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Honduran Elections a Parody of Democracy
The production Honduran Elections, staged at a small, rundown theater in Central America on November 29, left the audience unconvinced, and failed to resolve a confused and conflict-ridden plotline.
Written and directed by the Honduran elite and the Honduran armed forces, with the help of the U.S. State Department, the play opens on the empty streets of Tegucigalpa in what is announced as the most participatory elections in the history of the nation.
This is just the first of the inexplicable contradictions between the narrative and reality that run through the play.
Honduran Elections tells the story of a poor nation rocked by a military coup d'état and occupied by its own armed forces. The contrived plot then attempts to convince the audience that the same forces that carried out the coup —kidnapping the elected president and launching a wave of bloody repression — are now carrying out "free and fair elections" to restore democracy. The play follows these characters throughout election day, in a series of charades that leaves the viewer with the unsavory sensation of having been played as a pawn in a theater of the absurd.
For example, during the entire multi-million-dollar production, the elected president of this nation remains offstage. It is never explained in the play why this key figure was not given a role. The audience is expected to accept the fact that his absence is insignificant to the plot. Since the supposed message of the drama is that democracy has been restored to a country held under an illegitimate regime, the missing president makes no dramatic sense.
The major characters in the drama are a large group of miscast national and international observers, who remember their lines but frequently fall out of their roles as impartial observers; a mostly invisible Supreme Electoral Tribunal that issues undecipherable and contradictory statistics; and candidates who attempt to lend credibility to the plot but are so self-serving and devoted to the anti-democratic forces that their actions mock the very cause they claim to support.
This reviewer can only hope that the disastrous Honduran Elections will never be produced on another stage again. The writers, directors, and actors of the debacle have insulted the intelligence of viewers throughout the world and degraded the noble theme of democracy that purports to lie at the center of this deceptive drama.
Witness to a Sham
The mock theater review above is how it felt to witness the Honduran elections from my seat in Tegucigalpa last week. I arrived on November 27 to monitor human rights violations, and observe the context and accompanying conditions of an electoral process that could under no circumstances be validated, due to the fatal flaws in its origin.
The news is not that Porfirio "Pepe" Lobo of the National Party beat Elwin Santos of the Liberal Party. Since the military ousted the elected president Manuel Zelaya on June 28, the bipartisan system gave way to a far deeper duality — for and against the coup d'etat. Both Lobo and Santos favored the military takeover of the Honduran democracy and supported the illegal regime of Roberto Micheletti. Both sought to gain power by laundering the coup through these elections and to lock in a transition that guaranteed the continued power of the Honduran economic elite.
In fact, the November 29 national elections for president and congress shouldn't have taken place. The voting was organized and overseen by an illegal coup regime. This regime officially suspended basic civil liberties, such as freedom of assembly and freedom of speech. It closed down independent media, or repeatedly blocked transmissions.
In Honduras, normal electoral activities were redefined as criminal behavior, including holding rallies and proclaiming the right to abstain. Reports of coercion in factories and among public employees came in from individuals who suffered the threats firsthand. The army enforced the dictatorial decrees in the street.
Some 100 registered candidates, ranging from presidential candidates to local mayors, withdrew from the elections in protest of the continued coup and the internal exile of the elected president. The popular resistance called a boycott and a "popular curfew," urging people to stay at home on election day. This was in part to avoid confrontations with the over 30,000 security forces called out to "protect order," in a nation where these same forces are responsible for massive human rights violations and scores of murders of members of the resistance.
The Honduran elections should never have taken place because Honduras, under the coup regime, failed to meet the basic criteria of "free and fair elections" set out in documents like the one issued by the Inter-Parliamentary Council in 1994. The Honduran state didn't even come close to meeting the basic criteria of free elections by assuring freedom of movement, assembly, association, and expression. The security forces responsible for human rights violations before, during, and after voting have been granted complete immunity from justice. In San Pedro Sula, the police violently repressed a nonviolent march supporting the boycott, beating and arresting various people.
