BlackLantern
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if thats not criteria for a coup, I don't know what is
So, If a poll says that a president has 30% a approval rating he should be removed from power by force? Nice...
Then why make those things called ELECTIONS? Let's just hear what the polls say and put in power the guy with the best approval rating.
Zelaya won in a democratic election, like it or nor that decision should've been respected (and I hate Chavez, Correa and Ortega, but they were all democratically elected too)
if thats not criteria for a coup, I don't know what is
Agreed. I find it amazing that our president refuses to speak out against the country that has threatened to launch nuclear missiles at us, tried to hack our defense networks, and is holding two of our citizens prisoner...but will condemn a constitutional impeachment.
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras Honduras' interim leader said Wednesday he is willing to step down if it helps end his country's political crisis, conditioning the offer on guarantees that ousted President Manuel Zelaya doesn't return to take his place.
This may be a little logical and or naive but why not have the UN oversee new elections.
From my limited following of the situation I agree.There was nothing Wrong with the Voting Process, it's the theft of power the Former President was trying to pull. This guy only has about 10% approval. Both Political Parties agree. He and his few supporters are the only ones having issue with it.
I think they should just hold elections as scheduled, in november, and be done with it. At least their people are standing up for their Constitution. . .
Obama and all these other countries need to butt the **** out. I mean, where were all these people when all these South American dictators started coming out of the wood work.
In a welcome about-face, the State Department told the Senate Foreign Relations Committees Richard Lugar, R-Ind., in a letter Tuesday that the U.S. would no longer threaten sanctions on Honduras for ousting its president, Mel Zelaya, last June 28.
Nor will it insist on Zelayas return to power. As it turns out, the U.S. Senate cant find any legal reason why the Honduran Supreme Courts refusal to let Zelaya stay in office beyond the time allowed by Honduran law constitutes a military coup.
This marks a shift. The U.S. at first supported Zelaya, a man who had been elected democratically but didnt govern that way. Now theyre reaching out to average Hondurans, the real democrats.
Sure, the U.S. continues to condemn Zelayas ouster and still seeks mediation of the dispute through Costa Rican President Oscar Arias. But no U.S. sanctions means Hondurans have won.
U.S. moves toward formal cut off of aid to Honduras
WASHINGTON, Aug 27 (Reuters) - U.S. State Department staff have recommended that the ouster of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya be declared a "military coup," a U.S. official said on Thursday, a step that could cut off as much as $150 million in U.S. funding to the impoverished Central American nation.
The official, who spoke on condition he not be named, said State Department staff had made such a recommendation to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who has yet to make a decision on the matter although one was likely soon.
Washington has already suspended about $18 million aid to Honduras following the June 28 coup and this would be formally cut if the determination is made because of a U.S. law barring aid "to the government of any country whose duly elected head of government is deposed by military coup or decree."
The official said that $215 million in grant funding from the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation to Honduras would also have to end should Clinton make the determination that a military coup took place.
About $76 million of that money has already been disbursed and a second U.S. official said this implied that the remaining roughly $139 million could not be given to Honduras should the determination be made.
Diplomats said that the United States had held off making the formal determination to give diplomacy a chance to yield a negotiated compromise that might allow for Zelaya's return to power.
Such efforts, however, appear to have failed for now and so the United States is taking steps -- including its decision on Tuesday to cease issuing some visas at its embassy in Tegucigalpa -- to raise pressure on the de facto government.
"The recommendation of the building is for her to sign it," said the first U.S. official said of the 'military coup" determination, saying this was a response to the de facto government's refusal to accept a compromise that would allow Zelaya to return to power ahead of November elections. (Editing by Jackie Frank)
http://www.reuters.com/article/vcCandidateFeed1/idUSN27328207
EXCLUSIVE: Honduran president makes offer to end political standoff
The interim president of Honduras has offered the man he replaced after a June coup the chance to return to the country on the condition that both renounce claims to the presidency, a negotiator said Thursday.
Arturo Corrales, a member of a three-man Honduran panel seeking an end to the standoff, told The Washington Times that Roberto Micheletti was willing to make the concessions to restore peace and prosperity to Honduras following the coup against Manuel Zelaya.
The offer represents a turnaround by Mr. Micheletti, who has insisted until now that Mr. Zelaya should have been arrested rather than deported to Costa Rica on June 28. Mr. Zelaya was deposed by the military after he sought to change the constitution to allow him to run for a second term.
Lanny Davis, a prominent Washington attorney who represents the Honduran Latin American Business Council, said the new proposal "shows Mr. Micheletti is not concerned about power -- he is offering to resign entirely from public life. ... The question is, does Mr. Zelaya acknowledge that no one, even the president, is above the law?"
The United States, Organization of American States and United Nations all have condemned the coup and sought to isolate Honduras unless it negotiates a solution to the standoff.
Mr. Zelaya, a populist close to Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, has made several failed attempts to return.
Costa Rican President Oscar Arias also has sought to mediate an end to the dispute, so far unsuccessfully.
Mr. Corrales, who was appointed by Mr. Micheletti, has shuttled between Honduras and the United States for the last few weeks. He told The Times that under the new proposal:
Both Mr. Micheletti and Mr. Zelaya would resign.
The next in line under the constitution would become interim president.
New elections would be scheduled and monitored by independent foreign observers.
Mr. Zelaya may return as a private citizen.
Mr. Micheletti will support a decision by the Honduran congress to grant "political amnesty [not involving common crimes] to all parties relating to events of June 28."
Mr. Corrales expressed optimism that Mr. Zelaya would accept the proposal but conceded, "We don't know if Zelaya will agree to this at this point."
....
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/aug/28/honduran-president-makes-new-offer-to-end-politica/