Monday, September 28, 2009

Brazil rejects Honduran ultimatum. Lula:"Brazil will not comply with an ultimatum from a government of coup mongers,"

Brazil rejects Honduras ultimatum over Zelaya

TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) – Brazil plans to ignore a 10-day deadline set by Honduras' de facto government to decide the fate of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, who took refuge in the Brazilian embassy last week after sneaking back into the country.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula Silva rejected the ultimatum on Sunday and demanded an apology from Honduras' de facto leader Roberto Micheletti, who issued a harsh statement on Saturday warning Brazil to define Zelaya's status.
"Brazil will not comply with an ultimatum from a government of coup mongers," Lula told reporters at a summit in Venezuela, adding that international law ensures the sovereignty of its embassy in Tegucigalpa.
Zelaya was overthrown in a military coup on June 28, but on Monday he returned from exile, sparking a tense standoff with the de facto civilian government that has promised to arrest him on charges of treason.
Brazil had said Zelaya can stay as long as necessary, but the ultimatum presses Brazil to decide whether to give the deposed leader political asylum or send him out of the embassy to be detained by Honduran authorities.
"We urge the Brazilian government to define the status of Mr. Zelaya in a period of no more than ten days," the de facto government said in a statement. "If not, we will be obliged to take additional measures."
The statement did not give details on those measures, but said Brazil must guarantee the diplomatic mission is not used by Zelaya to "incite violence".
Since Monday, hundreds of soldiers and riot police have surrounded the embassy where protesters have mounted almost daily marches to demand Zelaya be reinstated.
"If they enter by force, they will be committing an act that contravenes all international norms," Lula said of the security forces outside the building.

Honduran threat to Brazil mission

Manuel Zelaya receives communion during Mass at the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa, 27 September 2009
Manuel Zelaya is living in the Brazilian embassy with some of his supporters
Honduras has threatened to revoke Brazil's right to a diplomatic mission in a dispute over the status of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya.
Mr Zelaya took refuge in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa after sneaking into the country on Monday, three months after he was sent into exile.
Honduras's interim government has given Brazil 10 days to either grant Mr Zelaya asylum or hand him over.
It has also issued a decree allowing it to ban protests and reporting.
The move was announced on Sunday after Mr Zelaya called on his supporters to stage a march on Monday.
Mediators blocked
Speaking to reporters in Tegucigalpa, interim Honduran Foreign Minister Carlos Lopez said: "If the status of Zelaya is not [resolved] within 10 days, the [Brazilian] embassy will lose its diplomatic condition."
Mr Lopez also reiterated that his government had no intention of raiding the mission.
Brazil had earlier said it would not comply with a demand from Honduras to "define the status" of Mr Zelaya.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said the embassy was protected by international law.
Mr Zelaya faces a number of charges if handed over, including treason.
The UN Security Council has called on the Honduras interim government to "cease harassing" the Brazilian embassy.
Meanwhile, the interim government denied entry to a group of four diplomats seeking to mediate in the crisis.
The group, some of whom were representatives of the Organization of American States (OAS), had been sent to lay the groundwork for mediation efforts between the two sides.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8277770.stm

Dictator suspends civil liberties amid calls for 'rebellion'

Interim leaders empower police to break up 'unauthorised' meetings as ousted president Manuel Zelaya urges supporters to march
Honduras's interim leaders suspended key civil liberties last night in response to "calls for insurrection" by ousted president Manuel Zelaya, empowering police and soldiers to break up "unauthorised" public meetings, arrest people without warrants and restrict the news media.
The announcement came just hours after Zelaya called on supporters to stage mass marches today to mark the three-month anniversary of the 28 June coup that ousted him. Zelaya described the marches as "the final offensive" against the interim government.
Zelaya, who surprised the world when he sneaked back into the country last Monday and holed up in the Brazilian embassy, is demanding he be reinstated to office, and has said that the government of interim president Roberto Micheletti "has to fall".
The government announced the decree in a nationwide broadcast, saying it was "to guarantee peace and public order in the country and due to the calls for insurrection that Mr Zelaya has publicly made".
The measure empowers police and soldiers to arrest without a warrant "any person who poses a danger to his own life or those of others", although unlike martial law, it requires that anyone arrested be turned over to civilian prosecutors.
The Honduran constitution forbids arrest without warrants except where a criminal is caught in the act.
The measure also permits authorities temporarily to close news media outlets that "attack peace and public order".
The media restrictions appear aimed at pro-Zelaya radio and television stations that – while subject to brief raids immediately after the coup – had been allowed to operate freely, openly criticising the government and broadcasting Zelaya's statements.
But under yesterday's order, authorities may now "prevent the transmission by any spoken, written or televised means, of statements that attack peace and the public order, or which offend the human dignity of public officials, or attack the law".
The decree states that the country's national telecommunications commission, known as Conatel, is authorised "through police and the armed forces … to immediately suspend any radio station, cable or television network whose programming does not comply with these regulations".
Pro-Zelaya television station Channel 36 warned yesterday that restrictions on the news media were coming, and said they were part of a pattern by the interim government of curtailing constitutional rights.
The government had previously bragged about the democratic atmosphere in the country, citing outlets such as Channel 36 as proof. The station continued broadcasting without interruption last night.
The interim government also expelled personnel from the Organisation of American States looking to set up a mediation effort and gave Brazil a 10-day ultimatum to either hand over Zelaya or give him political asylum and get him out of the country.
John Biehl, an OAS special adviser, told reporters in the capital, Tegucigalpa, that he and four other members of an advance team – including two Americans, a Canadian and a Colombian – were stopped by authorities after landing at the international airport yesterday. Biehl, who is Chilean, said he was later told he could stay, but the others were put on planes leaving the country.
"A high-ranking official told us we were expelled, that we had not notified [the interim government] that we were coming," he said.
Biehl said he was in Honduras to set up a visit by the OAS secretary general, José Miguel Insulza, who he said would arrive "at the appropriate time".
Micheletti had previously said the OAS was welcome to come, but had suggested that representatives began arriving today.
The foreign minister, Carlos Lopez, said the team's arrival had not come "at the right time … because we are in the middle of internal conversations".
Talks between Zelaya and Micheletti's representatives have produced no results.
A Micheletti spokesman warned Brazilian authorities yesterday to "immediately take measures to ensure that Mr Zelaya stops using the protection offered by the diplomatic mission to instigate violence in Honduras".
The Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, immediately rejected the missive, saying his government "doesn't accept ultimatums from coup-plotters".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/sep/28/honduras-suspends-civil-liberties-zelaya

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