[Very much unlike Chavez after April 2002 coup and kidnap, Zelaya has failed
to make a comeback on his own steam. Street Street protests are of course
on. But has not produced any tangible results as yet. Quite impressive
support from the international community, including the US President, has
also failed to produce the desired results. as yet.

So, in stark contrast with the harsh notes emanating from the radical fringe
of his supporters, Zelaya is compelled to publicly pin his hopes more and
more on an activist US role in his favour and against the coup leaders. And
that's just not happening. Never mind that there is a sea change in the
expectations from and the demands made on the US administration
as compared to Chile in 1973 or even Venezuela in 2002. But that's just not
enough.]



I.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8198576.stm

Ousted Honduran leader presses US

*Deposed Honduran President Manuel Zelaya has called on the United States to
take tougher action to help restore him to power.*

Speaking in Brazil, Mr Zelaya acknowledged that Washington had firmly
opposed his removal from office.

But he said the US was the biggest trading partner of Honduras and could
place more economic pressure on the coup leaders who deposed him in June.

The Obama government has suspended $18m (£11m) in development aid to
Honduras.

Mr Zelaya is in Brazil to meet President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. He says
he has been pleased with Brazil's support to restore him to power.

The Organisation of American States has demanded Mr Zelaya's reinstatement.

Police in Honduras say at least 40 people demonstrating in support of Mr
Zelaya on Tuesday were detained for public order offences in the capital,
Tegucigalpa.

Mr Zelaya was sent into exile on 28 June, amid a power struggle over his
plans for constitutional change.

His critics said the move was aimed at removing the current one-term limit
on serving as president, and paving the way for his re-election.

Following Mr Zelaya's removal, the speaker of Congress, Roberto Micheletti -
constitutionally second in line to the presidency - was sworn in as interim
leader.

II.

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0908/S00110.htm



Honduras and the WAO (World According to Obama) Factor
or How to sideline democracy, law, and international organisations – and
STILL hang in there...
By Julie Webb 
Pullman<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#a>

Just when you thought there were no more surprises in Latin America,
Micheletti’s maras (gangs) have come up with a new twist to an old tale –
‘discriminating’ death squads!

These guys don’t just go in boots and all maiming, torturing and killing
indiscriminately like their 70’s and 80’s counterparts. Which is not to say
that they haven’t, or won’t continue to, open fire indiscriminately when
they feel like it...but tough economic times like the present demand a more
responsible approach - too many deaths and disappearances would reduce the
exploitable workforce and further undermine the already-flailing economy.

The name of the Dirty War game in the 21st century is ‘selective targeting’
– just ask David
Murillo[1]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>,
Gustavo Mejia 
[2]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>,
Ricardo 
Castro[3]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>,
Carlos 
Reyes[4]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>
and
Osman 
Fajardo[5]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>
.

You have to ask them because they’re the ones who lived to tell the tale –
unlike at least nine others documented by international human rights
observers[6]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>,
or the 62 alleged by Honduran human rights organization, CODEH, to have been
murdered in the first 28 days of the
coup.[7]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>

Of course the Honduras military’s compliance – and violence - has nothing to
do with the millions paid in bribes to senior officers, as reported by Toni
Solo, or the “pills” being given to the grunts to stave off their hunger
pangs but which is rendering them “crazy”, the main ingredient of which is
probably a country equally irrelevant to the unfolding events in Honduras,
as history professor Miguel Tinker Salas recently
noted.[8]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>

While the military and police maras deal destruction, detention,
disappearance and death to selected opposition candidates, trade unionists,
leaders of social movements, independent judiciary, and even little
children, the Organisation of American States kowtows to whatever terms
Micheletti’s mob dictates to pied piper Arias, the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights belatedly announces a mission for a couple of weeks in the
future (enabling how many more attacks?), and the United Nations and their
peace-keeping forces are notable only by their absence. WAO, that’s
reassuring!

Even more reassuring is that Barack “The Hypocrisy’s on me” Obama wants us
to believe that acting ethically equals hypocrisy. According to his logic,
“collaboration” and “intervention” are mutually exclusive, and taking a
moral stand – impossible!

In the World According to Obama, having a bleeding great U.S. military base
slap in the middle of Honduras isn’t intervention.

In the World According to Obama, U.S. training, support of, and co-operation
with the military thugs now running Honduras isn’t intervention.

In the World According to Obama, bankrolling the Honduran coup through
programmes such as MCC, NED, and USAID
[9]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>
isn’t
intervention.

But withdrawing, in accordance with his own country’s laws and regulations,
military and economic “aid” to an illegal government imposed by a military
coup, is not only intervention – it’s hypocrisy! WAO!!

He must be right, or all those governments and international organisations
devoted to upholding human rights, the rule of law, and peace and justice
would already be doing something more than having talk-fests, to overthrow
this dictatorship of brute force and to protect Honduran citizens from
continued abuses...wouldn’t they?

