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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 03:01 PM
Original message
US revokes more visas to pressure Honduran solution
Source: Reuters

WASHINGTON, Oct 21 (Reuters) - The United States has revoked the visas of more Hondurans to pressure the facto government to end a three-month political crisis, a U.S. official said on Wednesday.

....

State Department spokesman Charles Luoma-Overstreet said the department had canceled visas for "a number of Hondurans who are members and/or supporters of the de facto regime."

"This action is a reflection of the seriousness and urgency with which the U.S. government takes the need for the de facto regime to reach an agreement with President Zelaya to restore the democratic order," Luoma-Overstreet said.

.................

The army blasted the embassy with loud recordings of rock music, army marching tunes, pig grunts and church bells for six hours beginning shortly after midnight on Wednesday, said a Reuters witness inside the compound.

Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN21494080



Loud recordings of PIG GRUNTS?? :rofl: Yeah, pig grunts, that will bring down the walls!! :rofl:

The assault of democracy has escalated to a new level of absurdity! How the Pigs are broadcasting their grunts.
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 03:07 PM
Response to Original message
1. Honduras regime harasses Brazil embassy, talks stall
21 October 2009 - http://www.france24.com/en/node/4906730


AFP - Honduras' de facto regime blared loud music at the Brazilian embassy to intensify pressure on deposed President Manuel Zelaya, as talks on the months-long crisis were in limbo Wednesday.

....

Dialogue between the two sides stalled Tuesday, when a Zelaya representative described proposals offered by the de facto government as "insulting."

The talks are blocked on the issue of whether Zelaya would return to office before November 29 presidential polls. .....

Micheletti has suggested that the Supreme Court -- which accused Zelaya of 18 crimes ahead of the coup -- should decide whether the ousted leader can be briefly reinstated, a proposal which Zelaya has rejected.

International observers, including the country's key backer the United States, have threatened not to recognize the polls if Zelaya does not return to office beforehand......
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clear eye Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 03:09 PM
Response to Original message
2. This is encouraging,. Many doubted the U.S. was serious
Edited on Wed Oct-21-09 03:09 PM by clear eye
in its demand for a return to elected rule. I hope the duly elected President, Zelaya, won't be traded away in exchange for holding elections. He was about to make some real headway in much needed reductions of economic inequality in Honduras. Even the International Development Bank has said that a big obstacle to bettering the economies of Latin America is the enormity of economic inequality, and praised its reduction in Venezuela.

I wish Pres. Obama were listening to the economists to whom the IDB is.
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Vidar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 03:41 PM
Response to Original message
3. Better than nothing--barely.
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 03:43 PM
Response to Original message
4.  COMIC frames overthrow of president in relation to century of US skullduggery
Edited on Wed Oct-21-09 03:44 PM by L. Coyote
'Comic' retells Honduran coup and Manuel Zelaya arrest
Graphic history frames overthrow of president in relation to century of US skullduggery in central America
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/oct/21/comic-graphic-history-honduras-coup


At first glance it could be a children's comic – but in fact it's a journalistic take on the Honduran crisis with an attention to context that puts conventional media coverage to shame.

The Honduran Coup, A Graphic History by Dan Archer and Nikil Saval frames the overthrow of the president, Manuel Zelaya, in relation to a century of US skullduggery in central America.

Most media reports go back only to June this year when conservative opponents ousted the leftist leader because he was getting cosy with Venezuela's Hugo Chávez.

With a leftist slant, Archer, a "comix journalist and instructor" at Stanford University, and Saval, a PhD candidate at Stanford, zip through the main events: Zelaya's arrest and exile, ....

...........
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 05:45 PM
Response to Original message
5. Honduras de facto government hardens stance as U.S. cuts visas
Honduras de facto government hardens stance as U.S. cuts visas
Wed Oct 21, 2009 5:39pm EDT - Mica Rosenberg - http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE59K68720091021


TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) .... Micheletti's caretaker government also imposed restrictions on street protests .... Overnight, the caretaker government sent the army to play loud rock music, military band tunes, church bells and recordings of pig grunts ......

The Organization of American States, which convened the latest talks between Zelaya and Micheletti's camps, condemned the actions -- sparking a swift rebuke from Micheletti's government.

