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HONDURAS: Zelaya Hemmed In by Troops around Brazilian Embassy
By Juan Ramón Durán
TEGUCIGALPA - Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya said Tuesday that he returned to his country to engage in dialogue to resolve the political crisis triggered by the Jun. 28 coup d'etat, but that the de facto government responded with tear gas and rubber bullets against his supporters.
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HONDURAS: U.S. Appeals for Calm, Repeats Support for Zelaya
By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - Confirming that that exiled Honduran President Manuel Zelaya has secretly returned to Tegucigalpa, the U.S. State Department Monday appealed for calm and reiterated its recognition that he is the legitimate president.
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HONDURAS: Zelaya Returns, Calls for Dialogue
By Juan Ramón Durán
TEGUCIGALPA - Ousted President Manuel Zelaya snuck back into Honduras and took refuge Monday in the Brazilian embassy in the capital with the aim of returning to power by means of mass demonstrations and a general strike led by the National Resistance Front Against the Coup d'Etat.
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RIGHTS: Tripped Up by Honduras, UN Council Turns to Middle East
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - The United Nations Human Rights Council set a firm precedent in favour of the international isolation of the de facto government that took over in Honduras after a Jun. 28 coup removed President Manuel Zelaya.
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HONDURAS: Vote to Go Ahead Despite Int'l Refusal to Recognise
By Juan Ramón Durán
TEGUCIGALPA - Although the international community has warned that it will not recognise the results of the November elections in Honduras, the de facto government in power since the Jun. 28 coup d'etat says the vote is going ahead.
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US-HONDURAS: State Dept Condemns "Coup d'Etat", Curtails Aid
By Daniel Luban
WASHINGTON - Frustrated by the continued intransigence of the Honduran regime that ousted President Manuel Zelaya, the U.S. State Department followed through Wednesday on threats to cut off aid to Honduras.
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US-HONDURAS: Zelaya Urges Tougher Stance Toward Coupmakers
By Guthrie Gray
WASHINGTON - Speaking at the Elliot School of International Affairs, the ousted president of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, encouraged the Barack Obama administration to take a harder line against the de facto government that was set up after the military forced him from the country in June.
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POLITICS-CENTRAL AMERICA: Falling Out and Falling Apart?
By Daniel Zueras
SAN JOSÉ - The late June coup d'état in Honduras was a body blow to political integration in Central America. The institutions of the regional integration process have been incapable of reacting to the event, leaving the future of the process increasingly uncertain and trade agreements, themselves in poor shape, as the only viable way forward, experts say.
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HONDURAS: OAS Mission Hits Dead End
By Thelma Mejía
TEGUCIGALPA - An Organisation of American States (OAS) mission of foreign ministers to Honduras failed to persuade the de facto regime to consider Manuel Zelaya's reinstatement as president.
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HONDURAS: Violence in the Streets; Coup Govt Delegates in Washington
By Thelma Mejía
TEGUCIGALPA - A delegation of representatives of the de facto government headed by Roberto Micheletti in Honduras began to meet Thursday with State Department officials in Washington, while demonstrators demanding the return of ousted President Manuel Zelaya have been beaten and arrested here.
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HONDURAS-US: Obama Administration Restating Its Position?
By Marina Litvinsky
WASHINGTON - A letter sent last week by the U.S. State Department has caused many to question the Obama Administration position on reinstating ousted Honduras President Manuel Zelaya.
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HONDURAS: Military Back on the Political Scene
By Thelma Mejía
TEGUCIGALPA - The demilitarisation process that got underway in Honduras 15 years ago was buried on Jun. 28 when more than 100 soldiers surrounded President Manuel Zelaya's home, pulled him out of bed at gunpoint and sent him into exile. Now the armed forces are making no effort to conceal their interest in political protagonism.
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HONDURAS: Regime Says 'Yes' to Talks but Squelches Protests
By Thelma Mejía
TEGUCIGALPA - While it publicly declares its willingness to continue to engage in dialogue, the de facto regime led by Roberto Micheletti in Honduras is taking a hard-line approach to protests demanding the return of ousted President Manuel Zelaya. So far three people have been killed, around 100 have been injured, and 150 have been arrested and held for several hours or days.
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Honduras in RSSIn the wake of a coup d'etat in Honduras that toppled democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya, the new authorities appointed by Congress to replace him face international isolation. The U.N. General Assembly has demanded “the immediate and unconditional restoration of the legitimate and constitutional government” of the ousted president. The situation in this impoverished Central American country is reminiscent of the era of instability and military regimes of the 1970s and 1980s.

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