From Polls to Percentage Points
But the elections did take place. On November 29, some Hondurans, particularly in the wealthiest neighborhoods, came out to vote while most of the poor stayed home. Those of us who drove from poll to poll to check for participation, militarization, and incidents confirm this phenomenon.
Concerned that the eyewitness accounts of sparse participation could undermine the U.S. message of "mission accomplished" in Honduras, Ambassador Hugo Llorens appeared at the polls to make the pre-emptive declaration that the "elections are a technical issue and the statistical results will tell the real story." We were all told not to believe our own eyes, as all eyes then turned to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal.
On the night of November 29, the Electoral Tribunal (TSE by its Spanish initials) triumphantly announced that 61% of registered voters had turned out to vote. This was a bald-faced lie. Their own statistics showed that only 49.2% of Hondurans had voted — a considerable decrease from past elections. Real News reports that an elections official, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of his life, claimed that Saul Escobar, the head of the Tribunal, invented the statistic.
The elections observation organization, Hagamos Democracia (Let`s Make Democracy) contracted by the TSE to deliver early results, reported a 47.6% turnout. In an exclusive interview with journalist Dick Emanuelsson, Rolando Bu of Hagamos Democracia attempted to explain the discrepancy, "We are working on the basis of the voter registration list we received of 4.6 million. I haven't spoken with the magistrates (of the Tribunal) yet, but it is likely that they are subtracting aspects such as migration and deaths." Needless to say, it is not acceptable practice to alter the voter registration list during the counting process.
Hagamos Democracia is financed by the National Democratic Institute, an arm of the U.S. government's National Endowment for Democracy. The NDI issued an elections report, sidestepping the critical issue of turnout and noting only that a discrepancy existed. It stated that it could not send a formal observation mission because there was no pre-electoral observation, which is a critical part of the process. Yet the NDI's 22 members wore "elections observers" vests during their work.
The NDI report also noted the compromised impartiality of many of the international observers. "Regrettably, the TSE offered funding for transportation, lodging, and meals, and a number of observers accepted this offer. The Declaration of Principles for International Election Observation states that international election observers "should not accept funding or logistical support from the government whose elections are being observed, as it may raise a significant conflict of interest."
This conflict of interest soon became painfully obvious. Interviewed on international television about the elections, I noted that the elections would not solve the political crisis in Honduras due to the lack of legitimacy of coup-run elections and the climate of violation of human rights, and because many nations would not recognize the results. A crowd of "observers" gathered around the interview in the hall in front of the Electoral Tribunal and verbally attacked me, shouting "liar" and ordering that I be thrown out of the country. I tried to engage in debate but the attacks continued and, fearing for my safety, I was escorted out of the area by a Tribunal security guard.
The Crisis Deepens
The United States played out the script written since mid-October. The newly confirmed Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Arturo Valenzuela immediately called the elections "a significant step in Honduras's return to the democratic and constitutional order after the 28 June coup." He went on to emphasize that it was just a first step, and that the nation must establish a government of national unity within the framework of the Tegucigalpa-San Jose Accord.
But on December 2, the Honduran congress closed the circle on the consolidation of a military takeover in the country by voting against the reinstatement of President Manuel Zelaya. "We're disappointed by this decision since the United States had hoped the Congress would have approved his return," Valenzuela said in a statement. "And our policy since June 28 has been consistently principled, and we've condemned the coup d'état and have continued to accept President Zelaya as the democratically elected and legitimate leader of Honduras throughout this political crisis. However, the decision taken by Congress, which it carried out in an open and transparent manner, was in accordance with its mandate in Article 5 of the Tegucigalpa-San Jose Accord. Both President Zelaya and Mr. Micheletti agreed to this accord on October 30th."
The loophole in the Tegucigalpa Accord that allowed the coup-controlled congress to first delay the vote until after the elections and then vote against reinstating the president allowed for the violation of the main point of the San Jose Accords, mediated by Costa Rican president Oscar Arias. The U.S government played a major role in inserting this loophole. State Department official Thomas Shannon negotiated with Republican Senator Jim DeMint over recognition of the elections without reinstatement of Zelaya in return for Senate confirmations of Valenzuela and Shannon's own confirmation as ambassador to Brazil.
