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AIDE: Zelaya Won't Accept Coup Leaders in Unity Gov't./NYT: Plan Wourld Return Honduran Leader

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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-18-09 08:08 PM
Original message
AIDE: Zelaya Won't Accept Coup Leaders in Unity Gov't./NYT: Plan Wourld Return Honduran Leader
Two articles. Note second article from NYT mentions that Pinochettis reps in Costa Rica said they will need to take issues back to Tegucigalpa for review. Stall, stall, stall.
magbana

"Honduras Zelaya won't accept coup leaders in unity gov: aide
Sat Jul 18, 2009 7:20pm EDT

TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Deposed Honduran President Manuel Zelaya will not accept any leaders of the June 28 coup that ousted him forming part of an eventual unity government, a close adviser said on Saturday in an apparent step back from an earlier comment by Zelaya.

"The president can talk about a reconciliation government, but not one that includes people who took part in the coup," Allan Fajardo, a close adviser accompanying Zelaya in Managua told Reuters by telephone. "There can be no coupmongers."

He said Zelaya also agreed with the proposal that he be reinstated to serve out the rest of his term, but that other proposals by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias were still subject to negotiation.

Zelaya said earlier on Saturday he agreed with a proposal by mediator Costa Rica to form a national unity government, telling Radio Globo, "We agree with it, but only as long as all the powers of the state are integrated into it."

(Reporting by Simon Gardner; Editing by Peter Cooney)
"
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE56H33D20090718

Plan Would Return Honduran Leader
Published: July 18, 2009

CIUDAD JUÁREZ, Mexico — The mediator in talks seeking to break the deadlock between the deposed Honduran president, Manuel Zelaya, and the de facto government that exiled him urged both sides on Saturday to agree to a plan that would return the ousted leader and grant a general amnesty.
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The seven points proposed by President Óscar Arias of Costa Rica during a second round of negotiations at his house in the capital, San José, would require the political elite of Honduras to recognize Mr. Zelaya as the country’s legitimate president, something they have refused to do until now.

But in restoring Mr. Zelaya, Mr. Arias’s plan would also sharply curtail his powers and focus much of the country’s political energy on the next election.

A source close to the talks said Mr. Zelaya’s delegation had agreed in principle to all seven points.

But prospects for an agreement appeared to dim late Saturday when a member of the delegation representing Roberto Micheletti, who was named by the Honduran Congress as president after the military arrested Mr. Zelaya and flew him to Costa Rica, said in a radio interview that the proposal still needed to be discussed in Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital.

Under the proposal, the general election scheduled for the end of November would be moved forward a month and the military would be placed under the command of the electoral tribunal to prevent any attempt to meddle in the balloting.

Mr. Arias’s proposal would also force Mr. Zelaya to give up any attempt to rewrite the Constitution to remain in office.

Mr. Zelaya would head a national unity government made up of members of all political parties, until the new elected government took office, as scheduled, at the end of January.

The proposal does not specify that any members of the Micheletti government would be included, which Mr. Zelaya has ruled out.

Mr. Arias’s proposal would also grant an amnesty for all political crimes both before and after the June 28 ouster of Mr. Zelaya.

Four negotiators from each side began talks at 11 a.m. on Saturday at Mr. Arias’s house, pausing to eat lunch there and continuing into the late afternoon.

In a statement, Mr. Arias, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 for his role in negotiating Central American peace accords, spoke of the weight of history in a region where the overthrow of elected governments has frequently punctuated an uncertain transition to democracy.

If an agreement was reached, “it would be the first time in Latin American history that a coup d’état is reversed by the will of both sides,” the statement said.

To achieve a settlement, however, the de facto government — in which the military, Congress and the Supreme Court lined up against Mr. Zelaya — would have to reverse course and allow him to return.

Mr. Micheletti had said that he would step down if it would help end the conflict, but he had emphasized that he would not make way for Mr. Zelaya. The de facto government has said that if Mr. Zelaya did try to return, he would be arrested.

The United Nations, the Organization of American States and the Obama administration, however, have all said Mr. Zelaya is Honduras’s legal president.

During a news conference in Managua, Nicaragua, on Friday afternoon, Mr. Zelaya suggested how difficult it might be to reach an agreement on all the details even if Mr. Arias did succeed in negotiating the general outline of an accord.

The ousted president said he was open to the possibility of some kind of unity government, but that it could not include any of the ministers in the government that took power after the coup.

And he argued that Mr. Micheletti had refused to show any flexibility. “We have been waiting for 10 days for the coup leaders to give us a sign,” he said. “If they don’t give us one tomorrow, the process with them will have failed. Up to this moment there’s been no gesture on their part.”

The Honduran coup has presented an unexpected test of Latin American policy for the Obama administration, which has thrown its support behind the mediation effort by Mr. Arias.

