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Honduras military ordered to turn back Zelaya's jet

AP

Honduras' ousted President Manuel Zelaya said he was getting on a flight home to reclaim his post today, accompanied by the UN General Assembly president and a group of journalists.

The interim government said it ordered the military to prevent the landing of Zelaya's plane. If turned away, it will likely land in El Salvador, where a separate flight was headed with Latin American leaders who support Zelaya's reinstatement.

Thousands of protesters were gathering in the capital of Honduras in anticipation of Zelaya's showdown against the interim government in power since the army ousted him.

Police helicopters hovered over the main Tegucigalpa airport, where soldiers outnumbered travelers and commercial flights were canceled. Access roads were cut off by police checkpoints, with soldiers standing guard alongside.

"The government of President (Roberto) Micheletti has order the armed forces and the police not to allow the entrance of any plane bringing the former leader," the foreign minister of the interim government, Enrique Ortez, told The Associated Press on Sunday.

In Washington, Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa says the safety of Zelaya's flight could not be guaranteed. Correa said he would fly with the presidents of Argentina and Paraguay and the secretary-general of the Organization of American States on Tango One, the Argentine presidential plane, to the Salvadoran capital.

The country's new government has vowed to arrest Zelaya for 18 alleged criminal acts including treason and failing to implement more than 80 laws approved by Congress since taking office in 2006.

Despite a Supreme Court ruling, Zelaya had also pressed ahead with a referendum on whether to hold an assembly to consider changing the constitution, and critics feared he would press to extend his rule.

But by sending soldiers to shoot up the presidential residence and fly Zelaya into exile a week ago, the Micheletti government has brought itself universal condemnations from the United Nations and OAS.

No nation has recognized the new government; President Barack Obama has united with conservative Alvaro Uribe of Colombia and leftist Hugo Chavez of Venezuela in criticism.

The OAS had given the Honduran government until Saturday to reinstate Zelaya, and sent two emergency missions to Honduras in hopes of heading off an escalation. But Micheletti pointedly rejected the group's demands.

The poor Central American country's Roman Catholic archbishop and its human right commissioner urged Zelaya to stay away, warning that his return could spark bloodshed. The interim government said it would arrest Zelaya and put him on trial despite near-universal international condemnation of the coup that removed him as he campaigned to revise the constitution.

In Washington, the Organization of American States suspended Honduras as a member late Saturday. Micheletti preemptively pulled out of the OAS hours earlier rather than comply with an ultimatum that Zelaya be restored.

Zelaya has urged loyalists to support his arrival in Honduras in a peaceful show of force.

"We are going to show up at the Honduras International Airport in Tegucigalpa ... and on Sunday we will be in Tegucigalpa," Zelaya said Saturday in the taped statement carried on the Web sites of the Telesur and Cubadebate media outlets. "Practice what I have always preached, which is nonviolence."

Zelaya supporters gathered Sunday morning at a university on the south side of the capital and planned to march to the airport a few miles away.

"We have no pistols or arms, just our principles," said Rafael Alegria, a prominent pro-Zelaya protest organizer. "We have the legitimate right to fight for the defense of democracy and to restore President Zelaya."

Large crowds of Zelaya's critics have staged their own daily demonstrations to back Micheletti, the congressional president who was named by lawmakers to finish out the final six months of the Zelaya's term.

Most of the ousted leader's supporters come from the working and middle classes of this impoverished nation, while his opponents are based in the ranks of the well-to-do — although the increasingly leftist approach of the wealthy rancher had eroded his popular support.

