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Honduras: Zelaya Claims He Is Back To Reclaim Presidency

FREDDY CUEVAS   09/22/09 12:51 AM ET   AP

Zelaya

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Deposed President Manuel Zelaya made a dramatic return to Honduras' capital Monday, taking shelter from arrest at Brazil's embassy and calling for negotiations with the leaders who forced him from the country at gunpoint.

The interim government initially ordered a 15-hour curfew, but then extended it to a 26-hour shutdown of the capital, but thousands of Zelaya supporters ignored the decree and remained outside the embassy, dancing and cheering.

Others in the capital rushed home, lining up at bus stands and frantically looking for taxis. Electricity was cut off for hours at a time on the block housing the embassy and in areas of Tegucigalpa where news media offices are located – something that happened the day of the coup that ousted the leftist leader.

Security Vice Minister Mario Perdomo said checkpoints were being set up on highways leading to the capital to keep out Zelaya's supporters from other regions, to "stop those people coming to start trouble." Later, Defense Minister Lionel Sevilla said all flights to Tegucigalpa had been suspended indefinitely.

Without giving any specifics, Zelaya said he snuck into the country by traveling for 15 hours overland in a series of vehicles – pulling off a homecoming that created a sharp new challenge for the interim government that had threatened repeatedly to throw him in jail if he returned.

Chants of "Yes we could! Yes we could!" bellowed from the crowd outside the Brazilian Embassy.

Zelaya told The Associated Press that he was trying to establish contact with the interim government to start negotiations on a solution to the standoff that started when soldiers flew him out of the country June 28.

"As of now, we are beginning to seek dialogue," he said by telephone, though he gave few details. Talks moderated by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias have been stalled for weeks over the interim government's refusal to accept Zelaya's reinstatement.

He also summoned his countrymen to come to the capital for peaceful protests and urged the army to avoid attacking his supporters.

"It is the moment of reconciliation," he said.

The government of interim President Roberto Micheletti, who took power after Zelaya's ouster and has promised to step aside following a presidential election scheduled for November, said the curfew would continue until 6 p.m. (0000 GMT) Tuesday. It first declared a curfew running from 4 p.m. Monday until 7 a.m. Tuesday.

The government said in a statement the army and police were ready to "guarantee the safety of people."

The shifting orders reflected the surprise of Zelaya's arrival, which caught the interim government off guard. Only minutes before he appeared publicly at the embassy, officials said reports of his return were a lie.

Zelaya's presence could revive the large demonstrations that disrupted the capital following the coup and threatens to overshadow the presidential election campaign.

Teachers union leader Eulogio Chavez announced that the country's 60,000 educators would go on strike indefinitely Tuesday to back Zelaya's demand to be reinstated.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged both sides to look for a peaceful solution to the crisis.

"It is imperative that dialogue begin, that there be a channel of communication between President Zelaya and the de facto regime in Honduras," Rodham Clinton told reporters on the sidelines of the annual U.N. General Assembly session in New York.

The U.S. State Department announced Sept. 4 that it would not recognize results of the presidential vote under current conditions. The coup has shaken up Washington's relations with Honduras, traditionally one of its strongest allies in Central America.

The secretary general of the Organization of American States, Jose Miguel Insulza, called for calm and warned Honduran officials to avoid any violation of the Brazilian diplomatic mission. "They should be responsible for the safety of president Zelaya and the Embassy of Brazil," he said.

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorin said neither his country nor the OAS had any role in Zelaya's journey before taking him in.

"We hope this opens a new stage in negotiations," Amorin said. He also warned: "If something happens to Zelaya or our embassy it would be a violation of international law," which bars host countries from arresting people inside diplomatic missions.

Honduras' Foreign Relations Department criticized Brazil, saying it was violating international law by "allowing Zelaya, a fugitive of Honduran justice, to make public calls to insurrection and political mobilization from its headquarters."

Micheletti urged Brazil in a nationwide radio address to turn Zelaya over to Honduran authorities.

In the days following the coup, at least two of the thousands of demonstrators who took to the streets were killed during clashes with security forces. Thousands of other Hondurans demonstrated in favor of the coup.

The country's Congress and courts, alarmed by Zelaya's political shift into a close alliance with leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cuba, backed Zelaya's removal.

