Tegucigalpa - Military Coup: Unrest In Honduras, As President Forced Out, Soilders Fire Tear Gas On Protesters |
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Tegucigalpa - Soldiers on Sunday morning seized Honduras President Manuel Zelaya and confiscated documents from the executive mansion, various radio stations in the capital Tegucigalpa reported.
Zelaya’s whereabouts were unclear. Some reports said he had been taken to an air force base. Others that he had been forced abroad, based on speculation that his family was already waiting for him in Nicaragua.
Local media reported that military units had also occupied the executive mansion and confiscated materials that Zelaya had prepared for use in a referendum on public support for his policies that was scheduled for Sunday.
Zelaya has been locked in a power struggle with other state institutions over efforts that seem designed to extend his term in office and change parts of the constitution. Sunday’s referendum was to gauge public support for those proposals.
His efforts have met with resistance from various institutions. The supreme court and Congress have both opposed the referendum. He also ran into opposition from the army when General Romeo Vasquez Velasquez refused a presidential request to provide logistical support for the referendum.
That standoff led Zelaya to fire Vasquez Velasquez, a move that was ruled unconstitutional by the supreme court on Thursday.
The Honduran military on Friday had deployed hundreds of soldiers across the capital of Tegucigalpa to maintain calm. Soldiers were told to keep potential troublemakers out of the capital, though those who did not seem to pose a threat were allowed regular access.
Under the current constitution, Zelaya cannot run for re-election in the presidential balloting November 29. Zelaya was elected in 2006 as a conservative, but later reversed his policies and now has scant support from leftist groups and trade unions.
The tension has caused international waves, with leaders of left- leaning Latin American leaders like Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega weighing in to back Zelaya. Chavez has used similar referendums to change the constitution and extend his term in office.
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Read Comments (4) — Post Yours »
1
Jun 28, 2009 at 10:06 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Such a story in iran would not be bed at all.
2
Jun 28, 2009 at 10:59 AM SimchaB Says:Report as Inappropriate
" Zelaya was elected in 2006 as a conservative, but later reversed his policies and now has scant support from leftist groups and trade unions." Please, try switching scant with staunch, then it will make sense.
Poster #1 what does a bed have to do with anything? Who is going to sleep?
3
Jun 28, 2009 at 05:05 PM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
Woa! Where is Bloomberg on this one? A conservative changed to liberal, seeking long term, even against a referendum?
And how does bloomberg feel when he's on a list with chavez, ahmadinejad, and Zelaya?
4
Jun 28, 2009 at 07:10 PM Milhouse Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ Woa! Where is Bloomberg on this one? A conservative changed to liberal, seeking long term, even against a referendum?
And how does bloomberg feel when he's on a list with chavez, ahmadinejad, and Zelaya? ”
When was Bloomberg ever a conservative? When did he even pretend to be one? He only ran on the Republican line because the Democratic primary was crowded.