How can we help Obama wage his War on Hypocrisy? First up, we can demand he
cut the crap, and immediately cut all U.S. support to the illegal government
of Micheletti and whoever illegally follows him, and unequivocally support
the unconditional return of the democratically-elected President, Manuel
Zelaya.

Second up, we can demand that he similarly supports national and
international efforts to ensure that all those involved in the coup, and in
the human rights abuses that have been perpetrated since, are held
accountable and brought to justice - and that the U.S. compensate the
victims and their families in recognition that Obama's failure to
immediately pull the plug on the coupsters enabled these continuing abuses.

Third, we can demand that he approve the establishment in the United States
of America of military bases of every country that has been subjected to
destabilisation by the U.S., threat to national security being the U.S.
justification for a military presence. In the interests of the War on
Hypocrisy, each of the following Latin American countries deserves such a
base, if they want them, having suffered a U.S. war or military action
either directly, or in conjunction with a proxy army: Guatemala, Haiti,
Peru, Dominican Republic, Cuba, Nicaragua, Grenada, Panama, El Salvador, and
Colombia[10]<http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/print.html?path=HL0908/S00110.htm#ftnote>
.

However hard I search my memory, I just cannot think of even ONE Latin
American country that has attacked, let alone threatened, the U.S. so
lastly, in the interests of the entire continent, we can demand that he shut
down all U.S. military bases in the Americas, other than in his own country

WAO, then he might be walking the talk!


*************

*FOOTNOTES:*

[1] Still imprisoned - David Murillo, an Evangelical Minister, was detained
after leaving the office of prominent Honduran human rights organization,
COFADEH, where he had filed a legal denunciation of the murder of his 19
year old son Isis at an anti-coup demonstration.
http://www.quixote.org/node/933

[2] Gustavo Mejia was imprisoned but later released – showed Quixote that
the last eight messages on his phone were anonymous death threats against
his children, trying to terrorize him into leaving the movement against
coup. Teachers in particular have received a lot of repression, he said.
“They tell us our days are numbered.” http://www.quixote.org/node/934

[3] Ricardo Castro was beaten, imprisoned, now released - a radio and TV
journalist for 28 years, he was pulled out of his clearly marked PRESS
vehicle in San Pedro Sula by police, who put a pistol in his mouth to
threaten him, then began beating him. When he pleaded for them to stop,
explaining that he had had back surgery, police threw him on the ground and
jumped on his back.http://www.quixote.org/node/893

[4] Carlos Reyes is a coordinator of the national front against the coup
d'etat and chair person of the trade union STIBYS, and an official,
non-party candidate in the presidential elections scheduled for November
this year. Reyes’ wounding follows an attack on the STIBYS offices where a
bomb was exploded after an anti-coup meeting on July 26. This bombing was
hard on the heels of the express warning of Billy Joya, “special security
adviser“to the coup government, that there were going to be bombs.
http://www.quixote.org/node/939

[5] Osman Fajardo was the judge assigned to follow up with the writs of
habeus corpus filed on behalf of those detained illegally in San Pedro Sula
on August 3rd 2009, who was threatened and assaulted by police when he
appeared at the police station to do his job.
http://www.quixote.org/node/934 <http://www.quixoteorg/node/934>

[6] Isis Obed Murillo Mencias, 19 years old. Gabriel Fino Noriega,
journalist from Radio Estelar, in the department of Atlántida, killed by 7
bullets on July 3rd, as he left his work. Ramón García, leader in the
Democratic Union (UD), forced off public transport when he was coming back
from a protest, and riddled with bullets in the area of Santa Bárbara. Roger
Iván Bados, former unión leader of the textile sector and current member of
the UD and Popular Bloque (BP), threatened with death immediately after the
coup, and shot to death after being pulled from his own house on July 11 in
San Pedro Sula. Vicky Hernández Castillo (Sonny Emelson Hernández), member
of the LGTB community, dead in San Pedro Sula from a gunshot to the eye.
Alexis Fernando Amador, dressed in a “4th Urn” T-shirt, found dead on
Saturday July 3 in the “Agua Blanca” area of Tegucigalpa. Roger Abraham
Vallejo Soriano, killed on Julio 29, 2009. Martin Florencio Rivera
Barrientes killed after leaving Rivera Barrientes’ wake. Pedro Magdiel,
killed in El Paraíso. http://www.quixote.org/node/934

[7]
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-kovalik/repression-escalates-in-h_b_250220.html

[8] Honduras is Only Part of the Story: The Conservative Counter-Attack in
Latin America http://www.counterpunch.org/salas08072009.html

[9]
http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/bill-conroy/2009/08/millennium-challenge-corp-poured-millions-honduras-months-leading-putsc
;http://www.counterpunch.org/hallinan08102009.html

[10] http://killinghope.org/bblum6/us-action.html

*************

*Julie Webb-Pullman (click to view previous
articles)<http://search.scoop.co.nz/search?q=Julie%20Webb-Pullman%20&b=Julie%20Webb-Pullman&sort_by=date>
is
a New Zealand based freelance writer who has reported about - and on
occasion from - Central America for Scoop since 2003. Send Feedback to
[email protected]*

*
*

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