| Deal in Honduras Could Restore Zelaya | | Print | |
| Written by Warren Mass | ||||||||||||||||
| Friday, 30 October 2009 14:00 | ||||||||||||||||
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Micheletti said his willingness to reach an agreement was a "significant concession" on his part. "I have authorized my negotiating team to sign a deal that marks the beginning of the end of the country's political situation," he said in a statement.
Hours later, AP reported that representatives of ousted President Zelaya had reached an agreement with the Micheletti government that could end the dispute over Honduras's presidency, and possibly pave the way for Zelaya's reinstatement. I'm very pleased to announce that we've had a breakthrough in negotiations in Honduras. Note that, following the official U.S. position regarding the internal Honduran political dispute, Clinton twice referred to Zelaya as “President,” while using the title “Mr.” for Micheletti, who became president by a constitutional act of his nation’s legislative and judicial branches. The United States was one of the nations that sponsored a resolution at the United Nations on June 30 that condemned the “coup” in Honduras “that has interrupted the democratic and constitutional order and the legitimate exercise of power in Honduras, and resulted in the removal of the democratically elected president.” The accord came after a team of senior American diplomats flew from Washington to the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, on [October 28] to press for an agreement. On [October 29], the assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, Thomas A. Shannon Jr., warned that time was running out for an agreement. Would that the “constitutional order” referred to by Mrs. Clinton had some respect for our and other national constitutions. Internationalists like Clinton have consistently worked to subvert the national sovereignty of their own and other nations in favor of world or regional government imposed by the UN and regional agencies like the OAS the EU, or NATO. Photo of Roberto Micheletti: AP Images
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Thomas Paine
said:
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Clinton doesn't care about constitutional Republics She should have celebrated the fact that the judical and legislative branches with the help of the military supported the constitution by removing a President who violated his power. Instead she deceives everyone by saying the democratically elected President should stay. (Forget that he turned into a dictactor after being "democratically elected". |
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For Freedom...
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... I question why current President Micheletti now has a change of heart and agrees to reinstating Zelaya. What caused this? It would be worth looking at. |
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Bonnie
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Why the change of heart? Can you say "OAS"? Can you say "United States"? Can you say "political pressure"? This is what happens when a nation sacrifices its sovereignty by entering into entangling alliances and agreements. Let history be a lesson. Get the United States out of the UN, NATO, OAS, NAFTA, FTAA, CAFTA, SPP, NAU, etc. |
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Jim Bowman Jr.
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Defending Freedom? Now I understand why it's called "promoting democracy around the world" instead of "defending freedom!" Honduras is just the latest rung on the anti-freedom ladder. Who remembers what we did to Hungary? Of course, why would Washington respect the constitution of a foreign country when they continue the shredding of ours? |
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Honduran President Roberto Micheletti announced that he is ready to sign an agreement that could reinstate ousted President Manuel Zelaya and end the country's political crisis, VOA News reported early on October 30. Micheletti was installed by a congressional vote as the Central American’s president on June 28 as a replacement for President Manuel Zelaya, who was exiled by the military acting on the orders of the Honduran Supreme Court. Late on October 29, Micheletti said that he has authorized his negotiating team to sign an agreement that "marks the beginning of the end" of the four-month political standoff. The Honduran congress must approve the deal.