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Comments

Honduras withdrew before OAS threw, so FU
[info]mysterywarbler wrote:
Sunday, 5 July 2009 at 03:48 pm (UTC)
Reuters reporting sucks. The Independent, became a crap tabloid a long time ago but I live in hope it reforms, maybe gets its news ITSELF, or from someplace more informative

http://cbs13.com/politics/honduras.oas.withdrawal.2.1071198.html

http://cbs13.com/national/Honduras.coup.president.2.1063829.html

Re: Honduras withdrew before OAS threw, so FU
[info]chanch5 wrote:
Sunday, 5 July 2009 at 08:38 pm (UTC)
Ok but the article claims no different:

"In Washington, the Organization of American States suspended Honduras as a member late Saturday. Micheletti preemptively pulled out of the OAS HOURS EARLIER rather than comply with an ultimatum that Zelaya be restored" (My emphasis).
Re: Honduras withdrew before OAS threw, so FU
[info]triffid2009 wrote:
Sunday, 5 July 2009 at 08:53 pm (UTC)
Agreed. Surely it wouldn`t take too much effort to at least have articles in British English.
Re: Honduras withdrew before OAS threw, so FU
[info]mysterywarbler wrote:
Monday, 6 July 2009 at 03:32 pm (UTC)
good lordy me lord but if you 'doon't moind', heh heh we'll use our own spellings their having grown their own sort of (hoar) of age. Anyway France has reformed theirs like twice now haven't they? If you wanna write me though about language/spelling and the merits or lack of them in the evolution tho, you can write me in the English using the ScandinavianAngloSaxonNorman spellings or change to another topic; ok--...

Did you visit that cbs website? They had a scary vid of a drive thru a forest fire in CA with a Ranger.

Thanks for the reply, it cheered me up a bit today. Cheers, ok?
Who's crazier, Kim Jong Il or the Honduran oligarchy?
[info]fin_d_empire wrote:
Sunday, 5 July 2009 at 06:52 pm (UTC)
The only countries who are really worried about North Korea's bouts of missile-rattling are the usual suspects: the Yanks, Japan, and now South Korea ever since another Yank stooge took charge there and ended the détente with the North. The Honduran oligarchy, by contrast, has managed to rile the whole of Latin America and even Canada.

In a dirt-poor country like Honduras where the rich and poor are divided by a line as sharp as a machete cut, the oligarchy will do anything to hold that line and the Yanks will in the end not let their longtime Honduran partners in crimes against humanity down, especially when almost all of the Yanks' erstwhile Monroe Doctrine bananalands of South and Central America has been taken over by Chavistas with red shirts and Che berets.

Obomber is a past master at talking the PC talk while conducting all sorts of dirty and vicious business under the table. He'll fake disapproval and mild indignation just enough so he doesn't look like another Jimmy Carter, who eagerly backed Anastasio Somoza's war on his own people in Nicaragua, but not so much as to stir up the snake-pit of Latino fascist expats of all nationalities camping out in Florida. Then he'll find himself some stooge - like Colombia's Uribe - who can act as a front for funneling Yank aid and support to the Honduran Junta, just as the Israelis did for Carter by arming and training Somoza's national guard.
Re: Who's crazier, Kim Jong Il or the Honduran oligarchy?
[info]topolcats wrote:
Monday, 6 July 2009 at 02:05 pm (UTC)
Your are right, I add this is an American CIA , State Department ploy to contain the right of Latin America to want a better life for the poor. America is creating by force and stealth a BUFFER ZONE ,see a map of Central America. hey do not want a brainwashed Mexico get the sickness of a wanting a better life-WHICH HAS BEEN REVIVED ALL OVER SOUTH AMERICAN-FAITH IN A BETTER LIFE, fairness, equality with the rich is the message of Chavez, not only socialism.
Which many south American county's strive for. Thus a buffer zone militarily. This is typical of American doublespeak and VICIOUSNESS, ONLY THE GRINGOS DESERVE A BETTER LIFE.
The Oligarchs
[info]rhinocircus wrote:
Sunday, 5 July 2009 at 07:55 pm (UTC)
want blood or their way. Honduras means nothing to them except that, they may live in luxury provided by feudal labour. Zelaya must risk his own skin to overcome this mafia regime.
Hondruan coup
[info]bushspoodle wrote:
Sunday, 5 July 2009 at 10:48 pm (UTC)
When UNIVISION's Jorge Ramos, in an interview via satellite, asked "interim president" Micheletti what clause in the Honduran Constitution gave him and his followers the right to do as he did, he could not answer.

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