Now the State Department has launched a concerted campaign, along with the coup regime, to get foreign nations to recognize the Honduran elections. Regional countries that have or hope for free trade agreements with the U.S. have agreed to play along. So far the countries that have announced they will recognize the elections include Panama, Peru, Colombia and Costa Rica.
Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador, and several European countries have announced they will not recognize the elections. President Lula da Silva reiterated Brazil's position from the Summit of Latin America, Spain, and Portugal, stating that his government would not recognize the Honduran elections or enter into dialogue with Pepe Lobo. "It's not possible to recognize a coup supporter. Period," he said in reference to Lobo. Lula added, "This is a matter of common sense, a question of principles, we cannot make agreements with the forces of political vandalism in Latin America."
International media such as CNN, along with the State Department and the Honduran coup leaders, are heading up the charge to call the elections "clean and fair", as The New York Times put it, and use the false voter turn-out rate as the sole indicator of the election's legitimacy. Some allies appear to be weakening their stance against recognition.
Opposition Regroups
President Zelaya, who remains holed up in the heavily barricaded Brazilian embassy, told the BBC that the elections were fraudulent and would only intensify the crisis. The National Front Against the Coup has decided to cease the daily demonstrations in the street and move on to building a broad movement for a constitutional assembly. Juan Barahona, a leader of the Front, announced that the focus on reinstating Zelaya has ended. Zelaya has announced that he would not return to government until the end of his term on January 27 because it would be validating a coup-managed transfer of power.
Human rights groups have stated that the violations committed under the coup will not be forgotten. Honduras suffered a wave of human rights violations including assassinations, rapes, beatings and arbitrary detentions of resistance members. An Amnesty International delegation, after 10 days in the country, noted in a press statement that the "crisis in Honduras does not end with the election results, the authorities cannot return to business as usual without ensuring human rights safeguards…There are dozens of people in Honduras still suffering the effects of the abuses carried out in the past five months. Failure to punish those responsible and to fix the malfunctioning system would open the door for more abuses in the future."
Roberto Micheletti has now returned to power after a "leave of absence" in a new stage of the political and legal limbo that has characterized this nation since June 28. Some wonder how long any president can remain in office now that a military coup has been deemed successful. "Many Hondurans fear that the coup's success represents a threat to the future stability of a democratic state," writes Robert White of the Center for International Policy, who then poses the following rhetorical question. "If the few dozen men who hold the strings of power and wealth can escalate one of the nation's recurring political brawls into the overthrow of an elected president, how can future democratic leaders dare to challenge the culture of wealth and impunity that has made Honduras one of the most corrupt, crime-ridden, and unjust nations in the world?"
The spectacle mounted to justify the coup leaders' retention of power has now played out. In the sequel, the excluded character — the people of Honduras who joined together to reject the hijacking of their democracy — will play a key role. Throughout the country, farmers, feminists, union members and citizens are more organized than ever before. The demand for the constitutional assembly to change one of the world's most obsolete constitutions is at the center of this new phase.
In the end, the Honduran political crisis cannot be resolved without a legal means to channel dissent and eliminate the gross injustices of Honduran society. A broad swathe of the population that rejects the "elections panacea" scenario is determined to fight for just that, and nothing less. They deserve the support of the U.S. government and the rest of the international community.
- Posted in

33 Comments so far
Show AllNo Justice, No Peace.
Americans should continue working to expose/condemn/defund the organizations working from within this country to screw over poor countries in the name of "free markets". We need some hackers to get THEIR email and documents and put them on the Internet. Let in the sunshine, and the cockroaches will run for cover.
