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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8390654.stm

Honduran Congress votes down Zelaya's reinstatement

Congress in Honduras has voted overwhelmingly against allowing ousted
President Manuel Zelaya to serve out the last two months of his term.

Of the 125 members of Congress present, 111 voted against his reinstatement.

Mr Zelaya, who was removed from office in June, told the BBC the
decision "ratifies the coup" and meant Hondurans were "living in
illegality".

The former leader has also condemned Sunday's presidential elections,
won by Conservative politician Porfirio Lobo.

After Congress voted not to reinstate him to serve out his term, which
ends on 27 January, Mr Zelaya said: "This decision ratifies a coup and
condemns Honduras to continue living in illegality."

As lawmakers debated, security forces kept back dozens of Zelaya
supporters who were protesting outside the building.

"We'll continue the fight because it is not only for the reinstatement
of Mel Zelaya but also for the restoration of democracy," one
demonstrator, Irma Flores, told BBC Mundo.

'No solution'

Several Latin American nations, including regional power Brazil,
refused to recognise Sunday's elections and insisted they would not
restore diplomatic ties unless Mr Zelaya was reinstated.

However, the US, which is Honduras's most important trading partner,
said the poll was an important first step towards ending the crisis.

Mr Zelaya has been inside the Brazilian embassy in the capitial,
Tegucigalpa, since secretly returning from exile in September.

"I'll stay in the Brazilian embassy fighting for this dictatorship to
be condemned, and now against the electoral fraud committed on Sunday.
The elections are no solution for the country," Mr Zelaya said.

Mr Lobo, who lost to Mr Zelaya in the 2005 election, has pledged to
form a unity government and seek dialogue.

Mr Lobo also urged the international community to "understand the
Honduran reality and stop punishing the country".

The interim president, Roberto Micheletti, was meanwhile set to return
to office after absenting himself from the post while elections were
held.

Mr Zelaya was forced into exile on 28 June after trying to hold a vote
on whether a constituent assembly should be set up to look at
rewriting the constitution.

His critics said the vote, which was ruled illegal by the Supreme
Court, aimed to remove the current one-term limit on serving as
president and pave the way for his possible re-election.

Mr Zelaya has repeatedly denied this and pointed out that it would
have been impossible to change the constitution before his term in
office was up.

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