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Caribbean-Latin America
Hopes rise as Honduras rivals send teams to crisis talks
2009-07-23
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- Rivals in the Honduran crisis sent teams to Costa Rica Wednesday ahead of a deadline for stalled crisis talks, as a diplomat suggested they had reached a deal for the conditional return of ousted President Manuel Zelaya. Amid a flurry of diplomatic activity almost a month after soldiers sent Zelaya away into exile, crisis mediator and Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias, the Costa Rican president, postponed a press briefing to accommodate the new plan to meet the two sides.

"We're traveling to Costa Rica immediately after this news conference is over" said interim foreign minister Carlos Lopez Contreras in Honduras.

A diplomatic source in Costa Rica said that a delegation for Zelaya was also heading to San Jose, and suggested that both sides had reached agreement for Zelaya's conditional return to Honduras. The deal would oblige Zelaya to respond to crimes he is accused of by the country's courts, and would return de facto president Roberto Micheletti to head the Congress, the diplomat said, requesting anonymity.
The devil clearly is in the details. What kind of court? Who prosecutes? What kind of hearings?

In the meantime, will Zelaya's supporters and paid toadies stop bringing guns into the country?
Costa Rican President Arias on Sunday warned that Honduras was on the brink of civil war and pleaded for crisis talks to resume after a 72-hour break.

Representatives of the interim leadership that backed Zelaya's ouster on June 28 rejected a proposal by Arias on Sunday that Zelaya return as president in charge of a "reconciliation" government. But they "maintain their position for dialogue and wish to preserve peace and tranquility in Honduras," a statement said Wednesday.

Despite increasing international aid freezes and insistence on a return for Zelaya, the de facto leaders have maintained that he will be arrested if he attempts to come back.

Zelaya, exiled in neighboring Nicaragua, has said he would return "by air, land or sea" shortly after the deadline expires.

But Hondurans remains deeply split over the possibility of his return, with many fearing more violence after Zelaya's spectacular first attempt left at least one protester dead in clashes with soldiers. Hundreds of white-clad demonstrators on Wednesday protested against Zelaya's return in the capital of an increasingly polarized Honduras. "We don't like you, Mel," one banner read in Wednesday's demonstration, using Zelaya's nickname.

Lawmakers in Honduras meanwhile approved the country's 2009 budget in a move that had been paralyzed under Zelaya.
Posted by:Steve White

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