Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Watch Video Donate Shop PBS Search PBS

Program
Support
From:
ABOUT US  |  LOCAL TV LISTINGS    EMAIL   PRINT      
PBS NewsHour
TopicsVideoRecent ProgramsTeacher ResourcesThe Rundown: news blogSubscribe rss | podcast


REGION: Latin America
TOPIC: Politics
Online NewsHour
TRANSCRIPT
Originally Aired: July 2, 2009
Report Part 1 of 2

New Honduran President Tries to Restore Order as Opposition Mounts

Supporters of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya took to the streets of Tegucigalpa, as the new president began appointing Cabinet members and boosted efforts to maintain order.
JOSE CABEZAS/AFP/GETTYIMAGES
 
audioDownload  
PART 1New President Tries to Restore Order
PART 2Experts Ask: Was Leader's Ouster a Coup?

RAY SUAREZ: Supporters of the ousted Honduran president fanned out in the streets of Tegucigalpa today and faced off against government forces.

Manuel Zelaya's loyalists hoisted signs labeling the new president a traitor and chanted slogans as police looked on.

Zelaya was ousted Sunday. He had tried to organize a referendum to end the constitutional limit on his presidential term. That enraged the country's congress and armed forces. The army stormed the presidential palace, removed him from office, and sent him to Costa Rica.

Honduras' new president, Roberto Micheletti, has already begun to appoint new cabinet ministers. The country's congress has approved a nightly curfew and 24-hour detention rules to keep the peace.

On Tuesday, Micheletti said the old president was not welcome back.

ROBERTO MICHELETTI, President, Honduras (through translator): He had already violated the constitution and the laws. He cannot return as the president of this country unless a president from a Latin American country puts him there forcibly by arms.

RAY SUAREZ: Condemnation of the forced ouster of Zelaya has been swift and unrelenting from both the United States and the Organization of American States. The 27 member states of the European Union have withdrawn their ambassadors.

On Tuesday, Zelaya received a standing ovation at the United Nations as he criticized the new regime.

MANUEL ZELAYA, President, Honduras (through translator): Dictatorships repress, as has been the case in Honduras today. A dictatorship has now been established. Repression has been established in the country. I fought for the reversal of this system, and the people fought for the overthrow of the system, but the elite refuses us.

RAY SUAREZ: In Latin America, some of Zelaya's strongest backing has come from Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and other leftist leaders. The United States, which has had close ties with Honduras and its military, has insisted Zelaya is the constitutional leader of the country and that military action was not warranted.

On Monday, President Obama labeled Zelaya's removal "not legal."

BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States: It would be a terrible precedent if we start moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing military coups as a means of political transition.

RAY SUAREZ: Zelaya postponed today's planned return to Honduras as representatives from the Organizations of American States headed there to negotiate a settlement that would include reinstating Honduras' elected president.

CONTINUE

LATEST AFRICA HEADLINES
U.S., Egypt in Showdown Over NGO Worker Trials
How Egypt's Soccer Violence Fits Into its Political Unrest
In Egypt, Deadly Soccer Riot Reignites Protests Against Military Rule
ONLINE NEWSHOUR LINKS

July 2, 2009
World View

June 30, 2009
Ousted Honduras President Vows to Return as Protests Continue

June 29, 2009
Other News: President of Honduras Ousted in Coup




CURRENT NEWSHOUR HEADLINES







The PBS NewsHour is Funded in part by: The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Additional Foundation and Corporate Sponsors
Program
Support
From:
Copyright © 1996- MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. All Rights Reserved.