Featured Story – What the Hell is Happening in Honduras?

Zelaya Napping at the Brazilian Embassy in Honduras

Zelaya Napping at the Brazilian Embassy in Honduras

Alternatively, supporters of the Cuarta Urna published a statement specifying what they desired to see develop out of a constituent assembly to reform the Honduran constitution. It is summarized below and can be read in its entirety at:

http://www.lacuadraonline.com/featured-story/cuarta-urna/

(Editor’s note: The link should be functioning in a day or so. Sorry)

The reformists in Honduras, led by Zelaya, hope to someday enact constitutional reforms that would allow for the establishment of a recall mechanism for all elected officials, including the president. They hope to draft protections to allow equitable access to the media, and controls on the accumulation of economic and political power through the manipulation and control of the flow of information. They look forward to the “rescuing of public services for the people” and placing “the human being at the center of the economy.” They argue for changes to current electoral law as pertains to legislative representation. Specifically, they want their legislators to be directly elected by their districts, rather than being selected by party bosses based upon the percentage each party received at the departmental level. Further, they hope for a separation of election days for Presidents, Representatives and Mayors. In addition there are calls for further protections of the rights of women, ethnic minorities and those of less traditional sexual orientations.

At the end of the day these are profoundly important, and entirely legitimate, issues for a nation such as Honduras to discuss, particularly as the current constitution was drafted under less than fully democratic circumstances – but Mr. Micheletti and the plotters didn’t think so, and thus, the coup.

Immediately, and resoundingly, all Latino members of the Organization of American States condemned the coup and declared the government of Roberto Micheletti to be illegitimate and irredeemable. The United States and Canada have been less forceful, to the point of being serious stumbling blocks to the advancement of democracy in the region. In its rather cryptic and convoluted condemnation of the coup, the United States has pushed for negotiations (with a government that it publicly claims to view as illegitimate) fostered by the Costa Rican president, Óscar Arias. Earlier in the summer a State Department official speaking on a condition of anonymity, suggested that a good place to start would be getting Micheletti to accept Zelaya’s return if Zelaya promised to pull back on his idea of asking Honduran citizens if they’d like to participate more fully in their democracy. The continued equivocation from Washington has left many observers in the region wondering if the Obama administration intends to break in anything but appearance from the traditional Bad Neighbor Policy employed by governments past. Vamos a ver.

For its part, the Canadian government has been even worse, not surprising considering the economic exposure Canadian mining firms have in the Honduran hills. Type Goldcorp, Honduras and “lack of informed consent” into Google and have at it.

In trying to determine where it all goes from here, there are a few points left to consider. Now that Zelaya has returned to Tegucigalpa – at the time of this writing he has successfully re-entered the country and is holed up at the Brazilian embassy in the Honduran capital – what is happening to the Honduran people and the surviving shreds of their political culture?

The leading golpista, Mr. Micheletti, has recently blown his stack in a most undemocratic way. Prior to Zelaya ratcheting up the pressure on the de facto government with his presence, the coup’s intention was to slow-walk the international community (and the growing resistance movement within Honduras) all the way to the November elections, and then to declare that democracy had triumphed in the end. They were having a nearly impossible time selling that to Latino members of the OAS, but there was a reasonable chance that the US and Canada could be brought on board before the beginning of 2010. Yet, all that may now change due to an overplay of force by Micheletti.

On September 28, Micheletti placed Honduras under martial law. Within 48 hours the coup had suspended constitutional rights in their effort to “defend the constitution.” Hondurans lost the freedom of free speech, travel, protection from warrantless searches, and all public meetings currently need to be approved by the police or the military. Moreover, a specific provision was introduced into the decree to allow the forceful removal of 55 campesinos who had taken up residence in a government building that housed deeds and land records. The campesinos claimed they were there to make sure that, during the crisis, the titles to their lands would not be destroyed or passed on to larger land owners. Regardless of the hue to your glasses, one can imagine that papers are being torched and the meager holdings of some of Honduras’ most impoverished land owners are presently going up in smoke.

Micheletti’s play appears to now be the dismantling of the resistance movement to his government before rescinding the grossly undemocratic orders. He may yet succeed, though, given his near universal condemnation by the community of nations, even some of his coconspirators are second-guessing their support, and his promise to repeal the oppressive and anti-democratic orders “at a convenient moment” may come too late for his salvation. But even if the orders are temporarily rescinded, the survival of Honduran democracy is in no way assured. Micheletti has the old Jeffersonian “wolf by the ears” problem. At this point he can neither safely hold on to power, nor safely let it go. Being an over privileged and coddled man, we’re guessing he’ll opt for increasing military repression until he breaks the back of the resistance, or someone offers to get him and his money to a country with no inclination towards extradition.

But what happens to Micheletti is of far less importance than what happens to Honduran democratic institutions and notions of justice. In many ways it is remarkable that the Micheletti coup has persisted in the face of such powerful and vehement international condemnation. And its dogged survival begs new questions: What, if any, international pressure will it take to bring down this coup? Will the great community of nations allow the Micheletti government to dictate its own transition from power, and thus retroactively legitimize the coup and its methods? Will the powerful governments of North America, who are still refusing to join in full-throated condemnation of the regime, finally bring their political and economic pressure to bear? The answers to these questions specifically, and the resolution of the Honduran crisis generally, should concern anyone living in the region. The political realities are new, and as such a fresh paradigm for the confrontations between the wealthy and the poor, the powerful and the weak, the military and the civilian may now be slouching towards Tegucigalpa to be born. Recent events in Honduras will certainly influence the future of the region, and that should give anyone living a few hundred miles to the northwest good reason to listen for things that go bump in the night.

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This article was written by on Tuesday, December 8th, 2009
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