8 million crates of pineapple and 22 million crates of bananas per year.

When the minimum wage decree came Chiquita appealed to the Honduran National Business Council, known by its Spanish acronym COHEP. Like Chiquita, COHEP was unhappy about Zelaya’s minimum wage measure. Amílcar Bulnes, the group’s president, argued that if the government went forward with the minimum wage increase employers would be forced to let workers go, thus increasing unemployment in the country. The most important business organization in Honduras, COHEP groups 60 trade associations and chambers of commerce representing every sector of the Honduran economy. According to its own Web site, COHEP is the political and technical arm of the Honduran private sector, supports trade agreements and provides “critical support for the democratic system.”

http://www.counterpunch.org/kozloff07172009.html
10:42 PM on 07/24/2009
That really doesn't mean much.

So a big corporation was crying over increases in wages, that's what you expect a for profit entity to whine about. It's not proof that they pushed the military to fly Zelaga to Costa Rica in pajamas.

Look I'm sure there were a lot of groups with different interests that supported the coup, but to be quite honest, Zelaya is a pretty dumb politician and he help dig his own grave with his so called "poll" *.

* I find it funny that people take him seriously with this "innocent poll" idea, since when can you conduct a valid poll by a distributing ballots (by the military) like it was an election and then saying it is non-binding. You want a poll, you get a polling agency to do it, what they were doing is a vote!
02:10 AM on 07/25/2009
"That really doesn't mean much."

To a Republican it doesn't!
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07:10 AM on 07/25/2009
Yes we know "washington consensus" hates votes when their oligarchs are threatened.
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HelloFunnyWorld
In Times Of Sorry Leadership.... Cry or Manage Up?
10:53 PM on 07/24/2009
To Billy Hell:

Thank you for the link, will check it out. Our family and friends are big fruit eaters....
We feel sick thinking of this and hope your information is wrong. Though -
our book club was told to read a new book on the Food Industry by some UK author called "Stuffed and Starved"
12:31 AM on 07/25/2009
The article basically says that Chiquita was against the govt. raising the minimum wage.

Is that surprising, a FOR PROFIT organization being against more cost? Of course they're going to oppose it, and of course the poor people of the country will support it, that much is obvious.

But that is quite a leap to say that this corporation or the organization representing the private sector was behind the coup (although one can easily imagine that these are likely supporters).

Again, it's good to investigate all possibilities and motivations, but before one can accuse and individual or organization of conspiracy one should have a bit more proof and be honest about the lack of it and the amount of speculation.
10:02 PM on 07/24/2009
All of you people in the US commenting on this story.... unless you have lived in Honduras for the past four years and know for a fact all the crimes that Zelaya has committed... you have no business in condemning the current President of Honduras.

Guess what? OBAMA GOT IT WRONG! He's supporting a criminal and a drug trafficker and wants him back in power.
10:34 PM on 07/24/2009
What crimes? Increasing the minimum wage? Entering into an agreement with ALBA which provides funding for regional joint factories and banks, an emergency food fund, and exchanges of cheap Venezuelan oil for food, housing, and educational investment?
04:54 PM on 07/25/2009
These are just some of his crimes. I will find the rest and put them up. 19 against the constitution alone.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=maMA3PTYoZE
10:38 PM on 07/24/2009
Member Since June 2009. Just in time to support the coup.

How nice.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
teron678
A Pessimistic Optimist
11:00 PM on 07/24/2009
LOL
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11:30 PM on 07/24/2009
Makes you wonder.
09:53 PM on 07/24/2009
Professor Greg Grandin, Professor of Latin American history at New York University interviewed on Democracy Now:

It’s the second day of a two-day strike, in which organized labor unions have shut down many state institutions. In Tegucigalpa, there were a number of roaming protests, including the shutting down, for most of the day, the main road between Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula, which is the main economic hub, San Pedro Sula. There were reports of deadly major disturbances in San Pedro Sula.

Yesterday there was a press conference of an international observation mission of fifteen groups, international, mostly from Latin America and Europe, from Denmark and—from Denmark and France and other European countries. And they put out a quite damning report, a preliminary report. They ruled that there is grave and systemic political persecution going on in the country. They’ve documented seven political assassinations, at least two disappearances. And I spoke to one of the members of the commission. She said if they had had more time, they certainly would have—the numbers would be higher. They received reports of more, but they couldn’t verify. At least one body was turned up in an area that served as a clandestine cemetery for death squad operations in the 1980s. Over a thousand people have been detained under the curfew. There’s reports of widespread political intimidation, workers in San Pedro Sula being forced to attend pro-government rallies under threat of being fired, death threats against alternative media.

