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Honduras's 'Bloodless Coup': What You're Not Seeing on TV

Posted by Avi Lewis, Al Jazeera English at 7:43 AM on October 27, 2009.


The coup regime in Honduras is winning. Without action from Washington, the the backers of the coup will go unpunished.

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This video is a trailer for the Fault Lines' coverage of the coup in Honduras. Watch Part One and Part Two of the full version of Fault Lines: 100 Days of Resistance.

I arrived in Honduras one week after ousted president Manuel Zelaya returned to begin his long spell of internal exile in the Brazilian embassy. With my crew from Fault Lines on Al Jazeera English TV, I went straight from the airport to a funeral. A week later, on our last night of filming, we attended another funeral. The first was for a 24-year-old woman, the second for a 50-year-old schoolteacher, and both active in the resistance to the coup. According to their families, both were killed for it.

The coup regime in Honduras is winning. Tepid pressure from the Obama administration is making it easy for the de facto government to run out the clock until the highly compromised elections in just five weeks. Whether or not international observers bless that vote, a new government will take power in Honduras and declare the stain of the coup removed, democracy restored. Absent the kind of meaningful sanctions Washington has so far been unwilling to impose, the status quo will triumph: the backers of the coup will go unpunished.

Unsurprisingly, the U.S. mainstream media is not reporting the story of what is really going on in Honduras. The de facto government and its backers invested $400,000 (that we know of) in bipartisan lobbying, and succeeded in implanting a deeply distorted narrative of events -- a nouveau cold war story starring Hugo Chávez as puppet master and Zelaya as marionette. Meanwhile, the voice of the social movement struggling to reform its country's constitution in the second poorest nation in the hemisphere has been all but ignored.

And the killing continues. Two more alleged political murders in the last two weeks while what scant reporting there was fixated on the negotiations between Micheletti and Zelaya, a surface story that serves the coup regime's strategy and is largely irrelevant to the deeper issues at play.

In Honduras, people are dying while the world looks the other way. Real international pressure -- especially from the United States -- is the only force that could stop that now. But time is running out.

Watch Part One and Part Two of the full version of Fault Lines: 100 Days of Resistance.

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Tagged as: chavez, honduras, zelaya, honduras coup, micheletti, 100 days of resistance, fault lines

Avi Lewis is the presenter of Fault Lines -- a fortnightly show that digs deeper into what is driving the big news stories of the day.


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They committed treason!
Posted by: truthteller on Oct 27, 2009 3:11 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Honduran generals and their puppet "President" committed treason against the Honduran people by staging a coup against the legitimately elected government. Treason by high officials is the only crime that I believe should be punished by death. Eliminating those who would override the will of the people is the only way to prevent it from happening again.

The other socialist leaning governments in the region should band together to take back the Honduran government for it's rightful officials by force of arms, with the support of the majority of the Honduran people. The U. S. government and others outside the region need to stay the f@#$ out of it. The generals who led the coup and their puppet deserve to be hanged in the capital's main square for their treachery. Anyone who assisted them (like the rich oligarchs) also deserve to either be executed or banished after being stripped of all of their wealth. Probably executed would be better, so they cannot regroup and stage another attack on democracy.

I'm sick of this crap happening because some U. S. corporation(s) think they have the right to oust governments they don't like, or might want to impose regulations that would give the poor working people a decent living. Instituting a minimum wage was the real trigger for the coup.

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» No, no, no, yiu got it all wrong Posted by: bonapartist
Banana Republicans
Posted by: jbro434 on Oct 28, 2009 3:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as Dole and Chiquita have their people at the table in Washington, nothing good will come of this. The CIA has teamed up with these folks before to meddle in the affairs of the Americas and it seems to be happening again. The excuse that the opposition gives about changes to the constitution is a smoke screen for the fact that Zelaya wants to raise the wages of the poorly paid farm workers and sweatshop laborers and the big multinationals had a hissy fit.
Does it surprise anyone that the leader of the coup was trained at the School of the Americas in Columbus, GA?
Boycott Dole and Chiquita. Buy Fair Trade and local only.

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Aren't we engaged in enough nation building already?
Posted by: franklyspanking on Oct 28, 2009 4:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Besides, we don't have a single deployable peace keeper in our entire uniformed services. Just war fighters and war winners...

...which is why peace keeping/nation building is a losing proposition for America.

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banana coups
Posted by: grmartin on Oct 28, 2009 4:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are there are any Latin American countries that have not suffered US-sponsored military coups? Of course this one has to be "unofficial", with Obama's new way of doing things, et al, but no nifty new president is going to change the leopard's spots. We can be sure there is US corporate funding and the CIA behind this effort.

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Obama continues The Monroe Doctrine
Posted by: bonapartist on Oct 28, 2009 10:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like every other president before him, in that, like in other matters, there isn't much hope & change. Than again it is a catchy PR slogan and nothing more.

Compare this to "nation building" in Iraq and Afghanistan continued by Obama's Democrats and started by Bush's Republicans and the continuity is painfully obvious.

How about US starts minding its own business, take care of its people first and stop meddling in domestic affairs of other countries?

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the sobering truth is
Posted by: bvennie on Oct 29, 2009 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Honduras: poll shows growing opposition to coup

continue reading

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Foolish
Posted by: JSquercia on Oct 31, 2009 7:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sadly it is foolish to expect the corporate owned Main Stream Media to cover any left wing South American Government other than to demonize them .

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Abercrombie and Fitch
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