He was arrested on orders of the Supreme Court on charges of treason and abuse of power for ignoring court orders against holding a popular referendum on reforming the constitution.

Micheletti said Zelaya sought to remove a ban on re-election – grounds for immediate removal from office under the Honduran constitution. Zelaya denies any such plan.

International leaders were almost unanimously against the armed removal of the president, alarmed that it could return Latin America to a bygone era of coups and instability. The United States, European Union and other agencies have cut aid to Honduras to press for his return.

Zelaya said he had "evaded a thousand obstacles" to return, traveling 15 hours by land in different vehicles. He declined to give specifics on who helped him cross the border, saying that he didn't want to jeopardize their safety.

His staunch supporter, Chavez, described the journey: "President Manuel Zelaya, along with four companions, traveled for two days overland, crossing mountains and rivers, risking their lives. They have made it to Honduras."

Sevilla, the defense minister, told reporters that Zelaya allegedly entered Honduras from Nicaragua in a car licensed in a South American nation that "is not Venezuela."

If the interim administration attempts to imprison Zelaya, protesters who have demonstrated against his ouster could turn violent, said Vicki Gass at the Washington Office on Latin America.

"There's a saying about Honduras that people can argue in the morning and have dinner in the evening, but I'm not sure this will happen in this case," said Gass. "It's been 86 days since the coup. Something had to break and this might be it."

___

Associated Press writers Catherine E. Shoichet, Martha Mendoza and Alexandra Olson in Mexico City, Fabiola Sanchez in Caracas, Venezuela, and Matthew Lee in New York contributed to this report.

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TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Deposed President Manuel Zelaya made a dramatic return to Honduras' capital Monday, taking shelter from arrest at Brazil's embassy and calling for negotiations with the l...
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Deposed President Manuel Zelaya made a dramatic return to Honduras' capital Monday, taking shelter from arrest at Brazil's embassy and calling for negotiations with the l...
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01:13 PM on 09/22/2009
OK, I live in Honduras, and yes, Mel raised minimum wage 60% in one swoop in the middle of the worst recession since the depression. Unemployment went from 30% to 50%+. In fact out of all my neighbors 0 now have full time jobs. Drive down through the downtown area and you'll see that a huge percentage of the businesses are closed now. Talk to any small business owners (not the rich people you guys are always speaking of) and you'll hear the same thing, they're behind on the rent and will have to let more people go soon. Now, thanks to Mel, there are NO tourists, so all the businesses that need tourist dollars are on the verge of going under. Meanwhile, a corrupt ex-president was globetrotting the world doing his best to ruin his own country just in order to come back for the last 3 months of his term. Since Mel was given the boot not one Venezuelan airplane loaded with cocaine and money has crashed here, before it was almost daily. And, why, when the Court and the Congress deemed it illegal, did Mel lead a mob of thugs to break into the evidence building and steal the ballots? Many of you forget that Mel refused to obey the law, and got violent thugs to back him up whenever he didn't get his way. Do some more research on what has gone on here for the last 8 months before you post.
Gonzo
07:44 PM on 09/22/2009
BS

You forgot to add the plane with cocaine and money had hookers too.
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11:04 PM on 09/22/2009
Hmmmm... Lack of tourists? I wonder what could be causing that little economic setback. I just don't know. Could it be...

...a COUP?

(apologies to Dana Carvey)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
05:43 AM on 09/22/2009
If I was an insurance underwriter I'd file his life insurance app in the trash can.
04:49 AM on 09/22/2009
Write it down as the first US-supported com mun!st takeover. Shame on you 0b and your minion.
07:45 PM on 09/22/2009
Huh?

How so?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paula Ann
01:17 AM on 09/22/2009
jeeeeeeeeeeebus.........

i thought saddam came back as a texan!!
12:24 AM on 09/22/2009
madam secratary Clinton and her hubby's long time counsel, lenny davis,

a neo-con in neo-lib clothing

is currently the lawyer / counsel for micheleti,

the thug whom the military (which is, like any other institution in honduras, owned by a handful of families) put in zelaya's righful place.