"We are very worried about the situation at the Brazilian Embassy," OAS head Jose Miguel Insulza said in Washington. "The problem is hostile gestures, loud noises at night, provocations ... we will continue denouncing this treatment," Insulza said.

...........

On Wednesday, Honduran police announced restrictions on protests, saying they must be authorized by the government 24 hours in advance with a request detailing the people in charge and the time and route the march will take, in an effort to quell near daily rallies in favor of Zelaya.

The U.S. State Department has suspended the visas of senior figures that backed the coup, spokesman Charles Luoma-Overstreet said ... "This action is a reflection of the seriousness and urgency with which the U.S. government takes the need for the de facto regime to reach an agreement with President Zelaya to restore the democratic order," he said.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 09:16 PM
Response to Original message
6. Return democracy to Honduras
Return democracy to Honduras
By Doug Cassel

October 22, 2009

Latin America has had more than its fill of coups d'etat. Lest we turn back the clock to a bygone era of might makes right, the latest Latin coup -- the forcible overthrow in June of Manuel Zelaya, the democratically elected president of Honduras -- must not be permitted to stand.

In enacting the Inter-American Democratic Charter in 2001, the Organization of American States committed itself to a new era of democracy. It authorized its governing body to suspend from membership any country where there is an "unconstitutional alteration of the democratic order." After Zelaya's ouster, the OAS swiftly -- and rightly -- suspended Honduras by a vote of 33-0.

The OAS thus joined the United Nations and every government in the hemisphere in condemning the coup. The Obama administration has made it clear that the U.S. supports the international consensus. While wisely deferring to the OAS to lead diplomatic efforts to restore Zelaya to office, Washington has suspended aid to Honduras and canceled the visas of leading coup supporters.

Apologists for the coup -- in Honduras and the U.S. Congress -- grasp at constitutional straws to claim that the overthrow of Zelaya was somehow lawful.

The facts belie their claim. President Zelaya was seized by the Honduran military in the early morning hours of June 28 and forced, pajama clad, onto a flight to Costa Rica. Coup supporters now acknowledge that this was a "mistake." In fact, it was much worse: The constitution of Honduras forbids expatriating any citizen, let alone the elected president, to another country.

Defenders of the coup argue that Zelaya was a menace to Honduran democracy and was scheming to amend the constitution to allow his re-election. At the time of his ouster, criminal charges had been filed against him, and a judge had supposedly ordered the military to arrest him.

If so, the proper course was to give him his day in court. Instead, hours after the army forcibly exiled him, the Honduran Congress purported to depose him. It had no power to do so. Although the constitution formerly authorized Congress to bring impeachment proceedings against a president, an amendment in 2003 removed that power.

More:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-oped1022hondurasoct22,0,4486627.story
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-21-09 09:26 PM
Response to Original message
7. Brazil denounces 'torture' of its embassy in Honduras
Brazil denounces 'torture' of its embassy in Honduras
Irish Sun
Wednesday 21st October, 2009
(IANS)



Brazil Wednesday at the Organisation of American States (OAS) denounced the 'situation of torture' that the de facto government in Honduras is imposing on the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa.

The building has become the centre of the political crisis in Honduras after ousted President Manuel Zelaya returned to his country and took refuge in the embassy, months after a June coup.

'Brazil asks the international community to condemn these actions unequivocally and forcefully and reserves for itself the right to launch before the relevant international organs initiatives to punish those responsible,' said Brazil's Ambassador to the OAS Ruy Casaes.

Before the OAS Permanent Council, Casaes stressed that measures against the building constitute 'an attack on human dignity.'

The Brazilian embassy - which currently holds about 40 people - is being subjected to 'severe intimidation and demoralisation measures which are tantamount to torture,' Casaes said in Washington.

Zelaya was ousted from power and sent into exile June 28. On Sep 21 he secretly returned to the country and sought refuge in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa, where he had remained since then.

Casaes denounced the application of 'new forms of psychic torture' in recent days, including the use at night of two very powerful lamps directed at Zelaya's room.

More:
http://story.irishsun.com/index.php/ct/9/cid/2411cd3571b4f088/id/556712/cs/1/
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 12:18 AM
Response to Reply #7
8. "Sirs, we are being assailed by loud pig grunts"
Gabriel Garcia Marquez could not have made this up, and yet it is reality in Latin America today.

