Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Micheletti says the ones who ousted Zelaya will be punished and Insulza confirmed meeting with the dictator Micheletti




Micheletti says the ones who ousted Zelaya will be punished 

October 5, 2009, 05:44 PM
Tegucigalpa, Oct 5 (EFE) .- The de facto president of Honduras, Roberto Micheletti, said today that those responsible for having brought the country to the deposed president, Manuel Zelaya, who did not identify, will be brought to justice and "punished" .









Insulza confirmed meeting with the dictator Micheletti
By: TeleSUR 
Release Date: 04/10/09


04 October 2009. "The secretary general of the Organization of American States (OAS) Jose Miguel Insulza, said the secret meeting held last week, with the dictator of Honduras, Roberto Micheletti, aimed to promote an initiative to promote dialogue and seek a solution to the political crisis in the Honduran people after the coup against the constitutional President Manuel Zelaya.

Insulza said in a statement that the meeting "was intended to promote a dialogue between the warring parties to restore democracy and constitutional order in Honduras." The meeting took place at the military base in Palmerola, introduced in U.S. base north of Tegucigalpa Honduras.

Siete Wednesday for October, are scheduled to travel a commission of OAS foreign ministers with Secretary General of the organization. Insulza management is part of "the strict observance of the mandate given by (...) the OAS General Assembly of the 4th of July" to try to resolve the crisis, the statement said.

The secret meeting was announced Friday by the de facto president of Honduras, Roberto Micheletti, who in a brief reference about the meeting, said "we talked a little of everything."

The OAS is working to restore constitutional order in that country since last June when when he led the coup by conservative political and business groups and executed by Honduran military forces of the Central American country.

The agency promotes the San Jose Accord, an initiative of Costa Rican President Oscar Arias. The agreement provides, inter alia, the return to power of ousted President Manuel Zelaya, who has taken refuge in the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa on 21 September this year.


Arias said the bottom of the crisis in criticizing Honduran Constitution says ZelayaTegucigalpa, Oct 5 (EFE) .- The deposed President of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, said the president of Costa Rica, Óscar Arias, said the bottom of the political crisis in criticizing Honduran Constitution."By taking positive statements given by the president of Costa Rica, Óscar Arias, referring to the Constitution of Honduras, we can deduce that it has pinpointed the fundamental problem of the Honduran crisis," said Zelaya told reporters from the Brazilian embassy .


Last week, Arias harshly criticized the Honduran Constitution, which, he said, he studied drafting the San Jose Agreement, through which we seek a solution to the crisis in Honduras.

The president of Costa Rica considered a "real eyesore" lack of political regulation of the president, one of the reasons that justify the coup that overthrew the coup on 28 June to Zelaya.

"A Constitution where it can be called political control, to impeach the president and the last thing left is to give a coup is a constitution that does not deserve any less the Honduran people," said Arias, who also believes that sooner or later have to be modified many of these clauses.

Zelaya said in a statement that the reforms to the Honduran Constitution and mechanisms to adjust to the pace of modern times are substantive issues raised today in the Honduran crisis.

He further indicated that those who today attack Arias "by its findings, the same ones who have violated the Constitution on an ongoing basis through 28 years and settled the same items-stone-coded to their interests."

Are the same as "do not want to recognize the need for the Honduran town of profound changes in its constitutional system, deny themselves the possibility of making reforms to overcome a closed system of representative democracy", the statement said the deposed president .

According Zelaya, who stays from 21 September in the Brazilian embassy, "change and reform in the constitutions and legal instruments in different countries, are standard procedures, except in Honduras, and President Arias as rightly pointed out. "

A closed Constitution "forbids the necessary and historic changes to the Honduran people aspiring to social processes," he said Zelaya, who also believes that the Constitution of his country must soon consider reforms of high social interest.

Such reforms should be, according to the deposed president, "the open consultation, the recall referendum, the conflict between powers, direct democracy and participatory democracy needed in modern liberties.


Soldados custodian fuera de la embajada de Brasil, en Tegucigalpa donde está el Presidente constitucional Manuel Zelaya. 3 de octubre de 2009. (Foto AP) Soldados custodian fuera de la embajada de Brasil, en Tegucigalpa donde está el Presidente constitucional Manuel Zelaya. 3 de octubre de 2009. (Foto AP)







No comments:

Post a Comment