MEXICO CITY, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya on
Tuesday praised the ongoing peaceful resistance in his country to the government
that forced him from office.
At a joint press conference with Mexican President
Felipe Calderon, Zelaya called the resistance "unheard-of" and thanked the
Mexican leader for his support.
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Mexico's President Felipe Calderon (R)
hosts a welcoming ceremony for the visiting Honduras' ousted President
Manuel Zelaya in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, August 4, 2009. Zelaya is
on a two-day official visit in Mexico. (Xinhua/Bao Feifei) Photo Gallery>>> |
"I don't believe in Talion's law of an eye for an eye. I take a pacifist
position," said the deposed Honduran leader.
Speaking on the steps of Mexico's presidential palace, Los Pinos, Zelaya
said that his camp in Ocotal, a town on the Nicaraguan border with Honduras, was
a symbol of peaceful resistance, adding that that his followers did not respond
to violence from Honduras' post-coup government with violence, but responded
with peaceful means.
He also noted that his movement was based on article three of Honduras'
Constitution, which stipulates that "no one should obey a government that takes
office by force of arms." "Insurgency is aright enshrined in the Constitution
and I am calling for a peaceful insurgency," he stressed.
He said that the coup in Honduras could reopen a dark chapter in Latin
American history, because right-wing forces also exist in Honduras' neighbor
Nicaragua and are ready to back coups in order to bring social progress to a
halt.
"If right-wingers bring forth violence, violence will be reborn in social groups -- those that
said 20 years ago that they would put down their guns," he
said, citing Nicaragua's Sandinstas and the Farabundo Marti Liberation Front in El
Salvador, former guerrillas who are now ruling parties in their respective nations. ¡¡
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Mexico's President Felipe Calderon (R)
greets the visiting Honduras' ousted President Manuel Zelaya during the
welcoming ceremony in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, August 4, 2009.
Zelaya is on a two-day official visit in Mexico. (Xinhua/Bao
Feifei) Photo
Gallery>>> |
He said that the people chose their president in both Mexico and Honduras,
and that change only takes place when the president has died or disappeared, and
that the June 28 coup was not a case of either of these.
He added that he would use all the peaceful means possible to halt the
suffering of the people of Honduras, currently being repressed by the government
of Roberto Micheletti, who took office after the coup.
He also called for solidarity from the media and from other nations in
denouncing the post-coup government.
Meanwhile, Calderon expressed Mexico's support for Zelaya.
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Mexico's President Felipe Calderon (R)
and the visiting Honduras' ousted President Manuel Zelaya attend a press
conference in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, August 4, 2009. Zelaya
arrived in Mexico on Tuesday for a two-day official visit. (Xinhua/Bao
Feifei) Photo
Gallery>>> |
"We receive Zelaya with open arms as we have always done and aswe will
always do with our brother Honduras," he said. "From the day of the dastardly
coup, we have shown solidarity with Honduras and supported the reinstatement of
Zelaya as the country's president."
Calderon told reporters that he and Zelaya had talked about Mexico's
commitment to a negotiated solution to the conflict in Honduras, and the
"peaceful restoration of the democratic government" there.
"Zelaya and the members of his government will always have doors open to
them in our nation," Calderon said. "In Mexico, we are convinced that democracy
is the only road for people to progress. Now and forever we reject any attempt
to return to the authoritarian past which has done so much damage to our
nations."
He added that Mexico, now holding the Group of Rio's rotating presidency,
backed the seven-point plan proposed by Oscar Arias, president of Costa Rica who
tried to mediate between Zelaya and Micheletti.
"Many women and men have fought to make Latin America a community of free
men and women, without the shadow of oppression and authoritarianism," Calderon
said. "Now more than ever we have to work tirelessly to make sure their legacy
endures."
Zelaya, who was forced into exile after the
coup, arrived in Mexico City late Monday.
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Visiting Honduras' ousted President
Manuel Zelaya speaks during a press conference upon his arrival in Mexico
City, capital of Mexico, August 4, 2009. Zelaya arrived in Mexico on
Tuesday for a two-day official visit. (Xinhua/Bao
Feifei) Photo
Gallery>>> |