| Zelaya's Return to Honduras Incites Protests | | Print | |
| Written by Warren Mass | ||||||||
| Tuesday, 22 September 2009 16:00 | ||||||||
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After being smuggled back into Honduras in the trunk of a car and aboard a tractor, Zelaya took sanctuary at the Brazilian embassy in the capital city of Tegucigalpa, where he appeared publicly on September 21. AP reported that Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said he spoke with Zelaya by phone the next morning. The leftist Silva — who along with Venezuela's Marxist leader Hugo Chávez has been one of Zelaya's most strident supporters — said that by allowing Zelaya into its embassy, Brazil only did what any democratic country would do. Chávez idolizes Cuba's Fidel Castro, is chummy with Libya's Moammar Khadafy and was a Saddam Hussein pal.... According to Gerver Torres, a former Venezuelan government minister, Chavez's "main motivation now is to do everything he possibly can to negatively affect the United States, [President George W.] Bush in particular … trying to bring together all the enemies of the United States." Furthermore, wrote Brookes, Chávez has not only threatened to cut off oil exports to the United States (which amount to 15 percent of U.S. oil needs), but he has amassed a stock of weaponry far out of proportion to his country's needs, including a purchase from Russia of 50 advanced MiG-29 fighters, 40 helicopter gunships, and 100,000 AK-47 assault rifles. He has also provided sanctuary for the Colombian FARC narcoterrorists seeking to overthrow the government of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, has mentored Bolivian revolutionary Evo Morales, and — some intelligence sources have alleged — has funded a rogue army officer who tried to incite a December 2004 rebellion against Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo. In view of Chávez' background and his unabashed support for Zelaya, there is little wonder why members of all three branches of Honduras' government were wary about the latter's backdoor attempt to extend his term of office by floating a national referendum to eliminate term limits on the presidency. And why they took preemptive action to head off such a move while they still had the power to do so and forcibly exiled him. While the United States has called Zelaya's ouster a coup, it has not formally designated it a "military coup," which, under U.S. law, would have triggered a cutoff of all nonhumanitarian aid. Senior State Department officials said the Obama administration was reluctant to make the formal designation to preserve its flexibility for a diplomatic solution. Photo of Manuel Zelaya: AP Images
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Bonnie
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A Honduran affair Let us hope the United States takes absolutely no action whatsoever, and above all, every government official keeps his d**n mouth SHUT! This is a Honduran affair and is none of our bee's wax. |
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Mark
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Knowledge of Honduras? The writer cribs from secondary sources and evidences virtually no knowledge of the real Honduras. The article should be titled "How Fidel and Hugo run a huge conspiracy that explains everything." Your facts are mostly not wrong (unlike the mainstream media), but your blinders impair your understanding. Mel is hardly a protege of Chavez--Latin American ain't that simple. Honduras is run by a criminal elite that wipe their ^#$^&s with free market capitalism; Mel is a huge fan of the free market, is not a socialist, and is simply trying to break the unfair power of the oligarchy. 70% of the country lives in miserable, desperate poverty. The Resistance Front that supports him know that what he was trying to achieve was the possibility of a national assembly to write a new constitution. Much of what you write is the twisted lies and slander perpetrated by the Honduran coup regime's backers and lobbyists in DC--led by none other than Lanny Davis! Please get your facts straight. I do agree on one thing--this is a Latin American affair. The US should sit back and see if Latin American can solve it. Remember, the so-called "Lefists" were all voted in by their own people. Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Ecuador... It ain't all Chavez and Fidel and some conspiracy. It's called massive, grinding poverty getting the vote and attempting to change things. |
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Former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, who was forcibly exiled to Costa Rica on June 28 by military forces acting on the orders of the Honduran Supreme Court after he made plans to hold a referendum in defiance of the Court and Congress, has secretly returned to Honduras.