the clintons and their neo-con / neo-lib clients have a long reach, indeed, all around the globe.
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12:03 AM on 09/22/2009
Hope Zelaya can break thru this US Chamber of Commerce coup !!
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
08:55 PM on 09/21/2009
We need to call the State Dept. (202-647-4000) and leave a message of dismay at the military coup, and demand for President Zelaya's immediate return to his rightful post as President of Honduras. The excuses given by the reigning "junta" are just that, "excuses". They, the coup leaders, should be jailed for insurrection, and a new Constitution worked out that satisfies the people of Honduras, not the sham "Constitution" that enabled the coup.
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09:20 PM on 09/21/2009
I think I'll pass. You are apparently a st.ooge for Ch@vez. It's all about the people on the surface, but it's all about the power underneath. Throw some bones to the poor to get them to support your power grab, and then corruption is king. The economy will become stagnant, output will fall, shortages will surface, and the people will suffer. It's just a new group of people that will suffer, those that oppose the dict@tor in any way, shape, or form.

Zelaya is cut from that creed. Populism to power............
09:31 PM on 09/21/2009
I see jumping to conclusions and name calling passes for substance in your case. That hardly justifies your ignoring the specifics of this case, not to mention ignoring some unsavory Latin American history re: coups.
09:34 PM on 09/21/2009
Cool ... name calling AND an endorsement of trickle-down economics all in one neat paragraph.
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piul05
Can I have a biscuit yet?
06:29 PM on 09/21/2009
Way to go, Lula - subtle and yet powerful display of leadership!
07:52 PM on 09/22/2009
Amen ... is the USA willing to take him on?
05:54 PM on 09/21/2009
The return of the bad old days of ruling families coup'ing out leaders they don't like can't be allowed to happen. Latin America is one of the places where politics has advanced.
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06:17 PM on 09/21/2009
Yeah, advanced to the days of Ch@vez p@wns winning elections and finding ways to make sure they are appointed for life.
06:25 PM on 09/21/2009
You betray your attitude to elections and rule of law. Fear and paranoia aren't legal basis for extra-judicial stunts. It's the we-had-to-kill-the-democracy-in-order-to-save-it mentality. BTW, I'm not Chavez' biggest fan, but his elections have been well judged by international observers.
07:53 PM on 09/22/2009
Write this down 100 times in the blackboard:

Chavez was elected ... Zelaya was elected ... Chavez was elected ... Zelaya was elected ...
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05:52 PM on 09/21/2009
I can only hope that this th.ug is not put back into power. He seeks to follow the downward path of Ch@vez.

I only hope that if somebody tried to instill themselves as dict@tor for life piece by peice in my country, they would be removed in the same fashion.
06:47 PM on 09/21/2009
So, you're OK with extrajudicially removing the democratically elected president of a sovereign country in his jammies and exiling him to another country because you take issue with what
you perceive to be political differences with him.

Wow, that's the democratic spirit the US is so well known for throughout Central and South America.
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06:56 PM on 09/21/2009
You left out the part where he wanted to abolish term limits for himself, and wanted to do so even though it was declared illeg@l by the supreme court. I suppose in the name of democracy everybody should have sat by idly while he slowly picked apart the democratic foundations of the country, Ch@vez style. It is absolutely sh@meful how liberals like you are trying to defend Zel@ya.

It's too bad you will never know what it would be like to have a Z@laya put a stranglehold on your own country.
09:00 PM on 09/21/2009
DO you really have any idea what you are talking about?
07:03 PM on 09/21/2009
Truth be known, authoritarian sycophants just like you in powerful foreign policy positions in the US government and the oval office throughout the latter half of the 19th century and the entire 20th century have been directly responsible for the creation and success of more dictatorships in Central and South America than any other group in history.

Chavez is no saint, but don't make the mistake of believing he is not aware of the above fact.
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07:48 PM on 09/21/2009
People like you have romantic delusions about men such as Ch@vez. I really wish you could have the benefit of living under the regime of such a man. Living in the cushy surroundings you probably do, it is easy to be a limousine liberal and preach democratic values from the mountain top. I envy your sim.plicity in a lot of ways. It would be much easier for me.
04:27 PM on 09/21/2009
As first reported by http://www.hondurancampesino.org

Mel is Back. We pray for his safe return and the resistance...Viva Honduras...
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
09:06 PM on 09/21/2009
I hope, Meno, to see all this on Democracy Now (Free Speech TV on Dish Network 9415) tomorrow morning. Thanks for the news ...