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Louisiana
4th October 2009, 05:18
BY SETH GALINSKY
September 29—One day after declaring the suspension of constitutional rights to assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom from arbitrary arrests, de facto Honduran president Roberto Micheletti said today he would soon reverse the decree.

The interim president backpedaled after criticism from abroad and from his own allies at home.

“We need to lower the pressure and all begin to calm down so that we can have a dialogue,” said José Alfredo Saavedra, president of the Honduran Congress, who headed a congressional delegation that told Micheletti to reverse the decree.
Manuel Zelaya was ousted from the presidency June 28 and put on a plane to Costa Rica by the military. His presidential term would have been up five months later.

The Honduran congress then voted overwhelmingly to appoint Micheletti, a former Zelaya ally and fellow Liberal Party member, in his place.
After several attempts to return were blocked, Zelaya slipped back into the country and took refuge in the Brazilian embassy September 21.
The embassy is surrounded by police and soldiers who used tear gas and water cannons to chase away thousands of pro-Zelaya protesters. More than 170 people were arrested in the two days after his return.

Honduran officials had issued an ultimatum giving the Brazilian government 10 days to hand over Zelaya for arrest or take him out of the country. Along with saying he would reverse the suspension of constitutional rights, Micheletti promised September 28 that nothing would happen to the Brazilian embassy.
Both Zelaya and Micheletti are wealthy businessmen. Zelaya owns ranches and runs a timber operation. Micheletti owns a large transportation business and once ran the Honduran telephone company.
Zelaya won the presidential election in 2005. As the world economic crisis unfolded, he began to use more left-sounding rhetoric and took limited measures that were popular among working people, such as raising the minimum wage for some workers.
After returning to Honduras, Zelaya has continued to say he is willing to reach a compromise with Micheletti prior to new elections scheduled for November 29.
Honduran capitalists and foreign investors are concerned that they will lose profits if an agreement is not reached. Jesus Canahuati, vice president of the Honduran chapter of the Business Council for Latin America, told Bloomberg.com that Honduras has lost as much as $200 million in investment since Zelaya was ousted.
Washington suspended some $30 million in aid and cancelled visas for members of the de facto government to show its displeasure. But Lewis Amselem, U.S. representative to the Organization of American States, criticized Zelaya’s return to Honduras as “irresponsible and foolish.”
Four of the six presidential candidates in the upcoming election met with Zelaya at the Brazilian embassy September 24.


Source: The Militant

ckaihatsu
6th October 2009, 03:02
[labor_action] HONDURAS--100 arrested in 1 day, thanks to the fascist decree of Micheletti


Report from Honduras – Thursday, October 1
In one day: 100 arrested from the Resistance, while the decree against the guarantees continues in force

By Sandra Fuentes, correspondent in Honduras
Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Tegucigalpa. — The same day at 5 a.m., the premises of the Instituto Nacional Agrario [INA] were forcibly evacuated; the operation was televised live by the pro-coup media, that did not stop saying that the integrity of the people who were leaving of their own will, was respected, while in the pictures we saw 57 campesinos that were being shoved out, in an operation with more than 300 armed cops, who confiscated the bags with clothes and satchels that were the only belongings of the comrades from the Resistance. They were all moved as arrested people and will not be released while exorbitant charges are made, that the coup plotters pull out of thin air, to sentence the Resistance to prison.

The same day at 8 a.m., a protest was called in front of the premises of Radio Globo, where the Resistance also began a protest about the eviction of the INA just hours before.

The Resistance began the rally by standing in front of the Radio Globo premises, in opposition to the decree that prevents freedom of expression, among other guarantees, when they were getting support from the people that were passing by in autos, and they were waiting on the sidewalk, in order to avoid being evicted by the cops. However, at 11:30, a violent eviction by hundreds of soldiers, anti-riot police and Cobras [anti-riot control vehicles] began; the pictures are exaggerated, the operation simulated a confrontation in a war, when they began to shoot teargas canisters to disperse the Resistance, while the leadership of the Frente was trying to have a dialogue with the police chiefs. They had to get away by running, too.