I don't know how the coup could have found a better way to declare their illegitimacy than broadcasting pig grunts!!!
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 02:35 AM
Response to Reply #8
11. Hondurans can NEVER take them as serious leaders of their government,
knowing that in addition to operating with no respect for Honduran citizens, they have lied to the world, have committed political assassinations, have ordered their police and military
to beat, terrorize, mangle, torture dissenters of all ages, both sexes who were just unlucky enough to be in their line of vision, have rushed into their houses, hauled them off to prison with no legal justification, have stormed into hospitals and seized people they injured in the streets, carried them out and brutalized them again, and are presently crudely, coarsely, childishly mocking the people who are inside the Brazilian embassy.

They've gone beyond behaving like bloodthirsty monsters, to acting like drooling idiots, and vicious small town bullies.

They are thumbing their noses at the world, daring anyone to come in and do something about it, so smugly safe, apparently, behind their armed forces and police they have commandeered by declaring themselves rulers of the kingdom.

I can't believe there is ultimately NO power higher than these greedy, amoral, treacherous thieves.
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 02:13 PM
Response to Reply #11
13. Just watched Berma VJ
Burma VJ
http://www.unaff.org/2009/f_burma.html

The Junta won by brutal force of arms. This cycle repeats again and again.

That's why this film's topic is so important:
THE RECKONING: THE BATTLE FOR THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT (Colombia/Congo/Sudan/Uganda)
http://www.unaff.org/2009/f_reckoning.html

At some point the Global Community must contend with counter-democracy criminalty.
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 12:21 AM
Response to Original message
9. Censorship Continues in Honduras, Press Group Says
Censorship Continues in Honduras, Press Group Says
http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=345938&CategoryId=23558


PARIS – Censorship continues in Honduras despite the de facto regime’s decision to allow two anti-coup outlets to resume broadcasting, Reporters Without Borders said Wednesday.

“Neither the official lifting of the 28 September state of siege nor the resumption of broadcasting by Radio Globo and Canal 36 (television) means that the rule of law has been restored in Honduras,” the Paris-based organization, known as RSF, said in a statement.

The press freedom watchdog noted that while the de facto regime allowed Globo and Canal 36 to return to the airwaves on Oct. 19, an Oct. 7 decree gives authorities the right to suspend any program or media outlet “fomenting social anarchy.”

RSF described the decree as directly aimed at the few media outlets to oppose the June 28 ouster and expulsion of President Mel Zelaya, who slipped back into Honduras on Sept. 21 and remains holed up at the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa.

“This provision constitutes a real threat to pluralism, an incentive to self-censorship and an additional mechanism for polarizing the media and public opinion,” RSF said.

............
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 12:38 AM
Response to Original message
10. Armed Forced Day celebration: "Filthy rat, crawling animal, scum of all life ..."
Embassy occupants in Honduras: Army tunes torture
By JUAN CARLOS LLORCA (AP) – 3 hours ago - http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jAkMGKIUDg_ngUiZboxQbYj5_DPwD9BFROEO1


TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Ousted President Manuel Zelaya, who is holed up with a group of 30 supporters at the Brazilian Embassy in Honduras, complained Wednesday about loud music blasted by soldiers posted around the diplomatic compound.

Soldiers "are using powerful sound systems that can be heard from 20 blocks away. ... We can't fall asleep," Zelaya told a news conference.

Army chief of staff Gen. Romeo Vazquez denied claims of harassment, saying the all-night broadcast was a "serenade" intended to celebrate the country's Armed Forces day holiday.

The playlist of tunes that stretched from after midnight into Wednesday morning included the song "Two-legged Rat," an ode to an ex-boyfriend made famous by Mexican songstress Paquita La del Barrio. Its lyrics begin, "Filthy rat, crawling animal, scum of all life ..." and get worse from there.

A statement from Organization of American States General-Secretary Jose Miguel Insulza expressed concern about "increased harassment" of the embassy, especially at night.