That would be the Pentagon essentially.
link to the July posting by Jeremy Scahill with detailed analysis of the constitutional 'constiuent assembly' that Zelaya was attempting to propose to the Homduran people.
http://rebelreports.com/post/133319827/why-president-zelayas-actions-in-honduras-were-legal
An aside: The Brazilian Constitution of 1988 came about through constituent assembly following the dictatorship in that country. The indigenous peoples had to press unflaggingly for the inclusion of Article 231 which details their rights especially to traditional lands, customs, beliefs among many other detailed rights for which they must continually struggle.
from the article:
President Zelaya intended to perform a non-binding public consultation, about the conformation of an elected National Constituent Assembly. To do this, he invoked article 5 of the Honduran “Civil Participation Act” of 2006. According to this act, all public functionaries can perform non-binding public consultations to inquire what the population thinks about policy measures. This act was approved by the National Congress and it was not contested by the Supreme Court of Justice, when it was published in the Official Paper of 2006. That is, until the president of the republic employed it in a manner that was not amicable to the interests of the members of these institutions.
Furthermore, the Honduran Constitution says nothing against the conformation of an elected National Constituent Assembly, with the mandate to draw up a completely new constitution, which the Honduran public would need to approve. Such a popular participatory process would bypass the current liberal democratic one specified in article 373 of the current constitution, in which the National Congress has to approve with 2/3 of the votes, any reform to the 1982 Constitution, excluding reforms to articles 239 and 374. This means that a perfectly legal National Constituent Assembly would have a greater mandate and fewer limitations than the National Congress, because such a National Constituent Assembly would not be reforming the Constitution, but re-writing it. The National Constituent Assembly’s mandate would come directly from the Honduran people, who would have to approve the new draft for a constitution, unlike constitutional amendments that only need 2/3 of the votes in Congress. This popular constitution would be more democratic and it would contrast with the current 1982 Constitution, which was the product of a context characterized by counter-insurgency policies supported by the US-government, civil façade military governments and undemocratic policies. In opposition to other legal systems in the Central American region that (directly or indirectly) participated in the civil wars of the 1980s, the Honduran one has not been deeply affected by peace agreements and a subsequent reformation of the role played by the Armed Forces.
In essence it akin to having a Constitution that excluded Blacks and Women from voting then declaring in another clause that No Changes to this constitution could be made unless 66 percent of the "White Males" in the congress agreed with it.
50 years roll by and a newly elected President thinks this unjust and seeks to have those provisions changed by going to the people in a referendum.
The White males call this "Undemocratic" and have that leader deposed.
We built a school for kids in Nicaraqua several years ago. While there, I learned that the U.S. military and the CIA have been present, occupying the country right along since God knows when. El Salvador is another U.S. military acquisition as is most of Central America and Mexico nowadays. This cannot be claimed as a way to stop drugs, because during the military occupation of CA, drugs have become true commodities, reverting to a mean price you can't find even in Columbia. So if the military is there but not stopping drugs, what on earth can they be doing there? Looking for Osama maybe?
Yet the discussion is about Zelaya as if his situation was unique. The U.S. military has invaded all of Central America without so much as a snicker from the left. Hillary Clinton and her pals on K Street have made tens of millions on this, but not a word from her posse about they think about her antics. The reason the left is finished is because everything we said would happen, has happened, and the result is we have no more say. Nothing we say matters a whit. You can bellow and wail all you want, but, as long as they send their checks, you will cash them. Good luck.
Thong-Girl has really chucked in the towel. Both Nicaragua and El Salvador now have elected leftist governments (Funes has nearly 90% approval), as do a good number of South American countries. Obviously the CIA-Pentagon Corporation certainly is doing all they can to subvert them, and Honduras was to be a trial case. But, that the "Honduran Election" game-play was such a such a dismal flop as Laura Carson shows, only confirms the ineptness of the Clinton mob in using such golpes to maintain their control. It was a flop because Latin America got the message clearly: If they get away with it in Honduras they'll bring off golpes everywhere. The combined leftish pressure from Latin America will eventually be to much for este lobo.
Yes, but you forgot to mention Morales' recent landslide re-election in Bolivia. And of course we can't forget Cuba and Venezuela and even Ecuador, Argentina, Nicaragua and even Brazil. Brazil took an active role in bringing Zelaya back to Honduras and giving him shelter in her consulate in Tegucigalpa.
