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IndianaGreen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-01-09 10:55 AM
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Honduras Crisis Exposes Weakness of US Democracy
Published on Saturday, August 1, 2009 by CommonDreams.org

Honduras Crisis Exposes Weakness of US Democracy

by Lindsay Shade


While Honduras is on the brink of a civil war, politics-as-usual in Washington, D.C. threaten, quite literally, to block US support for democracy in that country. It also threatens to squelch democracy here as well. On Thursday, the office of Sen. Richard Lugar sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton demanding clarification on the State Department's intentions with regard to Honduras. The same letter also noted that providing such a detailed clarification would "improve the prospects of confirming" several of Obama's diplomatic nominations for Latin America.

Lugar's letter comes on the heels of outright threats from fellow Republican Sen. Jim DeMint to delay a Senate vote on a key State Department post for Latin America because of U.S. support for ‘leftist' Zelaya, signaling that Lugar and other Republicans are aligning on this strategy to block U.S. pressure to reinstate Zelaya and restore Honduran democracy.

Thursday also brought to bear the most violent repression by coup forces in Honduras since Zelaya's removal on June 28th. In Honduras and Nicaragua members of La Via Campesina - a global network representing more than 150 million small farmers - reported that tear gas and rubber and wooden bullets were being shot at unarmed protesters from helicopters and other aircraft. Multiple human rights and civil society organizations are reporting that journalists and other civilians are being targeted in the conflict areas, particularly near the border with Nicaragua, and that hundreds of people have been injured, some quite severely. The prisons are filled with detainees who oppose the de facto regime. More than 150 people were arrested on Thursday alone, including minors as young as two years.

U.S. pressure (or lack thereof) on the coup regime to relinquish power plays a major role in the possible outcome in Honduras. Strong sanctions would likely bring an immediate halt to the de facto government's ability to maintain power. Already the U.S. State Department has condemned the coup, cut off $16.5 million in military aid, placed a hold on any new development aid, and most recently, revoked the diplomatic visas of four members of the de facto regime.

But human rights organizations the world over have called on the Obama Administration to do more, including terminating all existing aid and cutting off trade and remittances. Thus far, the U.S. has refused to take a strong position that explicitly recognizes the events of June 28th as a coup, which according to U.S. law, would require the suspension of all relations - trade, aid, or otherwise - with Honduras. Secretary Clinton stated on June 30 that "We are withholding any formal legal determination," on whether or not a coup had transpired.

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/08/01-0
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annabanana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-01-09 10:59 AM
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1. the big multinationals are lawless
They answer to no one.
Thieves run the world.
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