.............
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 10:54 AM
Response to Original message
12. One-Sided Reporting on Latin America: Small Oversights and Big Lies
October 22, 2009
One-Sided Reporting on Latin America
Small Oversights and Big Lies
By ERIC TOUSSAINT

It may be useful to assess the dangers of the systematically hostile attitude of the overwhelming majority of major European and North American media companies in relation to the current events taking place in Ecuador, Bolivia and Venezuela. This hostility is only matched by an embarrassed, complicit silence with regard to those involved in the putsch in Honduras or the repression enacted by the Peruvian army against the indigenous populations of the Amazon.

In order to demonstrate this statement, here are a few recent facts:

1) On 5 June 2009, the Peruvian army massacred over 50 Amazonian Indians who were protesting against the land concessions made by Alan Garcia’s government for foreign, mainly European transnational companies. The repression aroused no disapproval among the major global media groups. These groups gave almost exclusive priority to the protests occurring in Iran. Not only did the press fail to condemn the repression in Peru; it did not even bother to cover the story. And yet in Peru, so great was public discontent that the government had to announce the repeal of the presidential decree which the Amazonian Indians had fought against.

Once again, media coverage of the government’s backtracking was almost non-existent. We must ask ourselves the following question: if a Venezuelan or Ecuadorian army or police intervention had caused the deaths of dozens of Amazonian Indians, what kind of media coverage would such events have received?

2) When the constitutionally elected president Manuel Zelaya was ousted by the military on 28 June, the overwhelming majority of media groups declared, in total contradiction of the truth, that the soldiers were reacting to Zelaya’s attempt to modify the constitution, thus ensuring he could remain in power. Several other media groups added that he was following the example of Hugo Chavez, who is presented as an authoritarian populist leader. In fact, Manuel Zelaya was proposing to the Honduran citizens that they vote in favour of the organization of general elections for a Constituent Assembly, which would have represented real democratic progress being made in this country. This is well explained by Cécile Lamarque and Jérôme Duval on their return from a CADTM mission in Honduras: “The coup d’Etat was carried out on the same day Manuel Zelaya had organized a non-binding “consultation” asking the Hondurans whether or not they wanted to convene a National Constituent Assembly, after the elections which were due to take place on the 29 November 2009. The question went like this: “Do you agree that at the next general elections of 2009, a fourth ballot box be installed so as to allow for the people to express their point of view on the convocation of a national Constituent Assembly? YES or NO?” If this consultation had resulted in the majority voting “yes”, the president would have issued a decree of approval before Congress so that, on 29 November, the Hondurans would formally make known their decision on the convocation of a Constituent Assembly through this “fourth ballot box” (the first three ballot boxes would be for the election of a president, deputies and mayors, respectively).

In order to give an air of legality to the coup, Congress and the Supreme Court, associated with the putsch, deemed the ballot box to be illegal and asserted that president Zelaya had “violated the Constitution” by trying to modify it “so as to set his sights on serving a new mandate”, in the manner of an “apprentice Chavist dictator”. And yet, Manuel Zelaya, through this consultation with the people, was not seeking to renew his presidential mandate of four years which cannot be renewed. Zelaya would therefore be unable to be a candidate for his own succession.”

Whilst the popular movements opposing those involved in the Putsch increased, with protests and strikes in July, August and September, the big media names only dedicated a couple of lines to these events. On the rare occasions when the leading daily newspapers dedicated a feature article to the situation in Honduras, they adopted a policy of slander against the constitutionally elected president by presenting the military’s actions as a democratic military coup. This is the case with The Wall Street Journal, which in its editorial on 1 July 2009 wrote, “the military coup d’Etat which took place in Honduras on June 28th and which led to the exile of the president of this central American country, Manuel Zelaya, is strangely democratic.” The editorial adds, “the legislative and judicial authorities will remain intact” following military action.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/toussaint10222009.html
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 02:18 PM
Response to Original message
14. Coup's Impact on Honduran Women
Coup's Impact on Honduran Women
Margaret Knapke | October 22, 2009 - http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/6518


Ms. Magazine's inaugural cover featured President Obama in Superman pose, ripping open his suit coat and dress shirt to reveal a T-shirt that proclaims: "This is what a feminist looks like." Photoshop tricks aside, Honduran women need this to be true. They need the Obama administration to fully grasp the plight of Honduran women and their families and act decisively on their behalf.