The US Empire seems to be losing its grip on the Central and South America. Although very disappointing, the coup in Honduras (and Plan Colombia) seems to be a desperate attempt to re-establish the iron stranglehold.
The price of the US, Big Rogue State, giving birth to Baby Rogue Honduras hasbeen at least 5000 serious human rights violations.
Not to mention the resistance--this week 2 of Pinochetti's close relatives have been assassinated, and
of course, he has not "resigned".
Somebody high up in the US government sure wants those bloody bananas badly!
Kermit Roosevelts Coup in Iran became a template used by the USA for the next 40 years in other nations.
These tactics are being refined in the Honduras. Look at the Honduras as the Petri dish for testing new strategies to reverse Socialism and Governments of the people in the rest of Latin America in order to replace them with the Fascists that the USA Prefers.
Some of those tactics are being used in the United States, too.
- in Honduras a CIA employee with an Hondureno face (more or less) -
- in Kabul a CIA employee with an Afghan face -
- in Washington a CIA employee with an African-American face
- and there's more if you count it up, isn't there?
Many of us worried about echoes of Berlin in the '20's and 30's during the Cheney administration. I suspect Pinochet would have been closer, but that means that the people behind Bush's fascism have not left power, only hired another CEO.
Man, I am so impressed with the new direction of US foreign policy. How refreshing. That Obama is really turning things around, change we can believe in.
1.5 MILLION VOTED ---- 3 MILLION REFUSED
And so, Honduras is now ruled by the 1.5 million most
intelligent and wealth, class warfare in its finest hour.
Not all of us find rich people particularly intelligent.
Don't forget the recent sham election in Afghanistan. What a fine display of the democratic process for the surrounding nations!
Pepe Obama's coup...
Correct.
Another 'classic,' purely scripted triumph for American fascism and imperial hegemony in the America's. But there was never any doubt in this. The transparent and obviously staged charade served only to clumsily provide a fig leaf electoral cover which fooled no one.
There was no way the American empire would permit an even vaguely 'left' government to emerge in its southern bailiwick; nor was there even a scintilla of doubt that the Pentagon and the CIA would have their way and Obama would comply.
The only thing that is puzzling is that given the protracted media circus and fraudulent 'diplomatic' roundelay– is why they even bother with the pretense anymore at all? Why all the efforts to engineer a proxy coup when they can just do what they did in Iraq and Afghanistan?
Honduras is now–more than ever–and American client state run out of the Pentagon.
It will serve–in tandem with fascist Columbia– as a staging ground for an invasion or coup-invasion of Venezuela and the overthrow of Chavez. –(Jill Bains)
@Amfortas
"The only thing that is puzzling is that given the protracted media circus and fraudulent 'diplomatic' roundelay– is why they even bother with the pretense anymore at all? Why all the efforts to engineer a proxy coup when they can just do what they did in Iraq and Afghanistan?"
Are you serious? Watch yourself some NBC/ABC/CBS news... any stories on Honduras? Of the few there were, any serious questions as to the US's role in facilitating the coup or the legitimacy of the election? I don't watch, but I'll go out on a limb and say there were no serious investigations made/questions asked. Now, if they sent in the Marines to depose Zelaya like they did in Afghanistan/Iraq do you think that would be a bigger story? More questions for the POTUS/Pentagon/State Dep't to answer?
The surreptitious proxy coup/installation of a puppet regime is much preferred to armed intervention for many obvious reasons.
Iceburg Hits the Coast of Honduras: Resort Owners Offer Deep Diving Discounts
Nov 28, Main Street -- Under a cloak of secrecy and with their hands covering their faces in the "see no evil" position, Hondurans woke up this morning to find that it appears to have snowed enough to blanket the entire, tiny tropical nation in an icy pall. A man who appears to be the new head coach for Honduras's soccer team said that his persistence in pursuing the position has finally paid off. The new soccer coach has been vying to be head honcho every year since before the Soccer War, with voters saying "no thanks" for decades until this freakish change in weather.