The press was also evicted just like any demonstrator. In this operation there were also people arrested, and [the number] is not known exactly, but it is estimated [to be] around 50.

The de facto government calls these operations "peaceful"; at midnight they charge the 100 people arrested during the day, and then it is known for certain if someone is released or immediately moved to the common jails.

But meanwhile, the INA premises were looted by the army. Documents from the main campesino conflicts of the country were burned or disappeared, and, on this basis, they hope that Eduardo Villanueva, the new pro-coup administrator assigned to the position three months ago, will begin his duties.

Meanwhile, it is discussed whether the decree against the constitutional guarantees is going backwards or not. This fierce repression is an attempt to defeat the Resistance. Micheletti the fascist has said that, thanks to his decree, "calm reigns in Honduras."

This is the balance of the day, 100 people arrested; meanwhile the international community pressures the coup plotters, in order to impose a negotiated coexistence among these murderers of the people, as the San José Agreement provides. They are all giving Micheletti time to defeat the heroic Honduran Resistance in the streets.

Andropov
6th October 2009, 20:40
What are Zelayas politics like?

Bright Banana Beard
6th October 2009, 20:44
What are Zelayas politics like?

He a typical populist bourgeoise. His signing into ALBA and made the mimimun wage into law somehow pissed off the oligarchy in Honduras. He is the best alternative in Honduras for noq since he has many labour union supports. When he wanted to do poll to ask the people if they wanted to create a new constitution or modify the current one, he got coupped.

ckaihatsu
6th October 2009, 23:59
On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 3:52 PM, grok <[email protected]> wrote:
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> The de facto coupsters are definitely feeling the heat, whatever's
> going on here... But if they do fall, thanx to a unified
> internal-external resistance which didn't have to resort to force of
> arms, I hope this wouldn't give too many people the false notion that
> we are really in some Brave "New World" of Love & Peace -- where this
> wouldn't be just a one-off freak accident of the coming-together of
> fortuitous circumstances. It gets harder, folks. A LOT harder. Just
> look around at the World, eh?
>
>
> - -- grok.
>
>
>
>
> HONDURAS:
> COUP PERPETRATORS FORCED TO LIFT STATE OF SIEGE:
> <http://www.cubanews.ain.cu/2009/1006golpistasHonduras.htm>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> - --
> The Financiers & Banksters have looted untold trillions of our future earnings.
> Their bureaucratic police & military goons are here to make us all pay for it.
> Forever.
> Well FORGET THAT. Let's get it *ALL* back from them -- and more.
>
> **Socialist revolution NOW!!**
>
> Build the North America-wide General Strike.
> TODO el poder a los consejos y las comunas.
> TOUT le pouvoir aux conseils et communes.
> ALL power to the councils and communes.
>
> And beware the 'bait & switch' fraud: "Social Justice" is NOT *Socialism*...
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Honduras: Coup Perpetrators Forced to Lift State of Siege


HAVANA, Cuba, Oct 6 (acn) After one hundred days of people’s resistance to the coup d’état in Honduras, the de facto regime in this Central American nation was forced to respond to the internal and external repudiation and announced the lifting of the state of siege in the
country.


Cuban News Agency


Supported by this decree, the usurping authorities had increased repression of the people and suspended constitutional rights such as rights to freedom of thought, expression, association and movement, Prensa Latina reported.

The de facto regime also used the state of siege to raid and close the Radio Globo and Canal 36 (Channel 36) in the country and to forcibly enter the National Agrarian Institute’s offices.

The Tiempo newspaper reports that the de facto regime’s state of siege also failed to stop protests demanding the reinstatement of the institutional order.

This measure was rejected by popular organizations that make up the National Front against the Coup d’état, deputies, presidential candidates and even politicians that supported the coup.

In the international arena, the UN’s Human Right Council has condemned the humanitarian violations, the closing of media outlets and the siege of the Brazilian embassy in Honduras, where constitutional president Manuel Zelaya has found protection.