Ocnus.Net
HONDURAS: Regime Faces International Isolation
By Thelma Mejíam, IPS 30/6/09
Jul 2, 2009 - 9:52:15 AM
TEGUCIGALPA - In the midst of the international isolation faced by the
new government named by the Honduran Congress to replace President
Manuel Zelaya who was ousted Sunday, the courts issued an arrest
warrant for the leader Tuesday.
Attorney General Luís Rubí told a press conference that the arrest
warrant was based on 18 charges, including abuse of power, contempt of
court and corruption. If Zelaya returns to Honduras, "as he has
announced, have no doubt that we will arrest him," he said.
Zelaya said he would return to Honduras Thursday accompanied by a
delegation of authorities from several countries, headed by
Organisation of American States (OAS) Secretary General José Miguel
Insulza.
The president, whose terms ends in January, was pulled out of bed at
gunpoint early Sunday morning by the military, when at least 200 troops
surrounded his residence, and put on a plane to Costa Rica, still in
his pajamas.
Within the next few hours, the judicial and legislative branches
officially backed the military coup, and Congress named its head,
Roberto Micheletti, as acting president.
The coup followed an attempt by Zelaya to hold a non-binding referendum
Sunday on whether or not voters wanted to elect a constituent assembly
to reform the constitution.
The courts, electoral authorities and Congress declared the vote
unconstitutional because referendums cannot be held in an election
year, and the military refused to distribute the ballot boxes.
Zelaya, arguing that the vote was merely a survey aimed at increasing
public participation in decision-making, sacked the commander of the
armed forces last week. After the military chief was reinstated by the
Supreme Court, the president refused to accept the decision.
The opposition argued that Zelaya was trying to change the constitution
to be elected to a second term.
On Tuesday, Zelaya described the events to the United Nations General
Assembly. "The power groups want to remain untouchable in the country,"
he said.
The U.N. General Assembly unanimously condemned the coup "that has
interrupted the democratic and constitutional order and the legitimate
exercise of power in Honduras" and adopted a resolution demanding
Zelaya’s "immediate and unconditional restoration."
Attorney General Rubí said the U.N. resolution was "to be expected;
they have a great deal of misinformation, and should know that Honduras
is a country built on laws and the rule of law. What happened here was
the application of the law to a leader who thought he was above the
constitution.
"If former president Zelaya returns to the country Thursday, that’s
great, but he should know that he will be arrested on his arrival,
because there are warrants out for him, and he will be prosecuted in
the courts for the crimes committed," he said.
The army and the police used tear gas, clubs and water hoses to break
up protests Monday outside the presidential palace. After dispersing,
the demonstrators regrouped, to continue demanding Zelaya’s return to
power.
On Tuesday, an enormous anti-Zelaya demonstration was also held in
Tegucigalpa in favour of "respect for the constitution" and in support
of the new regime led by Micheletti, who has begun to name a new
cabinet.
Evangelical pastor Evelio Reyes, one of the organisers of the march,
said "it is time to begin building a Honduras marked by honour.
President Zelaya must be tried for his crimes, if he committed them,
and here we must reestablish peace and order, with the constitution
above everything else," he told IPS.
Similar marches were held in several cities in support of the acting
president named by Congress.
However, the protests against the coup continued, and were backed by
the teachers’ union, which announced an indefinite strike in primary
and secondary schools.
Marvin Ponce of the left-wing Democratic Unification party, the only
one of the five parties represented in Congress that did not support
the coup, told IPS that "we are starting to launch peaceful resistance,
but we are at a disadvantage because we do not have timely access to
the media."
Since Sunday, radio and TV stations have been closed down or censored,
and reporters have complained about difficulties in getting out the
news on the events of the last three days. Power and telecommunications
have also been cut off and on since Sunday, including the broadcast
signals of international news channels.
Social movements opposed to the coup announced traffic blockades in
western Honduras, and the mayor of the western city of Santa Bárbara,
Dennis Sánchez, said that despite the wide deployment of military
troops, "we are mobilising strategically to join the protests in the
capital."
Ponce said that "many of our peaceful protests have been repressed by
army troops, but that is not being reported. Yesterday they punctured
the tires of several buses that were carrying protesters to the capital
from Olancho (in the northeast) and so far we count more than 140
people arrested."
But National Human Rights Commissioner Ramón Custodio, a government
official, told IPS that his regional delegates had instructions to
verify arrests of social activists and demonstrators, "but our reports,
so far, indicate that this is not happening."
"The constitution is in effect, and none of the constitutional
guarantees or fundamental rights have been suspended, with the
exception of free circulation between 9:00 PM and 6:00 AM from Sunday
the 28th to Tuesday the 30th," said Custodio, referring to the curfew
imposed by the regime.
Lina Pineda, with the teachers’ union, told IPS that the strike "is
gaining in strength, and we have heard about cases of repression of
colleagues in the northern part of the country. I believe a solution to
this crisis is becoming more and more complex."
In the meantime, the Democratic Civic Union, a coalition of business
leaders, politicians, churches and social organisations opposed to
Zelaya, announced new marches and praised the military for "restoring
peace," in the words of María Martha Díaz of the governing Liberal
Party.
After his election as the Liberal Party’s candidate, Zelaya alienated
the party by taking a turn to the left.
Amílcar Bulnes, the president of the Honduran Private Business Council
- the main business association - said Tuesday that the international
boycott of the new regime "will have serious repercussions for the
country in an economy that Zelaya had already brought to a standstill.
"But we back the new government and are prepared to resist the pressure
over the next five months, using our own funds if necessary, until the
(November general) elections," he said.
The coup was condemned by the OAS, the Central American Integration
System (SICA), the European Union and the Bolivarian Alternative for
the Americas (ALBA) bloc.
Diplomatic and economic sanctions were also taken against the new
authorities in Honduras, accused of violating international conventions
like the Inter-American Democratic Charter.
The members of ALBA announced that they would withdraw their
ambassadors from Honduras and freeze diplomatic ties until the
constitutional order was restored.
The declaration was signed by presidents Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua,
Evo Morales of Bolivia, Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, Rafael Correa of
Ecuador and Raúl Castro of Cuba, and by the foreign ministers and other
officials of Dominica, Antigua and Barbuda and Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines. Zelaya also signed the statement issued by ALBA, of which
Honduras is a member.
The SICA, meanwhile, decided to immediately suspend all loans and
disbursements to Honduras from the Central American Economic
Integration Bank (BCIE) until Zelaya was reinstated.
In addition, Panama, Guatemala, El Salvador, Belize, Costa Rica,
Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic announced the cancellation of all
political, economic, financial, cultural, sports, tourist or
cooperation meetings with those who took part in the coup.
They also said they would immediately recall their ambassadors for
consultations and that they would not recognise any ambassador or other
representative named by the de facto government in Honduras.
The CA-4 initiative, which allows visa-free circulation between its
four member countries - Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua
– decided as well to close its land borders with Honduras for at least
48 hours, threatening to extend the measure until Zelaya was restored
to power.
The Rio Group – the main regional political forum – also held a meeting
that condemned the coup and demanded the return of the constitutional
president.
Zelaya will visit Washington, DC Wednesday to meet with representatives
of the government of Barack Obama.
Source: Ocnus.net 2009