Honduras Coup Hangs Tough

By Thelma Mejia

Repression has been a trade mark of the military coup that took power on June 28th.
Repression has been a trade mark of the military coup that took power on June 28th.

HAVANA TIMES August 3 (IPS) — While it publicly declares its willingness to continue to engage in dialogue, the de facto regime led by Roberto Micheletti in Honduras is taking a hard-line approach to protests demanding the return of ousted President Manuel Zelaya. So far three people have been killed, around 100 have been injured, and 150 have been arrested and held for several hours or days.

In the 36 days since Zelaya was hauled out of bed by soldiers and put on a plane to Costa Rica, the authorities say 260 demonstrations, roadblocks and public sector strikes have been held around the country by the president’s supporters.

High school teacher Roger Vallejo, who was shot in the head when the police broke up a roadblock on Thursday in the capital, died after two days in intensive care. Another teacher, Martin Florencio Rivera, was stabbed to death after leaving Vallejo’s wake Saturday.

Both deaths are under investigation. The teachers’ union, which has been on strike, demanding Zelaya’s return, blamed the police for Vallejo’s death and urged the prosecutors to carry out a swift inquiry.

In the same police operation, activist Carlos Reyes’ arm was broken. Reyes plans to run as an independent presidential candidate in the general elections scheduled for Nov. 29.

Wake Monday, Funeral Tuesday for Teacher

Vallejo’s wake is being held at a high school, and the burial will take place on Tuesday, to give relatives from outside the capital time to arrive.

The wake has drawn large numbers of teachers, students, social activists and members of the general public.

At the wake, the leaders of the Resistance Front against the Coup d’Etat announced a six-day march that will set out Wednesday from different parts of the country and converge on the two biggest cities: Tegucigalpa, and San Pedro Sula in the north.

The plan is to form two large groups of demonstrators to demand the restoration of the constitutional government.

The first protester to be killed was 19-year-old Isis Obed Murillo, who was shot by the security forces at Tegucigalpa airport on Jul. 5 when Zelaya’s attempt to return to the country by plane was thwarted by the military.

A leader of the teachers’ union, Lina Pineda, told IPS that “we never imagined that the break-up of the roadblock (where Vallejo was killed) would be so violent. They surrounded the demonstrators and began to lob tear gas canisters at them and beat several leaders with their nightsticks, while others were taken to police posts, although they were released shortly after.”

Pineda said that although the police had warned in a July 29 communiqué that they would not tolerate any more roadblocks “because we were hurting the economy and the country’s powerful elites, we never thought that warning was going to end in tragic violent incidents like the death of our colleague Vallejo.”

“We are going to use the authority given to us by law; people have the right to hold peaceful protests, but not to block other rights,” police spokesman Orlin Cerrato told IPS, referring to occupations of buildings and traffic blockades.

Micheletti Promises Iron Fist

Over the weekend, the de facto regime lifted the curfew in place for nearly a month, except along the border with Nicaragua, where a 6:00 PM to 6:00 AM curfew remains in place.

Hundreds of Zelaya supporters have crossed into Nicaragua, where the leader has spent much of his time over the last two weeks near the Honduran border.

Micheletti said Monday that “we are going to restore order and control; we will not allow the economy to be further damaged, and we will not permit violence on the part of protesters; we are going to enforce the law.”

Local and international human rights groups have called for respect for constitutional guarantees in the border zones, and for measures to protect human rights defenders and social activists.

From his center of operations on Nicaragua’s northern border, Zelaya lamented Vallejo’s death and announced that “peaceful people’s militias” have started to be trained by his supporters on several estates in the Nicaraguan region of Ocotal, 25 km from the Honduran border post at Las Manos in the southeastern Honduran province of El Paraíso.

Arias Continues Effort to Mediate

On Monday, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, who has been brokering talks between Zelaya and the de facto regime, planned to meet with Organization of American States Secretary General Jose Miguel Insulza, Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega, and Enrique Iglesias, head of the Organization of Ibero-American States secretariat.

