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Selling Out Democracy in Honduras: The U.S. and the Honduran Election

Manuel Zelaya

Manuel Zelaya

Honduras’ November 29 election has been rightfully scorned as a sham by political leaders across the hemisphere. With the exception, that is, of President Obama.

The June 28 military coup d’etat that overthrew Honduras’ democratically elected president provided President Obama with “a golden opportunity…to make a clear break with the past and show that he is unequivocally siding with democracy,” as Costa Rica’s former vice president put it. However, the U.S.’s recognition of the sham election Honduras’ de facto regime is staging on Sunday makes it quite clear that Obama is choosing instead to side with the far-right Republicans who support the coup.

In the wake of the coup that overthrew Honduran president Jose Manuel Zelaya Rosales, the Guardian’s Calvin Tucker observes that there had been some promising signs that Obama was going to remain true to his pledge to “seek a new chapter of engagement” in Latin America. Despite some initial waffling by the State Department, Obama spoke out in strong terms against Zelaya’s overthrow, saying that “it would be a terrible precedent if we start moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing military coups as a means of political transition, rather than democratic elections.” The U.S. backed a Costa Rican-brokered compromise that would have seen Zelaya returned to office, at the helm of a “unity government.” All non-humanitarian U.S. aid was suspended to the de facto regime, as were the U.S. visas of the coup leaders. The State Department indicated that the US would “not be able to support” the outcome of the elections out of concern that they would not be “free, fair and transparent.” And finally, during a visit to Honduras by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in late October, the coup leaders agreed to sign the U.S. backed agreement providing for Zelaya’s return.

This firm U.S. reaction apparently “privately stunned” the coup leaders, who were sure “this would never have happened if the Republicans had still been in power,” according to the New Yorker’s William Finnegan.

Indeed, the coup leaders, who along with their allies such as the Latin American Business Council have spent at least six hundred thousand dollars on Washington lobbyists and lawyers, count amongst their supporters several prominent congressional Republicans, including South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint.

DeMint had been leading efforts to block key diplomatic appointments in Latin America, and earlier this month, the Obama administration succumbed to this pro-coup Republican pressure, announcing that it will after all recognize Sunday’s election, and not insist on the return of the legitimate president. On November 4, Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Shannon announced on CNN that “the formation of the National Unity Government is apart from the reinstatement of President Zelaya” and that the Honduran Congress will decide when and if Zelaya is reinstated.

DeMint took credit for the change in U.S. policy, releasing a press statement declaring “Senator secures commitment for U.S. to back Nov. 29 elections even if Zelaya is not reinstated.” In the statement, DeMint said he was

happy to report the Obama Administration has finally reversed its misguided Honduran policy and will fully recognize the November 29th elections… Secretary Clinton and Assistant Secretary Shannon have assured me that the U.S. will recognize the outcome of the Honduran elections regardless of whether Manuel Zelaya is reinstated.

The 23 Latin American and Caribbean nations of the Rio Group do not recognize Sunday’s election. However the Obama administration is now going ahead in recognizing the vote held in the midst of what Amnesty International has characterized as a “human rights crisis,” marked by an”increasingly disproportionate and excessive use of force being used by the police and military to repress legitimate and peaceful protests across the country.” Since Zelaya’s overthrow, over 3,500 people have been illegally detained, over 600 have been beaten and dozens have been killed, according to the Committee of Families of the Disappeared (COFADEH), with media workers, human rights defenders and female protesters particularly targeted, according to Amnesty.

The only two presidential candidates on the ballot supported the coup that ousted the elected president. The leading opposition candidate, Carlos Reyes, recently withdrew his nomination for the presidency, calling the election fraudulent, and hundreds of candidates for congressional and municipal seats have also withdrawn from the election.

And Tucker notes that

Trade unions and social movements calling for a boycott of the election are facing mafia-style threats, with the regime’s chief of police boasting that he has compiled a blacklist of “all those of the left”.

At the same time, Honduras’ big business federation, which supported the coup, is reportedly offering “cash discounts” to Hondurans for voting in the election.

The fact that such an election has won the support of the Obama administration does not bode well for the president’s “new chapter” of U.S.-Latin America relations.

