[What a huge shift from the day of September 11 1973, when democratically
elected Chilean President Salvador Allende was deposed in a military coup
led by General Pinochet. Allende would commit suicide before being captured.
And hundreds of thousands of Chileans would be at the receiving end of the
brutal Pinochet regime.

Also a very significant shift from the days of aborted coup in Venezuela in
April 2002.]

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20091030/tts-uk-honduras-ca02f96.html

Honduras' Zelaya set to return to power

Friday, October 30 08:49 am
[image: 
Reuters]<http://uk.rd.yahoo.com/reutersonline/SIG=114rh0n4s/**http%3A%2F%2Fwww.reuters.co.uk%2F>
Sean
Mattson

Honduras' de facto government has accepted a deal that opens the door for
the return to power of President Manuel Zelaya, toppled in a military coup
four months ago.Skip related
content<http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20091030/tts-uk-honduras-ca02f96.html?printer=1#ynw-article-part2>

The breakthrough late Thursday followed renewed pressure from senior U.S.
officials who travelled to Honduras this week for a last-ditch effort to end
a crisis that has given U.S.
President<http://uk.news.yahoo.com/fc/george-bush.html> Barack
Obama a foreign policy headache.

"It is a triumph for Honduran democracy," the leftist Zelaya said after the
rival sides agreed to a deal that he said should see him restored to office
in the coming days.

Congress still needs to approve his return, but Zelaya said he did not
expect any new setbacks. "This is a first step. My reinstatement is
imminent, I'm optimistic," he told Reuters.

Zelaya was toppled and sent into exile on June 28 but crept back into
Honduras last month and has since been holed up in the Brazilian embassy
with Honduran troops surrounding the building and his rivals demanding his
arrest and trial.

De facto leader Roberto Micheletti, who took over the country within hours
of Zelaya's ouster, had repeatedly refused to step aside to let the leftist
return, but he softened his position Thursday.

"I have authorized my negotiating team to sign a deal that marks the
beginning of the end of the country's political situation," Micheletti told
reporters Thursday night.

He said Zelaya could return to office after a vote in Congress that would be
authorized by the country's Supreme Court. The deal would also require both
sides to recognise the result of a November 29 presidential election and
would transfer control of the army to the top electoral court.

If approved by Congress, Zelaya would be able to finish out his presidential
term, which ends in January.

Micheletti said the deal will create a truth commission to investigate the
events of the last few months, and would ask foreign governments to reverse
punitive measures like suspending aid and cancelling the travel visas of
prominent figures involved in the coup and the de facto government.

END OF ISOLATION

The United States, the European
Union<http://uk.news.yahoo.com/fc/european-union.html>
 and Latin American <http://uk.news.yahoo.com/fc/latin-america.html> leaders
had all insisted Zelaya be allowed to finish his term and they threatened
not to recognise the winner of the November election unless democracy was
first restored.

A U.S. team led by Assistant Secretary of State Tom Shannon and Dan
Restrepo, Washington's special assistant for Western Hemisphere affairs, sat
in on talks earlier in the day and warned that time was running out to reach
a deal.

The coffee-producing Central American country has been diplomatically
isolated since Zelaya was rousted at dawn by soldiers on June 28 and flown
to exile on a military plane.

Zelaya had angered many in Honduras by becoming an ally of socialist
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Critics also alleged he was seeking
backing to extend presidential term limits, a claim he denies.

Human rights <http://uk.news.yahoo.com/fc/human-rights.html> groups have
documented major abuses by the de facto government and say free and fair
elections would be impossible after Micheletti curbed civil liberties and
temporarily shut down pro-Zelaya news organizations.

Obama cut some aid to Honduras after the coup but had been criticized by
some Latin American for not doing more to force the de facto government to
back down. At home, however, some Republicans accused him of doing too much
for Zelaya.

The collapse of talks last week prompted Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
to dispatch the U.S. delegation to push again for a negotiated settlement.

(Additional reporting by Gustavo Palencia in Tegucigalpa; Writing by Jason
Lange; Editing by Kieran Murray)

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