Since the June 28, 2009 coup that ousted President Manuel Zelaya from office, the de facto regime has tried to stanch the flow of incriminating information coming from Honduras. But human rights organizations and grassroots delegations keep working to focus the Obama administration's gaze on the dire situation, particularly for Honduran women.
Mourning, Organizing

The Committee of Relatives of the Detained and Disappeared of Honduras (COFADEH) began investigating abuses immediately after the coup, searching hospitals and jails. Their July 15 report documents 1155 human rights violations during the first two weeks of the coup. These include 1046 illegal detentions, 59 beatings, 27 assaults on reporters and the independent press, and four executions. Three of those killed are named: Isis Obed Murillo Mencías (19-years-old), Gabriel Fino Noriega (radio-journalist), and Caso Ramon Garcia.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) issued their first and most comprehensive report on the Honduran crisis on August 21. Consistent with COFADEH's findings, the IACHR charged the coup government with "disproportionate use of public force, arbitrary detentions, and the control of information aimed at limiting political participation by a sector of the citizenry."

................
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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 02:22 PM
Response to Original message
15. Guardian: Honduran forces blast recordings of sound effects outside Brazilian embassy
Basically, a repeat of Reuters, but at least they are running a story

=====================
Honduran forces blast recordings of sound effects outside Brazilian embassy
Ousted president Manuel Zelaya, who has taken refuge at the embassy, claims soldiers are launching an aural assault

* Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondent
* guardian.co.uk, Thursday 22 October 2009 17.18 BST - http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/oct/22/honduras-zelaya-brazil-embassy-music

Honduran soldiers have blasted recordings of pig grunts and other sound effects at the embassy in which the ousted president, Manuel Zelaya, is holed up.

The acoustic bombardment, which included recordings of church bells, rock music and military tunes, appeared designed to intimidate Zelaya and around 30 supporters who have sheltered since last month in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa. The deposed leader said the noise amounted to "torture" and was another violation of human rights by coup leaders who seized power in June. "It can be heard from 20 blocks away. We can't fall asleep," he told a news conference.

.............

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L. Coyote Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-22-09 04:14 PM
Response to Original message
16. Documentary on Honduras resistance -- ONLINE -- where to screen it?
Documentary on Honduras resistance -- where to screen it?
by Johannes Wilm
Thursday Oct 22nd, 2009 11:19 AM - http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/10/22/18626374.php

My documentary on students in resistance against coup in Honduras is available online and I'm still looking for more places in the US to show it. Please contact me if you have suggestions.

spanish.gif
spanish.gif

This documentary "The young Honduran revolution" was made by me, Johannes Wilm, German-Danish activist. While working for the revolutionary Nicaraguan government I snuck across the border to Honduras in early August to document the resistance movement in the neighboring Central American republic, after a military coup had overthrown Leftist president Manuel Zelaya on June 28th.

By coincidence I document how for the first time in nearly thirty years the majority of students rise up against the police in a battle of 3000 students fighting police on the campus of the Autonomous University of Honduras in Tegucigalpa on August 5th.

The documentary shows where the student leaders come from, what their analysis of the current situation is, what plans they have for changing it, and what perspective for the future they see both for them personally and for the country at large. It is 90 minutes long and it is made in Spanish with English subtitles.

It is available to be seen online here:

http://www.archive.org/details/LaJovenRevolucionHondurena

It also has a Facebook-page here:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/La-Joven-Revolucion-Hondurena-The-Young-Honduran-Revolution/299251940113?ref=ts

It has so far been shown in various cities in the south west and in 12 countries in Latin America. It has been featured by a number of Latin American magazines and in the US by the Monthly Review and the Upside Down World site. It will be shown in Los Angeles at the "Human Rights Film Festival" on the 23rd of October and in San Diego at the City Heights Free Skool on the 24th, then in Hermosillo, Sonora where it will be shown to journalist students of Kino University on the 27th and to other students at the University of Sonora on the 29th. In Arizona where it will be shown amongst other places at the U of A on the 9th of November and at ASU in Phoenix on the 4th. At UC Berkley the SDS will present it at the end of November.

http://www.archive.org/details/LaJovenRevolucionHondurena
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