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Zelaya Supporters Plan Mass Protests in Honduras
TEGUCIGALPA - Supporters of Manuel Zelaya planned mass protests to mark the 90th day since the ouster of the Honduran president on Saturday, as hopes sunk of a rapid solution to the crisis.
Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya answers questions at the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa, seen here on September 23. Zelaya on Friday told his supporters to keep protesting for his return to office, despite the start of tentative talks with the coup regime.
(AFP/Orlando Sierra) The deposed president remained holed up in the Brazilian embassy, along with around 60 people including supporters, journalists and diplomats, in increasingly uncomfortable conditions and surrounded by soldiers.
The UN Security Council on Friday warned the rebel authorities not to harass the embassy, as Zelaya claimed toxic gases had been pumped inside, causing people to vomit.
Chances for either side to change their positions looked increasingly slim.
Tensions rose after former rancher Zelaya made a surprise return on Monday, almost three months after soldiers sent him away at gunpoint amid a dispute over his plans to change the constitution.
Some 6,000 frustrated Zelaya supporters spilled onto the streets Friday, passing by rows of soldiers in front of the Brazilian embassy, ahead of larger demonstrations planned Saturday.
"Thanks, Brazil!" shouted some of the red-clad protesters.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Friday, speaking at the G20 summit in Pittsburgh, that Zelaya "could stay as long as necessary for his safety in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa."
Zelaya claimed Friday that noxious gases were being pumped into the embassy and called on the Red Cross for assistance.
"We have here some 60 people who are trying to breathe in the courtyard. There are people who are vomiting blood. A toxic gas has been disseminated," he told AFP in a phone interview.
A police spokesman categorically denied the use of gas.
In New York, the UN Security Council called for the protection of the Brazilian embassy at a emergency meeting.
Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said the embassy was "virtually under siege."
The de facto leaders have insisted the compound will not be taken by force and denied they were responsible for initial power and water cuts.
They also underlined on Friday that they were not ready to meet with a delegation of diplomats hoping to help mediate the crisis.
"Honduran politics are not a threat to international peace and security, and, as a consequence, there should be a Honduran solution" to the stalemate, the foreign ministry said in a statement.
The previous day they said they would accept a visit by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias and Panama's Vice President Juan Carlos Varela as part of a mediation effort proposed by former US president Jimmy Carter.
But Arias told Costa Rican radio Friday that he was not planning "for the moment" to go to Honduras.
"The preliminary work needs to be done by the (foreign) ministers" of regional countries and representatives of the Organization of American States (OAS), Arias added.
The de facto leaders said late Friday they were postponing their invitation to the OAS mission.
There was no immediate comment from the pan-American body.
A daytime curfew was lifted Thursday and airports reopened, allowing businesses to resume and providing relief to an increasingly frustrated public. A nighttime curfew remained in place.
The United Nations on Wednesday froze its technical support for November's presidential poll, in which neither Zelaya nor Micheletti are standing. Zelaya's term ends in January.
A police spokesman told AFP Wednesday that two people had been killed in pro-Zelaya protests since the start of the week, and rights groups have voiced concern about clampdowns on demonstrators and local media.

8 Comments so far
Show AllGo Cowboy !
This article is typical MSM garbage.
Photos have been disseminated here in Latin America of the gorila gang attacking the embassy with toxic gases.
There are also loudspeakers in front of the embassy blaring the anthem full blast 24/7--the same trick the gringos used against Noriega when he was hiding in the Papal Nunciate in Panama.
I strongly protest against CD reprinting any more MSM anti-Latin American propaganda. This site has been a sinkhole of Miami Herald and other hatespeech reprints.
It's an insult to those of us who live in the region and it is a real betrayal of the "progressive" ideology.
Obama attacks critics for arguing that the US needs to solve the worlds problems, e.g., Honduras.
Translated: The US will only lead when it is the US's interest. When the US is content with status quo, e.g., the coup in Honduras and Israeli ethnic cleansing, it will do nothing or hinder change if the world tries to change.
Effectively, Obama just reworded Bush's "either you are with us or against us" to "either you are with us, or you can go your own way, but the US won't help and will not get out of your way."
The AP and USA Today have and continue to print lies and false stories about Zalaya and the current conditions in Honduras. None of the two news outlets OR their writers will respond to ANY of my request or communications as to their false statements. The day Zalaya returned to Honduras, NBC nightly news had NOTHING...no mention...of his return. The BBC had the story as their opening! We Americans need to get our news from more reliable and truthful sources!
Watch how main stream American media news covers ( or doesn't!!!) the demonstrations tommorrow!
So far as I gather, there was not much coverage of Chavez' visit to NYC, either. He was on CNN but that appears to have been it.
The best site for updates on Honduras is www.aporrea.org from Venezuela.
This US president is triangulating himself into a one term presidency unless gets out of this Klantonoid (emphasis on the Klan as that "old boy" had a black retarded kid executed while he campaigning for president in 1992 to get the Klan vote.
Barak Obama is morally obligated to at least do as much to restore the democratic government of Honduras as a nominally Democratic president did in 1994 by taking the case the US Security Council and calling for whatever action is necessary to get the coup gangsters out and the democratic government back in. He would surely face no vetoes on this and he knows it. Now he can do it or he can lose his base as well as get ready to leave the White House in 2013.
AD
I have been following this story for three months. Mainstream media bias and indifference has been striking. It is clear to me the American elite and their organs view Honduras and other small Latin American countries as breeding grounds for servants, places of human refuse- the establishment is only interested in whether their workshops(workhouses) have been burned. NYT, Economist, WSJ, and main stream wire services(Reuters) have done a slap dash and disgusting job of reporting this important event. Their cheap shots and neglectful performance has driven me from their pages. I pray they won't be bailed out as they implode as competent news organizations.
Yes - there are many more pages and TV pieces about which particular hotel will give a room to Ahmadinejad and Qaddaffi for their stay in New York. Of course anything Iran does, even if legal, is inflated like a Macy's parade cartoon balloon. The news is often an extended show about nothing by mindless spewsters.
Meanwhile, the story of Zelaya has been largely unreported. After an exciting nighttime foray across the border, he is taking refuge in the Brazilian embassy in a country in which he is actually the President. Any in depth reporting would have to include the facts that he was legally elected by the people of his country and then illegally deposed by a collaboration of Chiquita Banana (fka United Fruit), the local oligarchy and probably CIA after he tried to raise minimum wages for farm workers.
The story of Zelaya is a story that affects the lives of thousands of people and the international reputation of the United States.
Joe