"I knew hell would freeze over one day," the wildly unpopular coach, alias "the Big Bad Wolf" said.
New York Times: Conservative Appears to Have Won in Honduras
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/01/world/americas/01honduras.html?_r=2&hp
"Even voting for the right is doing nothing for it. It is only expressing to men feebly your desire that it should prevail. A wise man will not leave the right to the mercy of chance, nor wish it to prevail through the power of the majority. There is but little virtue in the action of masses of men..." Henry David Thoreau, "Civil Disobedience"
What a well written article even if I disagree with most of it. I think she got many of her facts from Hugo Chavez & Co though. I hate it when people confuse our government, however misguided, with the American people. Even though most Americans, unfortunately, could not tell you where Honduras is other than down by Mexico someplace, they would be on the side of the "good guy". In this case the good guys won. Also, if she was in Honduras during the electons she only sought to see what she wanted to see. This is apparent in the leftist tilt to her article. P
Pure crapola, Mauk.
Laura Carlsen is a well-respected Latin American specialist based like this poster, in Mexico.
She is more than capable of making her own en situ analysis of the coup and the bogus elections in Honduras.
And, more to the point, YOU are not.
The "good guys" most definitely did not win.
Viva Chavez, cabron!
This cat seems to have got his facts from CNN and Fox "news". It is quite comical.
Chavez, Morales, Zelaya, Funes, etc. were all elected in internationally observed free and fair elections. We can only "hope" for that in the USA.
Viva la Revolucion Bolivarense! Viva la ALBA!
So was Uribe. On the other hand, was Castro elected in internationally observed free and fair elections?
Neither Cuba nor Colombia have international observers for their elections.
One, because the US would say that the observers had been paid off anyway--and the other because the US doesn't give a shit and will accept any cock and bull story from Colombia, anyway.
Was there a point you would like to make or are you just shuckin and jivin?
Bolivariana, not Bolivarense.
"A broad swathe of the population that rejects the "elections panacea" scenario is determined to fight for just that, and nothing less."
–(Laura Carlsen)
Can one even conceive of Americans "fighting" for something beyond the corrupt and dead end dystopia of representative democracy as mediated by elections?
–One can only wish that Americans themselves could end their addiction to the "electoral panacea." For in all truth, elections matter as little here as they do in Honduras–perhaps even less. The only similarity is that the results are the same: Fascism.
–(Jill Bains)
Listening to the BBC World @ work the other day I heard a report that Álvaro Uribe Vélez, president of Columbia, wants to hold a referendum on changing the constitution so that he can run for a third term.
I'm still waiting to see him run out of the country in his PJs.
"no gods, no masters" --m. sanger
Uribe is trying for reelection??? Say it ain't so! Next thing you know, he will be shutting down opposition TV stations, harrassing legitimately elected opposition state governors, financing terrorists in neighboring countries, and threatening war with his neighbors!
He paid off a bunch of congressfolks to approve his second term--and when they blew the whistle THEY went to jail for accepting bribes.
That's how it goes down here in Latin America.
Uribe's family has its own drug cartel, formed the paramilitaries, and the DEA protects his routes to supply the gringo addicts.
Thicker than thieves, Uribe and the US government.
This is still 100% more fair than a Pennsylvania election.
Absolutely amazing. What political skill the Obama administration and State Department has shown in helping to facilitate this coup, make it seem like they oppose it, then make it seem like they've fixed things by facilitating an election to restore democracy in Honduras.
Does no one else agree this is impressive?
Definitely orchestrated by the US State Department. Disturbing that Obama/Clinton must believe their base will not notice and they will win another 4 years. I have been thinking how activists should proceed that would be helpful to the resistance in Honduras and the rest of Latin America. Continue current path educating on the many issues through events, press releases, rallies etc? Is there a more focused approach like aggressive attempt to appeal to Shannon or someone else in the State Dept to push for a National Constituent Assembly? Both and more of course until better way is found.