More to follow.
10:06 PM on 07/24/2009
The coup government is going to great lengths to present an international face as being democratic and modern and open and constitutional, but, you know, in Honduras you get a very different sense of the constituency of the coup. And there’s definitely been a reappearance of a certain kind of anti-communist, Cold War, national security type.

...one of the most infamous is Fernando Joya, Billy Joya, who was, I believe, a lieutenant captain or a lieutenant in Battalion 3-16, one of the most infamous death squads that operated in Honduras in the 1980s. He was in exile in the 1990s on charges that he had kidnapped and tortured a number of students, as well as been involved in other disappearances and other crimes against humanity.

He returned to Honduras at some point before the coup as a security adviser for one of the major corporate telecommunications and media operations here. And after the coup, he came out more and more in public. He has given interviews. And he was just named special adviser to the Micheletti—the Roberto Micheletti government, for security. In one of these pro-government marches, he’s appeared walking side by side with Micheletti. And for Hondurans who have a memory of the Dirty War of the 1980s, he, in particular, is a particularly potent symbol of just how retrograde and reactionary the coup is.

Watch or read the complete interview at: http://www.democracynow.org/2009/7/24/defying_coup_regime_zelaya_attempts_return
10:16 PM on 07/24/2009
I think your information on the background of Joya is accurate ... this character definitely seems "una tremenda joyita".

(in Spanish)
http://www.cofadeh.org/html/violadores%20ddhh/billy_joya.htm (From the committee of the families of the disappeared in Honduras)
09:03 PM on 07/24/2009
let the fun begin.

i wonder if james woods is up for a sequel?
07:56 PM on 07/24/2009
Why would anyone want to support someone who wants to change the constitution so he may stay in power? Why does Zelaya want another term in office when thier constitution does not allow it? What is he offering that is so important to the people that he must run for re-election?
08:18 PM on 07/24/2009
That is not what Zelaya either was or is attempting to accomplish. You have chosen to believe the propaganda of the coup d'etat advocates/apologists.

Zelaya was calling for a poll ( encuesta ) and not a referendum, as has been falsely claimed. Zelaya's legal right to promote a poll is protected under Article 5 of the Honduran Civil Participation Act.
09:54 PM on 07/24/2009
Polls are done door to door by private companies or through the phone. What he wanted to do was a referendum because you had to go to a polling station, present your ID, fill out a form in secret, and have your finger painted with ink so that you wouldn't be able to vote again. Does that sound like a poll? No, that's the exact same thing people do during elections.

But to make matters worse... he had his own people running the referendum... they would do the counting and present the results directly to him. Do you really doubt the outcome of the referendum?
08:30 PM on 07/24/2009
Why do you insist on spreading falsehoods such as "Zelaya want another term in office"?

This is something the coup plotters were spreading to justify their action, but has no basis in fact.
09:56 PM on 07/24/2009
Cause that's what he wanted. It's the exact same thing Chavez did in Venezuela and it's the exact same thing that Noriega is doing in Nicaragua.

Only a naive fool would believe he didn't want to set himself up as a dictator just like Chavez.
07:34 PM on 07/24/2009
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton has called Zelaya’s attempt to return to Honduras “reckless.” Micheletti’s tear-gassing, wounding, and possibly killing peaceful demonstrators is more than “reckless.” The Hondurans are a friendly, peaceful people; they do not deserve this.

Micheletti, not Zelaya, is inciting violence. The U.S. should actively support Zelaya’s return.

As Executive Director of Friends of the Children, Inc., I worked In Honduras with the Franciscan Sisters to help orphaned and abandoned children and also set up many small medical clinics. I saw how the wealthy controlled Honduras and profited from everything, even benefiting from charity given for the poor. The junta’s Miami bank accounts should be frozen. The U.S. and European Union should freeze their visas.

The constitution that the usurping government talks about is not like the U. S. Constitution. The current Honduran constitution, their 16th constitution, was set up in 1982 (when the military junta was in charge) to guarantee that the wealthy and military keep control.

This coup is not about left or right. This is about democracy. We cannot always agree with every democratically elected leader; but the U.S. should never sanction a coup. A president forcibly removed by the military at night in his pajamas is not something we want the U. S. to be seen as accepting.

Zelaya is not perfect, but he has been elected by the Honduran people, and he should be allowed to finish his term.
07:53 PM on 07/24/2009
Thank you for your humanitarian service and advocacy for those in Honduras who are truly in need. Unlike many who have been posting here these past three weeks, your contributions have had a positive, lasting, and concrete effect on the Honduran poor and marginalized.

Disclaimer : I agree with your comments completely.
09:58 PM on 07/24/2009
How may I be of service?