Even as we meet here today, America supports now the restoration of the democratically-elected President of Honduras, even though he has strongly opposed American policies. We do so not because we agree with him. We do so because we respect the universal principle that people should choose their own leaders, whether they are leaders we agree with or not. --Barack Obama, 7 July 2009, Moscow
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UPDATE: I just don't like it, not one little bit.
Clinton said Zelaya and the interim government should commit themselves to reaching a deal in talks with Arias, who won the Nobel peace prize in 1987 for helping to end political violence in El Salvador.It's so creepy. Clinton could call Tegucigalpa and that would be the end of it, and she's gotten them to offer him amnesty for bogus charges instead?
"I believe [dialogue] is a better route for [Zelaya] to follow at this time than to attempt to return in the face of the implacable opposition of the de facto regime," she said.
Mariana Sanchez, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Tegucigalpa, said on Tuesday: "There is a lot of speculation as to what will now happen here.
"The military-backed interim government yesterday sent a delegation to Washington made up of former presidents and former ministers ... [who] are going to meet some [US] Republican senators. This is going parallel to the announcement that Clinton made.
"The supreme court judge of Honduras ... said the interim government has allowed the court to name a commission that would help bring the country to a national dialogue and even offer amnesty to Zelaya of charges that he is facing in the country."
Oh Gawd!
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