Monday, June 28, 2010

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A year after the coup Spectacular Party in Honduras


Zelaya "confirms" that the U.S. was behind the coup, a year ago in Honduras
Everything indicates that "it was planned Palmerola military base, set up by Washington in 1984, he said.

Tegucigalpa. Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya accused from exile in the Dominican Republic to the U.S. State Department of being behind the coup that ousted him from power and his country on 28 June 2009.
"(...) We now know that what was suspected then confirmed: the United States was behind the coup," he said in a statement said that "one year after the military coup already have clarified the causes and the masterminds of this crime remained hidden. "
Although at first, the State Department "denied connection" Zelaya says that "all indications are that the coup was planned in Palmerola military base" established by Washington 1984, 70 km north of the Honduran capital.
According to the former president was elected by the Liberal Party (PL, right) and made a left turn, the coup was planned by the "U.S. Southern Command, and clumsily executed bad Hondurans."
Although the State Department "continues to deny this point, time and public support that the United States ended up giving the coup and who was executed by confirming their participation ended."
To Zelaya "the masterminds of this crime are due to a conspiracy of the old hawks in Washington with Honduran capital owners and their U.S. subsidiaries partners and funding agencies."
Zelaya Rosales believes the measures he took during his government, installed on 27 January 2006 "to relieve the backlog in Honduras (...) were losing his mind" to the Americans, because between these measures include the "plan recovery Palmerola military base to make it civil military airport ", the signature of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA), and that" in the assembly of the OAS in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, (2009) we withdraw decrees the expulsion of Cuba in 1962 "the regional body.
Zelaya criticized the decision to withdraw the ALBA Honduras, accounting follow the" mandate of Washington which prohibits "relationship with Chavez."
Meanwhile, a year of the coup, the countries of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) today demanded the government of Honduras to provide guarantees for the former president Manuel Zelaya, you can return to their country.
"The member countries of ALBA demand respect and guarantees for the democratic struggles of the Honduran people, to cease repression and political killings, and also that he is guaranteed to José Manuel Zelaya Rosales full political rights to return to their homeland," said a statement.
The document described the coup of June 28, 2009 as "a gross military operation kidnapping and exile" Zelaya, in retaliation for signing the integration of Honduras that make up the alliance, including Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia and Nicaragua.
added that after a year's military coup, "no one doubts remain about the participation of groups of U.S. power in this despicable operation


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The Constitutional guarantees most Statute of
A year after the coup in Honduras, new allegations of conspiracy
Sunday, June 27, 8.21 MARK STEVENSON

When first anniversary of the coup that ousted Manuel Zelaya, Honduras's new president warns some would like him to be the next to be ousted from power.
Porfirio Lobo said he was targeted by a new conspiracy organized by the same wealthy businessmen who supported the removal of Zelaya.
Lobo, an affluent landowner who supported the coup, surprised his own political party when he denounced a plot. "He who is all of you," he said.
The complaint, which was less than a month after the first anniversary of the coup which falls on Monday, laid bare the continuing instability in a country with a poor majority in which a few families make decisions.
"If they did it once, they can do it again," said Security Minister Oscar Alvarez said in an interview with The Associated Press.
A series of murders after the coup remain unresolved, including the killing of nine journalists, supporters and opponents of the government.
is difficult to determine what were the motives behind the killings in a country plagued by political tensions and violent drug gangs whose murderers to pay through the streets on motorcycles.
violence and allegations of conspiracies threaten to undermine the message the president has spent months selling the world: that Honduras is a thriving democracy, that should be accepted back into the Organization of American States, which suspended the country after the coup of June 28, 2009.
Although most countries have resumed relations with Honduras and both the U.S. and the European Union have resumed assistance projects worth $ 900 million, some Latin American leftist leaders have refused to accept the new government, arguing that the stroke represents a dangerous precedent.
Zelaya, who like Wolf came out of a class of wealthy landowners, angered the business elite in early 2009 with a campaign for a new constitution, which promised the poor that his voice would be heard by redesigning the future of country.
But when Zelaya ignored a Supreme Court order requiring him to cancel the referendum on the constitution, soldiers sent into exile in pajamas at gunpoint.
A year later, Wolf, who was elected in November and in January the government was part of the installed interim leadership to the coup, is now faced with the same tensions between rich and poor.
The new president, under pressure from the U.S. to promote reconciliation, has been criticized by employers and policy by referring to the output of Zelaya as a "coup" and saying he would not object to another attempt to install a Constituent Assembly.
Conservative sectors in Honduras claim that Zelaya was legally removed from office with the vote of Congress.
Tensions grew when Wolf reached agreement with farm workers who occupied thousands of hectares of palm oil plantations in the fertile valley Aguán.
"When members of the political and economic means entrepreneurs are beginning to talk like that, you have to take appropriate measures," Alvarez said, although the government has not taken steps beyond the public warning Lobo.
In an interview Friday with The Associated Press, Wolf himself dismissed the negative comments against him as "conspiracies cafeteria not going anywhere."
Still, lambasted the country's powerful business class, he has amassed his fortune primarily through assembly plants that export to the United States.
"The business community should begin to work harder for Honduras, and not be thinking about other things," said Lobo.

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