Micheletti praised the meeting between Arias and Iglesias, and asked that the latter be sent to Honduras as a foreign envoy, to meet with different political and social sectors to discuss the crisis and Arias’s 11-point compromise proposal, which includes the return of Zelaya as president and a political amnesty.

In the meantime, Zelaya has begun to send out signals that he is interested in returning to the talks with Arias, after meeting last week in Managua with U.S. ambassador to Honduras Hugo Llorens and State Department officials.

Although the results of the meeting were not reported, remarks to the Honduran press by Zelaya’s foreign minister Patricia Rodas indicate that Llorens insisted on another round of talks mediated by Arias.

Time Is On the Coup Leaders Side

“The more time that goes by, the stronger we become,” deputy foreign minister of the de facto regime, Martha Lorena Alvarado, told a local TV station Sunday night. “But we are willing to engage in any dialogue that respects our constitution, and we believe that although the international pressure has been strong, we have the unity needed to withstand it, without abandoning the negotiations.”

The regime boasts that it has survived the first month, despite the international pressure and isolation: no foreign government has recognized the de facto government, the EU and Latin American countries have withdrawn their ambassadors, and the U.S. and EU have suspended millions of dollars in aid.

According to the head of the industrialists’ association, Adolfo Facussé, “things are settling down here, and we have begun to make contact with foreign investors who were not interested in coming to the country before.

“We are channeling investments of nearly 500 million dollars from Canadian and U.S. business interests, and I think Zelaya is waging a struggle that makes no sense,” Facussé told IPS.

“From outside the country, they want to impose on us a president who is not popular domestically, and if he comes, he won’t make it, he won’t be able to govern, because no one is behind him,” he argued.

Zelaya, a wealthy rancher who was elected as the centre-right Liberal Party candidate, veered to the left after taking office in 2006, alienating the country’s conservative elites, the military, the courts and the legislature.

The coup was precipitated by his attempt to hold a non-binding referendum asking voters whether they wanted to elect a constituent assembly to redraft the constitution. In the days leading up to the coup, the courts ruled that the referendum was illegal, Zelaya sacked the armed forces commander for refusing to distribute the ballot boxes for the vote, scheduled for June 28, and Zelaya refused to reinstate the military chief after the Supreme Court ordered him to do so.

3 thoughts on “Honduras Coup Hangs Tough

  • Assuming the basic veracity of the first commentator — they must have moved in very rarified circles indeed.

  • I’ve just returned to the US after spending 3 months traveling around Honduras. I am outraged by the one-sided coverage I see in the US media. Everyone I talked to about the situation, from taxi and bus drivers to people in the grocery stores were in favor of the new, duly elected by congress President. The media terminology stinks. It is not a coup, Zelaya is not the President in exile and he was not deposed by the military, though they did, on orders from the government, take Zelaya out of the country.

    The vast majority of Hondurans agree that this is a matter for the Honduran people to resolve. Zelaya was removed by the Supreme Court of Honduras and in accordance with the constitution of Honduras. Something not often reported is that Micheletti is a member of the same party as Zelaya and was endorsed by him for the next presidential election. If Zelaya was content to relinquish the presidency as required by the constitution of Honduras, none of this would have happened.

  • 1: Far more than 3 have been murdered in Honduras, just by taking confirmed/assumed deathsquad crimes into account. Not like the cuban media isn’t pointing these crimes out either. There also seems to be a marked tendency on the Left everywhere, to follow the lead of the imperialist mass-media in the [non-]recognition of deathsquad crimes & activity. This, of course, is a fatal & fundamental strategic error continually made by the reformist Left, primarily. But no surpise there.

    2: Why are Arias & Insulza even in the picture now? They should never have been in this process in the 1st place. For Zelaya to continue dealing with these yanqui stooges sends out the strong signal that the honduran people’s Constituent Assembly is ‘negotiable’ –i.e. eminently jettisonable at the first opportunity– and thus WILL be jettisoned, simply in the interests of getting Mel Zelaya back in the country. The point however very much is the CA — not Mel’s return.

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