Isabel Macdonald is AlterNet’s NYC-based publicist. Before joining AlterNet, she was the communications director at the media watch-dog group Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting, and her writing has appeared in Extra Magazine, Huffington Post, the Indypendent and Z Magazine.

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Walk Against Warming

Walk Against Warming 2009

12 December is D-Day for the planet as world leaders meet in Copenhagen to do a global deal on climate change.
While they talk the talk, we're walking the walk all over the world, from New York to Tokyo, Mumbai to Paris and all over Australia. So get your walking shoes on and be part of the most important Walk Against Warming ever.
12 DECEMBER - Global day of action

SYDNEY 1pm, Martin Place
MELBOURNE 12pm, State Library, Swanston St
BRISBANE 10am, King George Square
ADELAIDE 11am, Victoria Square/Tarndanyangga
PERTH 11am, Perth Cultural Centre, Russell Square
HOBART Timbs Track, Upper Florentine, Gordon River
CANBERRA 11.30am, Federation Mall
DARWIN 5pm, Nightcliff Jetty

http://www.walkagainstwarming.org/

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Never Again….Again!

We Wish To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families is an unforgettable firsthand account of a people’s response to genocide and what it tells us about humanity.

The book chronicles what has happened in Rwanda and neighboring states since 1994, when the Rwandan government called on everyone in the Hutu majority to murder everyone in the Tutsi minority. Though the killing was very low-tech — mostly by machete — it was carried out at shocking speed: some 800,000 people were killed in a hundred days. A Tutsi pastor, in a letter to his church president, a Hutu, used the chilling phrase that gives the book it’s title.

The survivors harrowing accounts of the genocide are even more heartbreaking given that the world powers not only ignored warnings about the impending genocide but failed to intervene while it was being carried out. The UN mandate of Never Again become Again…Again.

The question still remains whether a country composed largely of perpetrators and victims can create a cohesive society?

When I read this book a few years ago it had such a profound impact on my social and political conscience that I consider reading it a turning point in my life. I can’t guarantee the same experience for you but I do know it’s a book you won’t forget.

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Nuru Building Communities.

Picture 6

Nuru International was founded by Jake Harriman, a former Special Operations Platoon Commander with the U.S. Marines. After fighting the war on terror around the world, Jake became convinced that the only way to end terrorism is to end extreme poverty. He left the Marines and enrolled at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business to create an organization to end extreme poverty.
Nuru works amongst the rural poor in the developing world. We’re currently working in Kuria, Kenya, and it is from the local language that we got our name: Nuru is a Kiswahili word meaning light.
When Nuru was invited into the community, we mobilized the local farmers into groups. We then trained local leaders using an innovative leadership development model that equips the poor to become the answers to their own problems.
Next we employed design thinking to understand the specific needs of the community and created innovative solutions together with the community to meet those needs.
However, we don’t claim to know all the answers. That’s why we have our own Research Team to search out and compile innovative and effective practices used by top organizations around the world facing similar challenges.
Nuru partners with those organizations, inviting them into our project to apply their expertise in Nuru’s 5 program areas: Agriculture, Water & Sanitation, Healthcare, Education, and Community Economic Development. Nuru then facilitates the project as a general contractor of NGOs.
The end result: each individual organization’s impact is multiplied far beyond what could have been achieved in isolation, and eliminating duplication of effort brings rapid results at a much lower cost.
During the implementation phase, Nuru generates revenues in all 5 program areas, eventually allowing the project to be fully financially sustainable and independent of outside funding.
Once that is achieved, Western Nuru staff will exit the project, empowering the trained local Nuru staff to duplicate the model in neighboring communities.
This is holistic integrated development that is sustainable and scalable.

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Media Watch: Deadliest Drugs.

drug_deaths_1_460
Check out the article on The Guardian blog for detail and data. You want both right?
There’s been a furore over here in the UK about the dangers of illegal drugs. The Government has sacked its most senior drugs advisor, Dr Professor Nutt, after he claimed cannabis was no more harmful than alcohol. And that horse-riding, and specifically ‘equasy’ (Equine Addiction Syndrome) was riskier than taking ecstasy. (Statistically he’s correct. His study here.).

Anyway, digging at the numbers behind his statements and how drugs are reported in the popular press, I found some stuff I didn’t expect about drug harms.

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