12) HONDURAN OLIGARCHY:
"THE WAR IS
AGAINST CHAVEZ"
(The following article
is from the August 1-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low income rate; for
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July 10, 2009, by
Ricardo Daher ‑
Aporrea (from Venezuelanalysis.com)
The Honduran de facto government and
private media insist on denying the coup d'etat and say that they
accept the mediation of Costa Rican president Oscar Arias, but exclude
any conversation over the return of Zelaya to the presidency.
At the same
time they sustain that they are the spearhead of a "war" against the
"dictatorship of Hugo Chavez."
The daily
newspapers, Heraldo, Tribuna and La
Prensa, lead the way in defending
the coup d'etat and repeat, almost in the same words, the accusation
against the Venezuelan president for his supposed interference. They
also promote the withdrawal of Honduras from the ALBA accords, because
they claim, "it has only benefited the left."
The
headlines of these newspapers and the declarations of the current
leaders of the State are a copy of the anti‑communist manual of the
press campaigns in the decades of the sixties and seventies in the last
century.
With
contrived arguments, the Honduran media promotes a campaign accusing
the Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez of interfering in the country and
provoking the confrontations last Sunday near the surrounds of the
Tegucigalpa International Airport, when 200,000 people waited for the
return of the constitutional president.
By
extension, they sustain that the UN and the OAS are manipulated by
Chavez, and that the presidents of Argentina, Cristina Fernandez, of
Paraguay, Fernando Lugo, of Ecuador, Rafael Correa, of Nicaragua,
Daniel Ortega and the Honduran president himself, Manuel Zelaya, also
obey the orders of the Venezuelan president.
Even the
highest authorities of the Catholic Church have joined the campaign.
The Honduran
oligarchs continue ignoring the demand of the people for a return to
institutionality and to allow Zelaya to finish his term. "We have
communicated with president Arias to tell him that we are prepared for
any dialogue, always and when it is not for the return of president
Zelaya, but rather when it is to hand him over to the justice
tribunals," Roberto Micheletti, the defacto president, said. He
insisted, "we are not going to negotiate anything, we are going to
dialogue." "We are clear that everything that has happened here was
within the framework of the law and the Constitution of the Republic,
here what there was, was a constitutional situation," the dictator
concluded.
At the same
time, the de facto president continued naming new authorities in the
cabinet and substituting governors and mayors.
Legislator, Mauricio Reconco, of the
Liberal Party, defended the legality of the overthrow of Zelaya, "we
know what was done was best, if not we would have been in a worse
situation," he said. Immediately he went on to attack Chavez, "in this
moment we are seeing internationally that Honduras has shown it is a
country that has put a block in the path of Hugo Chavez. The war is no
longer against ex‑president Zelaya, but against Hugo Chavez."
"It is
lamentable that in organisations such as the UN and the OAS, Hugo
Chavez continues to have strength and power, he has chess pieces ‑ such
as these presidents, Correa, Lugo, Kirchner, Mel Zelaya and Daniel
Ortega ‑ who he manoeuvres at his whim," he concluded.
Cardinal
Oscar Andres Rodriguez, after defending the coup d'etat and criticising
the protests calling for the return of the constitutional president,
attacked the Venezuelan president: "We totally reject the interference
of the Venezuelan president, we are a small but sovereign country,
since he came to insult us in the month of August, that Mister has been
trying to put his hands in here, he should leave us in peace, he should
dedicate himself to governing his own country".
Meanwhile,
the rightwing movement Generation for Change, continues holding
mobilizations in support of the coup, as they did previously against
president Zelaya, and they repeat the same arguments of the old rulers.
Luis Colindres, one of the youth leaders said during an event on
Tuesday, that a dictatorial system exists in Venezuela, and that "if
Zelaya Rosales returns the same thing could happen in our country."
The Retired
Officials of the Armed Forces Association mobilized together with the
"youth" of the Generation for Change. At the same time as they defended
what they claimed was a legal presidential substitution, they
criticised the OAS, which they considered to be biased in favour of
Zelaya and through a communique condemned the intervention in internal
affairs by said organization.