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Posts Tagged ‘military intervention

Democracy Now! has an interview up with Honduran president, Manual Zelaya. It’s definitely worth a listen.

An excerpt:

JUAN GONZALEZ: Mr. President, your opponents who engineered the coup claim that you were trying to subvert the constitution of 1982. What were you trying to do with the referendum that you were holding and is it true that as they say, your were trying to illegally extend your term?

MANUAL ZELAYA:[translated] That is completely false. In Honduras we do not have reelections and I never intended to be reelected. That will be a matter for another government, another constitution and another Constituent Assembly. The Popular Consultation is a survey, just like the Gallup one does or other polling groups. It does not create rights. It has no power to impose. It is not obligatory, its an opinion poll. How could this be a motive for a coup d’etat? No one has tried to me. I was expelled by force by the military. This is an argument made up by the coup plotters. Don’t believe them.

AMY GOODMAN: Mr. President, the United States has not cut off aid to Honduras. Do you think they should because of the coup?

MANUAL ZELAYA:[translated] We only have humanitarian aid coming from the United States the U.S. held up military aid, our officials in Washington have been replaced because they left with the coup. They were changed yesterday. And all of the U.S.’s messages have been consistent with the firm condemnation of the coup and supporting democracy in Latin America.

s-demint-largeAnd just to add one more layer to the confusion: Sen. Jim DeMint, a Republican senator from South Carolina, has come out in support of the coup. And strangely enough, his reasoning sounds very similar to that of Honduran bloggers.

via Huffington Post:

Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) has come out in support of the military coup in Honduras, chastising President Obama in a statement for what he calls “a slap in the face to the people” of that country.

From his statement:

“The people of Honduras have struggled too long to have their hard-won democracy stolen from them by a Chavez-style dictator. The Honduran Congress, the Honduran Supreme Court, and the Honduran military have acted in accordance to the Honduran constitution and the rule of law. [...]

“I am hopeful that as President Obama grows in office, he will eventually turn away from despots like Ahmadinejad, Chavez, Castro, and Zelaya, and give the United States’ full-throated support to the people of any country who are fighting for the same values we cherish and defend in America. The people fighting for freedom around the world, in Iran and Honduras, should never have to wonder which side America will choose between freedom and tyranny.

“President Obama’s call for the reinstatement of Zelaya is a slap in the face to the people of Honduras. And the resolution written by the Organization of American States tramples over the hopes and dreams of a free and democratic people.

“The rule of law is working in Honduras. President Obama should not undermine the democratic institutions that guarantee freedom by forcing an illegitimate President back into power.

The big question now appears to be, who gets listened to in this case? Latino congressional members say boo! on coup. White conservative members say yay! Honduras appears to be saying yay as well, but the entire rest of world leaders say boo. Nobody likes the evil socialists, so capitalists say boo, but social justice people think that socialism is the lesser of two evils–so they say yay.

Everybody is screaming “rule of law”–but in Latin American nobody really has any clue what that means, and Indigenous peoples wish we would all shut up and get the hell out.

What is to be done?

Yes, Latin@’s you have stumped my ass again.

We’ve been talking a lot here at VL about the many strange “truths” of the Honduran coup–and then I came across this post by Latina Lista. It is a blog post written by a blogger in Honduras, and she presents a completely different version of what the coup means to Hondurans. It makes things much clearer to me.

An excerpt:

I have not seen any US media outlet show coverage of the tens of thousands who gathered yesterday in support of the new government. A friend commented on the remarkably one-sided coverage of the crisis, “A few hundred rioters throwing rocks at soldiers and the police and water cannon makes much better news than thousands of supporters holding their hands above their hearts with tears streaming down their face singing the national anthem.”

Honduras is a small and underdeveloped country. It can ill afford the bad reputation that the world has for its leaders. However, I hope and pray that world would consider carefully the events surrounding the removal of Mr. Zelaya.

I am reminded of the words of the prophet Amos:

Do you know what I want?

I want justice–oceans of it.
I want fairness–rivers of it.
That’s what I want. That’s all I want. Amos 5:24

As rivers and oceans of people are marching across the land of Honduras, one can only hope and pray that the world will take notice of a small country that seeks to live in peace, freedom and development.

Read the whole thing here.

soagradI think that the following is written by more conservative members of the NLC–although I may be (and probably am) wrong. Honestly, I don’t keep up too much on individual goings on of the members of Congress.

But either way, these people presented an opinion with concrete solutions–and again, I am finding myself feeling conflicted.

National Latino Congreso

June 29, 2009

Statement of the Conveners of the National Latino Congreso (NLC) on the Illegal Military Coup in Honduras,

We, the undersigned Conveners of the National Latino Congreso, commend President Barack Obama for his timely condemnation of the illegal and unconstitutional removal of the democratically elected President of the Republic of Honduras Manuel Zelaya on June 27, 2009.

We urge President Obama to instruct the State Department to officially declare that the Honduran military and its allies have staged a coup against the constitutionally elected President of Honduras (Manuel Zelaya).

Such a declaration will automatically trigger a suspension of US economic aid to the Honduran government.

We urge President Obama, and the Congressional leadership (Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, US Senate Majority Leader and U.S. Representative Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the US House of Representatives) to further undertake the following actions:

1) Suspend all US military aid to Honduras (including closing the US
military base);
2) Suspend Honduras from CAFTA membership (Central America Free Trade Agreement); and

3) Suspend Congressional funding (from the National Endowment for
Democracy*) for all Honduran civic groups that supported the coup.

We further call on the Congressional Hispanic Caucus to join with us in
opposing the military coup. Latin America has made great progress in rooting out the culture of military coups in the last 10-15 years and as US Latinos we cannot stand by silent in the face of such a brutal and illegal attempt to contravene our Hemisphere’s march towards more just and democratic societies.

Signed,

Antonio Gonzalez, President, William C. Velasquez Institute (WCVI)

Oscar Chacon, Executive Director, National Alliance of Latin American and Caribbean Communities (NALACC)

Nativo V. Lopez, National President, Mexican American Political Association
(MAPA)

Ok, so if Zelaya really was democratically elected (and especially in Latin America, we all know how contested the words “democratically elected” really are), then yeah, this coup is total bullshit.

But then–economic sanctions. Ugh. I have yet to see a case where economic sanctions have done nothing more than through a country into complete chaos while simultaneously starving and disempowering the most marginalized people in that country.

Oh, and suspending a country from one of the nafta/cafta/peruvian/globalization treaties is a punishment? Really?

Then there’s this part:

Honduran civic groups that supported the coup

And I can’t help but think, can somebody define “civic” for me? As in, what is it code word for? Indigenous peoples that are working to reclaim their own lands? Rich formerly Spaniard elites that are pissed that *they* don’t own the lands? Drug lords?

And then finally, there’s this:

Latin America has made great progress in rooting out the culture of military coups in the last 10-15 years

And we have to again go back to the question of *who* is funding and coordinating the vast majority of military coups in Latin America? It’s surely not people from within Latin America–although, of course, there are vast groups of people that *benefit* from those military interventions/coups. No, the vast majority of military coups in Latin American can be traced back to the U.S. So, why do we not want this coup to happen, then? Because now all of a sudden we’re leaders in social justice and human rights?

It’s all very confusing.


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