Elisabeth Malkin reported from Ciudad Juárez, and Blake Schmidt from Granada, Nicaragua. Jesús Mora contributed reporting from San José, Costa Rica."
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/19/world/americas/19honduras.html?_r=1&hp
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Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-19-09 08:24 AM
Response to Original message
1. An "unexpected test" for the Obama administration? What BS!
Edited on Sun Jul-19-09 08:26 AM by Peace Patriot
"The Honduran coup has presented an unexpected test of Latin American policy for the Obama administration, which has thrown its support behind the mediation effort by Mr. Arias."--NYT

Hillary Clinton is advised by John "death squad" Negroponte. She had as her chief campaign adviser Mark "free trade for the death squadders in Colombia" Penn--a known paid agent of the narco-fascists running Colombia. The Obama administration, so far as I know, continues funding John McCain's "International Republican Institute," with US taxpayer dollars that McCain has poured into these rightwing groups in Honduras. US taxpayers are probably paying Lanny Davis top dollar to lie for this coup in Washington. The Pentagon maintains a close relationship with the Honduran military--with a US base in Honduras, joint maneuvers and training of Honduran military officers at the infamous "School of the Americas." US taxpayers are basically funding the Honduran military. The US embassy in Honduras, still full of Bushwhacks, knew of the coup ahead of time. It was all orchestrated to not be too bloody (probably the only concession to Obama), with Zelaya's wife and son taking refuge in the embassy, after the military shot up the presidential palace, rousted Zelaya out of bed at gunpoint and flew him as a prisoner to Costa Rica. That Costa Rica's president, Oscar Arias, then became the US-designated negotiator--circumventing the OAS and the UN, where opinion is unanimous against the coup, and especially circumventing the OAS where leftist (majorityist) governments now prevail--is also interesting. The US probably chose Costa Rica as Zelaya's destination that night.

We probably have Obama to thank that they didn't drop Zelaya out of the airplane on its way to Costa Rica. That's the sort of thing that Negroponte's criminal pals in Latin America have done in the past. That's the sort of thing that Bushwhacks still do. (Haven't we just heard about the Bushwhacks' CIA assassination program--supposedly not implemented--but who believes that?) They're spying on everybody, at home and abroad. The NYT--which suppresed exposure of the Bush Junta spying program for a full year, to assist the narrative that Bush/Cheney were re-elected in 2004--thinks that the Obama administration didn't know--that this was an "unexpected test" of the Obama administration?

Well, test it is. Bushwhack/DLC policy of bludgeoning Latin American into submission, one way or another, vs Obama's stated policy of respect and cooperation. But "unexpected"?

The upshot will be killing reform in Honduras for the time being. Chiquita International's (former United Fruit Co.'s) oppression of Honduran workers will continue (Obama's AG Eric Holder was their attorney when they were caught paying millions to rightwing death squads to keep unions out of their corporate farms in Colombia--got them off the hook; John Negroponte is now VP of that law firm and John "death squad" Bolton is a partner). (Note: Zelaya raised the minimum wage in Honduras--that was his real crime.) The election will no doubt be held--that seems to be the plan--which Zelaya cannot run in--with over 1,000 political prisoners in jail, several activists already murdered, the media shut down and the military in charge (which open fired on a peaceful crowd of Zelaya supporters at the airport the other week, killing one youngster and wounding others). How can the left mount a campaign in these circumstances? How can it be a fair vote?

And the Pentagon will remain securely in control of Honduras--as a strategic location for whatever plans it has on the drawing board for Oil War II-South America. (Note: Zelaya's other real crime was proposing that the US base in Honduras be converted to a commercial airport.) I'm sure they want Venezuela's northern oil fields off its Caribbean coast (in the state of Zulia, where the fascist secessionists are also probably being funded by McCain's IRI, that is, by US taxpayers). Cuba just discovered a big oil field. They surely want that. And they now have the US 4th Fleet roaming the Caribbean--reconstituted by the Bush Junta last summer. Honduras is the Pentagon's "lily pad" country for launching aggression against Honduras' neighbors. (It is from Honduras that Negroponte sent his death squads into Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala during the Reagan "reign of terror.)

No reform in Honduras. No independence for Honduras. Still a vassal of the US--that's what Clinton and Negroponte wanted--and that will be the upshot, at least temporarily. The NYT is lying to us (again!) that it was "unexpected." How shocking it must be to NYT editors to have all these "unexpected" things happening in the world that serve corpo/fascist interests. (Not.)
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-19-09 10:24 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Right on, right on, Peace Patriot!
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David__77 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jul-19-09 12:40 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Hopefully the plan doesn't succeed.
And hopefully Cesar Ham is elected president of Honduras and the working people of the country consolidate in support of socialism.
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