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Zelaya's return

Violence at Honduras airport leaves two dead

AP

07/08/2009

Roberto Micheletti, interim president of Honduras:"I believe there is time to think about, to have a dialogue, to solve this problem and at the right time he will take the decision to come back and turn himself in so the right authorities can decide the right thing to do with former president Zelaya."

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Ousted President Manuel Zelaya was kept from landing at the main Honduras airport on Sunday because the runway was blocked by military vehicles and groups of soldiers, some of them clashing with a crowd of thousands outside.

His Venezuelan pilots circled around the airport and decided not to risk a crash.

Zelaya instead headed for El Salvador, and vowed to try again on Monday or Tuesday in his high-stakes effort to return to power in a country where all branches of government have lined up against him.

"I am the commander of the armed forces, elected by the people, and I ask the armed forces to comply with the order to open the airport so that there is no problem in landing and embracing my people," Zelaya said from the plane.

But interim President Roberto Micheletti insisted on keeping him out, and said he won''t negotiate until "things return to normal" and that they were the authentic representatives of the people.

Micheletti also accused Nicaragua of moving troops in an attempt at psychological intimidation, and warned them not to cross into Honduras, "because we''re ready to defend our border."

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega called the allegation "totally false."

Violence broke out among the huge crowd surrounding the airport, with at two men killed - one of them shot in the head from inside the airport as people tried to break through a security fence, according to an Associated Press photographer at the scene.

At least 30 people were treated for injuries, the Red Cross said, after security forces fired warning shots and tear gas.

When Zelaya''s plane was turned away, his supporters began chanting "We want blue helmets," - a reference to UN peacekeepers.

Zelaya called on the United Nations, the Organisation of American States (OAS), the United States and European countries to "do something with this repressive regime."

He landed in Nicaragua and met briefly with Ortega, then flew to El Salvador for consultations with the presidents of Argentina, Paraguay and Ecuador and the secretary-general of the OAS, Jose Miguel Insulza, who flew there from Washington.

Zelaya won wide international support after his military ouster, but the presidents decided it was too dangerous to fly on Zelaya''s plane, which carried only his close advisers and staff, two journalists from the Venezuela-based network Telesur and UN General Assembly President Miguel D''Escoto Brockmann, a leftist Nicaraguan priest and former foreign minister.

Honduras'' new government has vowed to arrest Zelaya for 18 alleged criminal acts including treason and failing to implement more than 80 laws approved by Congress since taking office in 2006.

Zelaya also refused to comply with a Supreme Court ruling against his planned referendum on whether to hold an assembly to consider changing the constitution.

Critics feared Zelaya might try to extend his rule and cement presidential power in ways similar to what his ally Hugo Chavez has done in Venezuela.

But instead of prosecuting him or trying to defeat him at the ballot box, his political opponents sent masked soldiers to fly Zelaya out of the country at gunpoint, and Congress installed Micheletti in his place.

The military solution drew condemnation at the United Nations, and Honduras was suspended by the OAS.

Many called it a huge step backward for democracy, and no nation has recognised the new government. President Barack Obama has united with Chavez and conservative Colombian President Alvaro Uribe in insisting on Zelaya''s return.

Chavez, meanwhile said the "the military junta, created to the spitting image of the Yankee empire" was "challenging the world like Israel."

"It would be very good to listen to the US president say something about it because we are sure, very sure, that this military junta and this illegitimate government of gorillas is being supported by the Yankee empire," he said.

Without OAS membership, the isolated interim government faces trade sanctions and the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidised oil, aid and loans for the impoverished nation.

The immediate concern, however, was avoiding more bloodshed. Both critics and supporters of Zelaya have staged large demonstrations.

The country''s Roman Catholic archbishop and its human rights commissioner urged Zelaya to stay away to avoid provoking them.

Moments after Zelaya''s plane was turned away, about a dozen trucks filled with police ordered everyone off the streets, imposing a sunset-to-sunrise curfew.


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