Friday, July 10, 2009

Honduras Crisis Talks Faltering

Friday, July 10, 2009
22:57 Mecca time, 19:57 GMT

Honduras crisis talks faltering

Zelaya met Arias in San Jose and reiterated his demand to be reinstated immediately

Talks aimed at ending a political crisis in Honduras have so far failed to reach a resolution, after the two claimants to the presidency left the negotiations.

Delegates for Roberto Micheletti, the military-backed interim president, and Manuel Zelaya, the deposed elected president, continued talks mediated by Oscar Arias, Costa Rica's president, on Friday.

But a statement released by the Costa Rican government afterward said that Micheletti's advisers will return to Honduras at about 2200 GMT.

Gabriel Elizondo, Al Jazeera's correspondent in San Jose, the Costa Rican capital, said: "This would be a major development because they were saying last night that they would continue the talks indefinitely.

"With the Micheletti camp here apparently telling Oscar Arias that they plan to leave, that would throw these talks into a completely new direction, maybe even end them."

However, Mariana Sanchez, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, said that the interim government had dismissed the Costa Rican statement.

"I spoke with the minister of communications a little while ago and he said it was a rumour that was being spread by the media that supports Zelaya," she said.

Honduras, a Central American country of seven million people, has been hit by protests since June 28, when Zelaya was seized by the army and forcibly deported.

Obstacles to settlement

Micheletti and Arias held separate meetings with Arias on Thursday after they refused to see each other face-to-face.

The interim leader flew back to Honduras late on Thursday, while Zelaya headed to Guatemala on Friday in an attempt to win regional support for his reinstatement as president.

"We have made the first step," Zelaya said on Friday after a final meeting with Arias.

"President Arias heard my position and that of the union and political representatives with me, which is the immediate restoration of the elected president."

But Arias said that the talks have failed to produce a clear negotiated settlement.

"I feel satisfied because a sincere, clear dialogue has been initiated, but still, the positions are very different and certainly these things ... take time, they require patience," he said.

"This could possibly take more time than imagined."

Talks to continue

Micheletti, following his return to Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras, said he was ready to return to talks "if necessary".
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Country facts
Second largest country in Central America
Population of 7.2 million
Second poorest country in the region
Economy forecast to grow less than two per cent this year
Relies on money from Hondurans in the US for more than 25 per cent of its gross domestic product
Former Spanish colony gained independence in 1821
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"If I am invited by President Arias, I will return with great pleasure," he said.

The US has suspended military ties with Tegucigalpa in the wake of the crisis and has said that it could cut off about $200m in aid.

The World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank have also suspended credit to the country.

Gabriela Nunez, the finance minister in the interim government in Honduras, said on Friday that the suspension of Inter-American Development Bank and World Bank loans would cost the country $200m in 2009.

Zelaya's leftist allies in South America have also made life uncomfortable for Micheletti since the coup.

Venezuela has suspended its oil deliveries to Honduras, while Nicaragua denied Micheletti permission to fly through its airspace for the Costa Rica meeting.

Zelaya was removed from power as he was about to press ahead with a non-binding referendum on constitution change.

Congress and the courts had declared the move to hold the public vote illegal, accusing Zelaya of trying to change the charter to enable him to run for a second term in office.

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

2 comments:

Smartphone trends said...

Hi Everybody, I am an average citizen living in the north of Honduras, and I want to tell that Zelaya always is lying.
He lied since he begun his government.
For all the world media,please understand that he is an outlaw, he was trying to do thins with no legal intentions.
Ther is something clear here:International comunity wants Zelaya Back, but most of honduran citizens not.
If he come back,here will be a civil war against him.

toreckly said...

Hi, we hondurans did not like the idea of Zelaya given our country away to communist Hugo Chavez, so we kicked him out, and out he will stay.