Honduran Coup Turns Violent, Sanctions Imposed

By Laura Carlsen Director
Americas Program, Center For
International Policy

Huffington Post
June 30, 2009

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/laura-carlsen/honduran-coup-turns-viole_b_222843.html

Thousands of Hondurans are now in the streets to
protest the coup d'etat in their country. They have
been met with tear gas, anti-riot rubber bullets, tanks
firing water mixed with chemicals, and clubs. Police
have moved in to break down barricades and soldiers
used violence to push back protesters at the
presidential residence, leaving an unknown number
wounded.

If the coup leaders were desperate when they decided to
forcibly depose the elected president, they are even
more desperate now. Stripped of its pretense of
legality by universal repudiation and faced with a
popular uprising, the coup has turned to more violent
means.

The scoreboard in the battle for Honduras shows the
coup losing badly. It has not gained a single point in
the international diplomatic arena, it has no serious
legal points, and the Honduran people are mobilizing
against it. As the military and coup leaders resort to
brute force, they rack up even more points against them
in human rights and common decency.

Only one factor brought the coup to power and only one
factor has enabled it to hold on for these few days --
control of the armed forces. Now even that seems to be
eroding.

Cracks in Army Loyalty to the Coup?

Reports are coming in that several battalions --
specifically the Fourth and Tenth -- have rebelled
against coup leadership. Both Zelaya and his supporters
have been very conscious that within the armed forces
there are fractures. Instead of insulting the army,
outside the heavily guarded presidential residence many
protesters chant, "Soldiers, you are part of the
people."

Pres. Zelaya has been remarkably respectful in calling
on the army to "correct its actions." It is likely the
coup will continue to lose its grip on the army as
intensifying mobilizations force it to confront its own
people.

International Community Imposes Sanctions

In the diplomatic arena, it's not that the coup is
losing its grip -- it never even got a foothold. The
meeting of the Central American Integration System in
Managua Monday became a forum for pronouncements from
one after another of the major diplomatic groups in the
region. Latin America is a region where diplomatic
recombinations have proliferated in recent years, so
the alphabet soup of solidarity statements just keeps
on growing.

The Bolivarian Alliance (ALBA) issued a resolution,
announcing the withdrawal of its ambassadors while
continuing the member countries' international
cooperation programs in Honduras. The group urged other
nations to do the same -- a growing list including
Brazil and Mexico has already followed suit.

The ALBA group cited the Honduran constitution, which
states in Art. 3:

     No-one owes obedience to a government that has
     usurped power or to those who assume functions or
     public posts by the force of arms or using means or
     procedures that rupture or deny what the
     Constitution and the laws establish. The verified
     acts by such authorities are null. The people have
     the right to recur to insurrection in defense of
     the constitutional order.

Putting teeth behind the words has already begun. The
Central American countries agreed to close off their
land borders to all commerce with Honduras for the next
48 hours. The Central American Bank for Economic
Integration has cut off all lending until the president
is restored to power.

It also called for sanctions in multilateral
organizations: "We propose that exemplary sanctions be
applied in all multilateral organizations and
integration groups, to contribute to bringing about the
immediate restitution of the constitutional order in
Honduras, and to make good on the principle of action
that Jose Marti taught us when he said: 'If each one
does his duty, no-one can overcome us.'"

The Rio Group of Latin American and Caribbean nations
also met in Managua and issued a statement condemning
the coup and supporting Zelaya. Organization of
American States Sec. General Jose Insulza was there
too. President Zelaya received a standing ovation
following his closing speech.

The U.S. government has been unambiguous in its
condemnation of the coup and support of President
Zelaya. President Obama stated today, "We believe that
the coup was not legal and that President Zelaya
remains the democratically elected president there." He
added,"It would be a terrible precedent if we start
moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing
military coups as a means of political transition
rather than democratic elections."

After years of the Bush administration, when the
commitment to democracy abroad was decided more on the
basis of ideological affinities than democratic
practice, some sectors have trouble accepting that the
U.S. government is condemning the overthrow of a
president who espouses left-wing causes. Note the
obstinacy of reporters at today's State Department
press conference:

QUESTION: So Ian, I'm sorry, just to confirm -- so
you're not calling it a coup, is that correct? Legally,
you're not considering it a coup?

MR. KELLY: Well, I think you all saw the OAS statement
last night, which called it a coup d'état, and you
heard what the Secretary just said... [Clinton
explicitly called it a coup].

This discussion and another drawn-out discussion in
which reporters attempted to open up a window of doubt
over support for reinstatement of Zelaya went on quite
a while. Ian Kelly, the Dept. spokesperson, held fast
as reporters tried to equate supposed violations of law
by Zelaya with a military coup in an fantasy
"everyone's-at-fault" scenario. Kelly reiterated that
the coup is indeed an illegal coup and the only
solution is return of the elected president.

The "coup question" is more than semantics and has
implications beyond conservative media's political
agenda to justify the coup leaders. When a legal
definition of coup is established, most U.S. aid to
Honduras must be cut off.

Here's the relevant part of the foreign operations
bill:

     Sec. 7008. None of the funds appropriated or
     otherwise made available pursuant to titles III
     through VI of this Act shall be obligated or
     expended to finance directly any assistance to the
     government of any country whose duly elected head
     of government is deposed by military coup or
     decree.

So far, the Obama administration has focused on
diplomatic efforts and is waiting to see how long the
Honduran stand-off will last before looking to specific
sanctions. The probability that the coup's days are
numbered make that a reasonable strategy for the time
being.

Attack on Freedom of Expression

The military coup has also launched an all-out attack
on freedom of expression in the country. Venezuela's
Telesur reports that its team was detained and military
personnel threatened to confiscate its video equipment
if it continued to broadcast.

The ALBA declaration notes the use of censorship as a
tool of the coup: "This silence was meant to impose the
dictatorship by closing the government channel and
cutting off electricity, seeking to hide and justify
the coup before the people and the international
community, and demonstrating an attitude that recalls
the worst era of dictatorships that we've suffered in
the twentieth century in our continent."

Grassroots organizations that support President Zelaya
have faced an uphill battle against the media, which
alternates between scaring people about the risk to
keep them out of the streets and denying the existence
of those who do go out. A message from Via Campesina
Honduras warns people that information is controlled by
the coup to hide opposition, cut off communications on
many channels and only allowed information that favors
them. They have now organized to open up contact with
reporters throughout the world.

An increasingly organized opposition, and independent
media on the scene and on the net are breaking through
the information blockade. A third source is Twitter. A
major player in the Iranian uprising, Twitter has
become the pulse of, if not the body politic, at least
some bodies of that politic.

All this means that the information black-out designed
by the coup is riddled with points of light. It's still
hard to get statistical information like crowd numbers
or figures of killed and wounded, but Honduras is
certainly not the isolated and insignificant "banana
republic" it once was.

The Return of the President

Zelaya now leaves for New York City where he will speak
before the General Assembly of the United Nations to
further outpourings of support. In Managua, he
announced that from there he will return, accompanied
by Insulza, to Honduras.

In an interview with CNN a coup leader said that Zelaya
"can return to Honduras -- as long as he leaves his
presidency behind."

The Honduran ambassador the the UN, Jorge Reina, said
that although the coup leaders have asked to address
the UN, "the UN does not recognize them...They have
made a serious mistake, those who think that countries
can be led through coups."

"That history has passed."
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